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Chapter 55. A Pound of Feathers is Heavier Than A Pound of Steel

AN: *Does the Jedi trick* This is still Wednesday somewhere, I promise!




Roshanak Kamshad Gulnaz



“…Then let us discuss the main reason why we gathered here today.” Roshanak looked at two other Matriarchs and the Speaker of Kosenya. “The Kiymetl.”


It was unfortunate that Roxanna wasn’t here in person, but her presence was critical in the north. Moreover, her arrival — no matter how rushed it was — would have significantly delayed this meeting long enough for it to become useless. As a warrior and a general, Roshanak preferred to act with decisiveness rather than wait for her opponents to grow in strength, especially when said growth was almost unthinkable.


The Speaker’s ears shifted back immediately. “Do you fear the Kiymetl is acting against Emanai?” Mitra Kosenya Adalet had a serious, no-nonsense attitude, common throughout their Manor.


“Or is it your wounded pride speaking out of spite?” The Kishava Matriarch was quick to remind.


The Samat Matriarch remained silent, impatiently tapping on the gold goblet full of wine. Compared to the mighty Kishava, the Samat was a direct competitor to the Kiymetl, especially when it came to trading within the capital. Compared to the concerned Kosenya, they weren't dependent on them to provide sufficient grain for the troops. All of which gave them the reason and desire to see the Kiymetl step down. Their previous history only made it more personal.


“Perhaps, but let us be honest among each other here — Aikerim Adal is known by many names but none of them is ‘stupid’. She might appear coy or humble but that is nothing more but a mask of a hypocrite, donned to pursue her real goals. The recent glass affair not only made her fortunes soar — by goading the Esca Envoy to act with rashness, Aikerim wrested control over Kiymetl’s major trading partner. By requesting a personal aqueduct routed to her Manor, she solidified her status even further and subverted the position of Amanzhan Irada as the main contender for the title of a future Matriarch. Yet, despite this success, the current events show that she has no intentions to stop. The affair of steel is-”


“She is the younger daughter of a Matriarch, cousin,” Parusatis Aminah lazily interrupted her. “This is what they do for it is the task of younger sisters to keep their elders in check.”


“Is it also her task to rob you blind without you even realising it, cousin?” Roshanak swished her tail.


The eyes of the Kishava Matriarch narrowed. “Explain.”


Roshanak snapped her fingers, ordering a nearby slave to refill her cup. “Do you remember the Scourge of the South Sea?”


“What does your aunt have to do with Aikerim Adal?”


“Apart from coming into a great deal of wealth from her daring, yet extremely lucrative naval raids, absolutely nothing. But your Manor should remember her triumphant returns. She didn’t win her battles by being stupid and she knew that gold and gems represented static wealth while fame and glory could be easily forgotten. To make her fortunes last, she needed something else. Something that would see her wealth multiply in perpetuity.”


“Land and slaves.” Kishava Matriarch put her goblet away.


“Land and slaves, indeed. The Scourge of the South Sea was the Boon to the Kishava Manor. The strongest labourers, exotic companion slaves, and the most skilled artisans — all were quickly snatched by her growing Manor. Am I to assume that you are enjoying the same treatment by the rising star of the Kiymetl?”


“It had been a few tendays, Roshanak,” Parusatis said with a sigh. “Are you urging me to act out of impatience?”


Roshanak tasted her wine. “Aikerim Adal had been trying to purchase land for a while. Unfortunately for her, Amanzhan Irada wasn’t granted the role of a Speaker just for being the first daughter and had been quite successful at blocking her attempts. Her sour relationship with the Samat didn’t help her either. The lack of attempts to purchase slaves was somewhat surprising until I received some concerning news.”


Parusatis Kishava Aminah cracked her fingers, vicious eyes sparkling on her friendly-looking face. “Who?”


“The Esca, of course. The word across the sea is that the lamuras are busy collecting slaves in large quantities. Not the oarsmen to move their galleys nor fighters to bolster their forces. Artisans and craftsmen. Children and families to bolster their ranks and secure their loyalty. I am certain that by the time this news reached me there was probably at least one ship sailing toward Samat, full with future Kiymetl slaves.”


“Control any Manor you can and avoid every other that you cannot.” The Samat Matriarch finally spoke up from her couch, moving the finger across the ridge of her goblet. “Aikerim is only interested in those she can dominate.”


Parusatis Aminah inspected her sharp claws. “I will have my women confirm your words, cousin. But, if what you say is true, I assume you came here with a particular plan in mind?”


Roshanak nodded. “I was planning on inviting the Censor herself to this meeting — to hear what the Goddess and, to some extent, the Shebet would say. Perhaps it is for the best that she is currently unavailable — her twin brother and the Speaker of their Manor had been rather close with the twin moons of Kiymetl.”


Calling the Shebet Matriarch here in person was futile. Daimonas or not, the Chasya twins held the real power within the Manor and while their aunt did a lot of work to maintain day-to-day House activities, she would stall and defer anything too important, lest she runs afoul of her divinely blessed niece or nephew.


“There are four among the seven present here,” Roshanak continued. “That means the Summit of Speakers will listen to our combined voices no matter what the Kiymetl and the Enoch might say and whether or not the Shebet is even present.”


“A soft approach?” The Kishava Matriarch raised her eyebrow, making the Kosenya Speaker shift uneasily on her couch. “I thought you were a bit more disgruntled from that rejection.”


Roshanak scoffed. “I have no desire to tread the path of Esca in this matter. Especially when both Chasya twins had shown interest in her Manor and that ‘Alchemist’ of theirs despite no love between Sophia Chasya and Aikerim Adal. It would also be very shortsighted of me to interrupt the trade between the Kiymetl and the Kosenya. The north walls are worthless without defenders guarding them and they need to eat daily like the rest of us.


“I am a general, Parusatis Aminah. And I know not to blindly chase the enemy that isn’t routed — for there might be ambushes I might not know about. Fortunately for us, the glass affair did reveal her plans to me, no matter how obvious they were, and those plans haven't come to fruition yet.”


A floppy ear slowly lifted up as the Kishava Matriarch smiled. “The coveted place among us.” 


“Indeed. Aikerim might be a main contender for the title, but her mother is still alive. And her eldest sister still holds a lot of power. I am sure that Amanzhan Irada would be thrilled to know the Pillar majority of Emanai still sees her as the future Matriarch. And react accordingly.”


Parusatis nodded. “A suddenly weakened position will force Aikerim to reconsider her plans, lest the carefully built foundation would crumble below her feet.”


“Unless she has other tricks up her sleeve,” The Samat matriarch crossed her arms. “We are dealing with the mother of Anaise Hilal — one that the Goddess herself deemed worthy to speak to. The Esca’s response is quite suspicious to me as well — a proud clan like them would never bow their heads and curl their tails just because Aikerim has tough glass and mirrors.”


“Yes, the political pressure alone won’t be enough, especially with the sudden influx of the blade steel and strange weapons within the Kiymetl.” Roshanak easily agreed. “But we can play her game as well. Aikerim Adal had been careful not to reveal too much but rumours of the daimonic presence are spreading. Perhaps the public could be a bit more ‘concerned’ about the nature of said ‘daimon’, especially if it is a murk? If Aikerim Adal was truly blessed by Gods, where is a blessed Spark? Perhaps her Manor needs a little bit more oversight to make sure nothing untoward is happening within those walls. A mature hand to guide them past excesses of youth.”


The wersheep smiled. “Especially with the black smoke coming from within her Manor. I have a few eyes and noses around and many report the brimstone smell. As the caretaker of the capital, I can’t allow anyone to summon a volcano within my borders, even if it lets her craft weapons with ease!”


Roshanak glanced at the Kosenya Speaker and Mitra Adalet nodded. “As long as the Kiymetl as a whole remains healthy. Nanaya Kiymetl Ayda had been generous in her grain shipments and my mother would not accept any disruptions. Aikerim Adal’s actions are… concerning indeed. If she is already treating two Houses of War in such a way…”


“The Kosenya will likely receive the same treatment once she takes the reins, I agree.” Roshanak completed her thought. “I believe we are in agreement, then.”


She lifted up her cup in a toast and waited for the other three to join her. “To the fruitful coalition.”




Aikerim Kiymetl Adal



“Thank you, Sulla,” she quietly dismissed her attendant and re-focused on Yeva’s lecture with a sigh.


The word was back on the streets, encouraging Dominas to sell their land ‘elsewhere’, while the slow progress inroads with her elder sister stalled once again. New players had entered the game: either the Kishava or the Kamshad themselves. Or both for that matter — Erf’s stipulations on slavery and ‘freeloading’ husbands made the growing tensions not just likely but inevitable. Nevertheless, Aikerim still felt the pang of loss in her heart — a few more tendays of peace would’ve solidified her current position enough to purchase land without any significant oversight.


Now she was thrown back to the pre-Feast days, carefully measuring her steps and planning her moves. Well, not quite. There was no longer an imminent danger of Erf being claimed by the Goddess and her influence grew substantially since then. 


Nevertheless, the new players were acting bold enough to warrant caution on her part. Aikerim wasn’t afraid, however, but annoyed. All these dances and overtures, all these plays were performed to obtain the source of her newfound power. Her daimon. Whether those players knew it or not they sought out Erf. As his master, Domina, and mother-in-law, Aikerim Adal was already far ahead of everyone trying.


All she had to do was not lose.


Well, a few additional wins wouldn’t go amiss either. The question was how.


Her fingers played absentmindedly with the trinkets that Yeva provided previously. His wife was busy explaining the so-called ‘thermal expansion’ to Isra, Wrena, and Shahin and she used plenty of props to showcase its actions. Things like two bound strips of different metals where the difference in their expansion rate would force the whole thing to bend and curl, allowing one to tell how hot something was with great precision.


Looking at a visibly twitching Isra Haleh, the master smith already came up with a plethora of ways to use that knowledge in her craft and was eager to leave the room and start working. Shahin Esca was in an equally contemplative mood, bolstered by the steaming mug of kava cradled in her hands, as Yeva made it perfectly clear that said expansion was the root cause of glass strength or weakness.


Unfortunately for Aikerim, the new revelations weren’t immediately helpful in tackling the new problems. She knew this knowledge was critical for the current and future projects — even Wrena was quick enough to realise that those fluctuations in size would hinder further advances in precision. That meant better machines, more refined products, and eventual profits. Eventual was the key word here.


But not everything followed this slow but inevitable improvement. Aikerim pulled the hems of her kaftan apart and glanced down on her chest — there was a new layer of ‘cloth’ there, covered by the customary silken tunic. The black wood of the nurturing tree felt soft to the touch and pleasant on her skin, it was also extremely durable and highly susceptible to the Kiymetl spells. An additional layer of protection for a stray Collector’s blade and a convenient source of the material if she were to require a sword.


The reward of her daughter’s honesty.


“Perhaps it is best to end the lecture here for now,” Domina spoke up from her couch. “I am sure that Isra Haleh is eager to try out new designs.”


“Oh don’t mind me,” the master smith was quick to interject. “I do wish to learn more!”


Yeva paused for a moment but shook her head. “Domina is right. I would prefer to make sure you understand the concepts rather than merely know them and a little bit of practical work would greatly assist you in that. Tinker around with trinkets, make your own, and let the fog of knowledge settle into the dew of comprehension within your mind, making it easier to travel ahead. Make bigger bi-metal strips and see if you can craft working thermometers for furnaces, forges, and kilns.”


Isra Haleh nodded and took off, followed by Wrena Khayrat. Shahin Esca idled for a moment, giving Aikerim a questioning gaze but Domina shook her head. The former envoy knew her ways around intrigue, but she had a different conversation in mind at this moment.


“You wished to speak with me?” Yeva tilted her head once they were alone.


Aikerim smiled and shook her head. “I am. Let us take another walk.”


She found herself missing Erf stumbling through his conversations. While Yeva was reserved and methodical, choosing to remain silent unless she was certain what needs to be said, Erf had that bubbling energy barely contained within himself. Always eager to spill over and shower her with new inventions and gifts. Aikerim was certain that if he stayed behind, there would be dynamos everywhere, shooting lightning back and forth.


“Forgive me for not transitioning to electricity,” Yeva correctly guessed her thoughts, “but there is a necessary foundation that needs to be built first. We are approaching technology that demands to be treated with respect and I would be remiss of my duties if I let either Isra or Wrena die or get heavily injured simply because they didn’t know some crucial detail.”


“Do not worry.” Aikerim swished her tail in a soothing gesture. “I could feel your intent throughout the lecture as you introduced a new method of measuring unknown and advanced earlier techniques at the same time. I was just amusing myself by thinking how different Erf’s approach would be.”


Yeva pondered as she walked. “Well, for starters, there will be new toilets by now.”


A snort managed to escape her lips before Aikerim could control herself. “Thank you for that reminder, Yeva. I managed to completely forget that fascination of his. Now I know I made the right choice by leaving you, not him behind.”


The girl smiled in response. “There is a certain merit in his desires.”


“You too!?”


“It makes more sense if you understand that it is designed to physically trap the foul odours. If it is constructed properly, said rooms wouldn’t even need fragrant herbs on the walls to make them acceptable. Once you have that, there are no other barriers to make them convenient and place them closer to bedrooms and other rooms where people tend to gather often.”


She eyed the murk daimon suspiciously. “Are you making those now?”


Yeva giggled. “Not yet. The infrastructure is still incomplete to make them appropriate.”


“The below-structure?” Aikerim tried the new word. “Are you talking about the sewer tunnels? I was informed that Samat had built them properly.”


“The Samat sewers are well-made, indeed, but the estate needs a network of pipes to most buildings, whether to take waste away or vent foul gases building up underground. Since I hate using lead pipes in general and copper is too useful elsewhere, Keivan is currently making ceramic pipe sections. They are strong enough to last for a while and won’t corrode and rot from within. Moreover, there needs to be a separate network to bring clean water in, but I will use trees to make pipes for that.”


“What is wrong with the current system?”


“Aqueduct water is fresh, but it is only water from a stream rerouted into the city. It needs to move or it would quickly bloom and become undrinkable. The fountains we have in the kitchens, the rest of the Manor, and across the entirety of Samat are a necessity of that design. This system works but it is very water-inefficient. Aqueduct alone will become unsustainable rather quickly with our new technologies, especially when steam engines start to take their toll.”


“You aren’t planning on boiling the water, are you?” Aikerim frowned. The Samat was starting to grumble about the smoke coming out of her Manor, despite multiple other furnaces working across Samat as well as the stench of waste, rot, and fish on the streets of the lower city. She was planning to avoid the confrontation for as long as possible, not to provoke them further.


“That would be too excessive, yes. The water doesn’t need to be stored forever, just longer than it currently can. A few good filters should give us that for now. Once that is in place, we will have an on-demand water supply where it is used as needed and not spent continuously.”


Aikerim sighed, seeing one of the secluded workshops they were approaching. “Well, you seem to have thought it out well in advance. I hope that you can show me the results soon but the future might be a little bit more hectic now.”


Yeva paused and looked at Domina with a silent question on her face.


“The other Pillars decided that they waited long enough after Anaise’s departure and were rousing up once again. I do not know the path that they would take but my Manor can already feel their attention.”


“Should I speed up the armour production? Ask Isra to start making brigandines?”


“Of course not.” Aikerim rolled her eyes.


Yeva gripped the door, making the wood groan. “But what if they ignore the Divine decree?”


“Yeva, calm down.” Domina placed her hand on Yeva’s shoulder. “No one will be attacking this Manor. Not just because Gods said so. Not because I come from one of the Seven Houses. They will not attack because this is a Pillar Manor. I have training grounds here where guards for my caravans train: slaves as well as wer and wermage members of the Kiymetl. There are multiple wermages of my immediate family living here, most of whom have experience in magical warfare.


“A direct assault on this Manor might eventually overwhelm my defences but it will leave the entire Samat in ruins while doing so. And that is assuming no other Manor will come to our aid. Kiymetl or otherwise. We are talking about burning rubble and piles of dead all over the place. Even the Samat Manor themselves will forget about past grievances and do everything in their power to stop that.”


“I…” Yeva shook her head and sighed. “Yes, of course. Forgive my outburst.”


“I understand where you are coming from. The threat of sudden violence is common among slaves of lesser masters and one is left relying on the nature of the other to stay safe. I am certain that even small Dominas on the outskirts of Emanai might have similar thoughts to yours. For there are too few defenders and not enough onlookers nearby. But law exists across the land-between-mountains and the Seven are here to enforce it. If the Seven Pillars themselves begin to fear for their safety that means the law is gone from this land. Then Gods will interfere.”


Aikerim patted her shoulder and led her inside the building. “Your way of thinking is sound, but this is not the way of Pillar Manors.”


“Right…So what course of action are we taking?” Yeva looked back at Domina with a serious expression on her face. 


“Plan ahead, prepare, and make sure that our supply routes stay secure. What would your current and future projects require? Assume that any land purchases will be delayed and Manor expansions are off the table for the foreseeable future.”


Yeva grimaced. “The estate is big but not infinite. How tall are we allowed to build?”


“What do you mean allowed? I am no architect to tell you when a building is too tall to stand.”


“I meant allowed by traditions.” Yeva pointed in the general direction of the Landing Altar. “I assume many would frown if you have a tower in your Manor that is taller than the floating Pillars themselves.”


“Right…” Aikerim scratched her ear. “Erf talk has begun. Let us stick with something…conservative. Nothing taller than the walls of this Manor.”


“So up to three floors, well probably two to accommodate every body type present in the Manor. Lamuras and Minotaurs are rather tall. Can we dig below?”


“Yes. Just don’t breach the underworld.”


“Well, we are limited by ventilation and drainage anyway.” Yeva let that sarcasm fly over her head. “But some excavation might provide us with rock and gravel for other projects. What about the other estates that you possess?”


Aikerim waved her tail. “I would prefer to keep… the new machines within this Manor for now. While I trust my farm heads to run everyday tasks, I am not so keen on letting them handle things that the rest of the Kiymetl Manor doesn’t know about. Moreover, the traffic between estates can attract quite a few curious eyes and hands.”


“Fair enough. We can store bulk cargo there, however. It is no longer a secret that your Manor is looking for raw resources. What about the lands that no one cares about? While the northern steppe is too far from here but slopes of the Babr Mountains seem rather desolate. Even the areas close to the South Sea. It would be easy to ship-”


Aikerim started to shake her head even before Yeva finished her sentence. “That is where I gain a lot of my wool from. While the land is too barren to be arable, there are plenty of sheep in nearby Manors. Now that we have Pillar Houses interfering, it would be very hard for me to purchase land near my sources of wealth.”


“Well, I think Erf had managed to acquire some.”


Aikerim blinked. “He did what? How?”


“Albin.” Yeva shrugged as if one word was almost good enough to explain everything. “Apparently, Erf got a promise of land title on the slopes of the Babr Mountains when they were playing the guitar together. After he finishes his military service, that is.”


Aikerim grabbed her ears and tugged them down. “I swear those two will make my hair silver within a season. I didn’t even want to imagine the Shebet Speaker playing Erf’s guitar, yet you made me do it! What did he ask for that land?”


“Steel spoons and knives, mostly. Ones that would not rust.”


“If that wasn’t Erf and Albin damned Chasya, I would’ve assumed that both of them were drunk. Or you were drunk to tell me. Or I was, for hearing something this inane.” Domina let go of her ears and took a few calming breaths. “Forget this, Aikerim. We have a Shebet Speaker on our side… and that is… good? Good. Yes. Let us move on — none of those promises would matter in the short term anyway. What about raw resources? I assume we still need steel?”


“Steel and copper are both critical. We can improve the quality ourselves, however. Concrete for the buildings and foundations. Everything else that we were already purchasing should continue as well.”


“So the only two new things are copper and concrete? Volcanic ash might take some time to arrive.”


“It is not necessary. A cheaper concrete might last less than fifty years but we aren’t building monuments to eternity here. Even if we are still stuck within the walls of this Manor after fifty years, the buildings will need to be upgraded anyway. Limestone and gypsum would suffice.”


“Well, as long as the buildings won’t collapse while they are in use.”


Yeva smirked. “I didn’t say they would be flimsy. Even after fifty years, those buildings would be more sound than most of the slum houses I witnessed in the cheaper parts of Samat. I just have standards.”


“That you do,” Aikerim chuckled. “You have been talking about nothing but standards in your recent lectures.”


Yeva coughed. “There is still the last piece missing if you wish to speed up the current pace. People.”


Domina pressed her lips thin. “Slaves are coming from my farms and across the sea, but recruiting from the Samat population would have to wait. There is a need for additional vetting in the current situation and I simply do not have the people suited for that. We are also likely to end up with a crowd of beggars at my gates crying day and night once the word spreads about the ‘generous’ Domina. I can’t let that happen.”


The murk girl grimaced. “And we can’t accept them all due to land and food constraints. In addition to potentially taking in disguised spies and Collectors.”


“There is another way, however. Dock workers and petty traders. While many are beholden either to us, the Samat, or the Kishava, most are still independent and hire workers daily from the available crowd. We can probably set up a system through them to invite promising individuals to our side. While not perfect by any means, it can act as a barrier between my Manor and the horde of hopefuls. It would take additional time to ensure the honesty of my suppliers.”


“The fact that you, a Domina, are thinking about this already makes me grateful.” Yeva bowed to her. “I am sure that most wouldn’t even bother to come up with alternatives in this situation, and yet you did. Yes, such recruiting agencies might work well for us far into the future.”


“I am not stupid, Yeva.” Aikerim chuckled. “The Pillar Manors stir because they sense the unnatural presence, the hidden power that keeps multiplying my wealth over and over with no end in sight. They don’t care about me. They don’t care about my wealth, current or previous. They want that hidden power for themselves.


“They want Erf, Yeva. And with your new knowledge,” Aikerim reached out and poked Yeva with her finger, “they will want you too.


“It is given that I will prioritise both of you, even if that might hinder my chances at becoming the Matriarch of Kiymetl.”


Yeva stared down at the finger on her chest for a while then she reached out and took it into her hand. “You wish to become a Matriarch?”


Aikerim smiled, “Every chick dreams of being a falcon.”


Fingers squeezed her hand. “Then you will be.”


“My, I hope you aren’t planning anything untoward about my mother, are you?”


Yeva shook her head. “Don’t need to. Don’t have to.”


“Just play the infinite game? Try not to lose?”


“We will spice up the game a little bit.” Yeva smiled and let go of Aikerim’s hand. “I’ve brought you here rather than to the greenhouse for a reason. While Isra is busy working on the steam engine, I had Wrena prepare a new machine for me. Something to assist me with a large influx of workers in the coming days.


Aikerim glanced around and quickly noticed something covered by a canvas cloth. “That?”


“Yes.”


Domina waved her hand, sending the cloth away, only to frown at what she was. “Is that… a press?”


“It is. But not for olives. Rather than pressing seeds into oil, it would press letters on paper, quickly creating multiple copies of a specific page. I was planning on mass-producing small virtana codices so that every illiterate slave could have a copy and quickly learn how to read and possibly write.”


Aikerim licked her lips. “It could press any codex?”


Codices were expensive for a reason.


“As long as it is something that can be written on a parchment with a quill.”


“And, once they all can read, you can press the codex on numbers and teach them how to count.” She walked over and picked up a small piece of metal “Is that… a letter?”


“It doesn’t have to be numbers. We could design a manual on how to operate a loom or a lathe and train workers by a dozen rather than one by one. What you are holding is called a type — an inverted letter stamp that would print a proper letter when pressed onto paper while stained with ink. While it still takes time to set all those types into sentences and blocks of text, even typesetting a single codex takes less time than writing one with a quill. Considering that you can print hundreds with each typeset… you can imagine the productivity increase.”


“Not yet, I cannot. I will need to see it in action.” Aikerim licked her lips once again, they were getting dry. “But I can appreciate how anything you create somehow just fits with everything that was created prior. Was Erf thinking about this when he created the paper? Or when his tree started making inks and dyes?”


“Absolutely. Because we are limited by what we can create by the tools that we have. The impact of this press would not be as powerful if we lacked a proper and cheap medium to print upon. But this is more than what you see, Domina. What you see is a weapon.”


Aikerim frowned. “It can print runes?”


“Er…you know what? It probably could, but I wasn’t being literal here. A printed word is a weapon of information rather than force. You can print thousands of papers teaching people how to read or you can print thousands of pamphlets to spread a particular knowledge among the literate masses. You can cast your ideas and dreams far and wide and catch many like-minded thinkers with great ease. The ones who will gladly bolster your ranks. The ones who will fight for your cause. And ones who will die for it too.”


Yeva walked around the frozen Domina. “Before, I had my concerns about whether to tell you this or not even when Erf had put his trust in you. But your actions so far speak true of your name Aikerim the Just. Consider this as the proof that you will be Matriarch. Whether you will take the seat of your mother or forge the eighth Pillar — I don’t care — you will be one.


“Because even the sharpest sword in the world can’t cut an idea apart. 


“And now you will become a general of ideas. Whoever stands against us won’t have the faintest chance in the world.”

Comments

I would say that by that height, Pillars would stop being called pillars and start being called floating castles. And Heurisks aren't likely to make something like that.

Snus

So no Burj Khalifa in Samat. It's a shame...

Diego

Erf was sarcastic in that response, however. You can see his cheeky attitude about it especially in the next sentence about it being nine if he hit the rooftop (which would make Samat rooftops quite high for a classical era even with magic)

Snus

Erf said the fall from the window would be 10 seconds. Assuming 1 g that means about 500 meters...

Diego

Well, it is easy to lock into one specific direction and I do emply unreliable narration a lot -- what they say isn't always their literal thoughts but often the result of emotions, plots and desires

Snus

alright alright, guess i was just reading to much into things.

The grand chief

Well it doesn't matter anymore as she stipulated no more than three floors high.

Snus

We are still dealing with a single Manor and A scant few technologies so far. Most of "Aikerim effect" isn't visible mostly because she is simply isnt pushing prices down - she is still essentially getting the same revenue as before but her cost prices went through the floor resulting in enormous rise in profit. The current tech is early industrial era tech there is no way she can quickly satiate a city of a million people and possibly few nearby markets. She is selling luxuries that she is making dirt cheap atm. It is not "near-legendary" Emanai can make that steel. They can't make that much of that steel. Isra's sister mentioned a few chapters before that it isnt quality but quantity that makes this situation so unique. In this chapter this steel is called "blade steel" exactly because they use it for good blades already. Kamshad Matriarch wants someone a Kiymetl Matriarch who would "play by the rules" atm with the refusal to accept her essentially "bribe", Aikerim is playing the "dark horse" style, which she doesnt like. IF Anaise accepted Muramat, Kamshad would have been on their side for sure. About Kosenya: Enoch doesnt have "bad case of addiction" not even close and not for a while. This had been discussed among Kiymetl and Enoch and not among others. Kosenya wouldn't be thinking about this at all. Kiymetl - yes hence their general siding with their sisters in leu of that Samat: There is no case of taking over luxury markets is those markets didnt exist previously. Samat didnt have porcelain nor glass, nor other trinkets. Kamshad - the insult was "lessened by Kiymetl slipping on technicalities of "military service" Kishava Matriarch is speaking like that because she is disgruntled with Kamshad pulling the previous marriage arrangement. her statement wasnt about Kiymetl being bad but Kamshad being petty. Kishava - I already went over that in previous statement. And slave trade was discussed previously when Shahin proposed this plan - there is nothing "illegal" about this exchange. Kamshad merely playing on emotions by stating it in this manner, to a certain degree as the responce to the Kishava previous jab about "spite". Shebet - eh kinda far fetched, Technically the timing of the Ritual is dictated by the Goddess in the eyes of Emanai, At most Sophia was seen as trying to use that opportunity to score an easy win. hence why it isn't mentioned since then. In the eyes of Emanai this was neither her loss nor win. She tried but it didn't work. Just to say it in conclusion - none of these imply an embargo or any other specific course of action. They will obviously act in some way, and that was the point of this chapter but that doesn't mean they will act in a certain way. Roshanak said this herself that she wont be repeating mistakes of Esca.

Snus

I was wondering about how tall Aikerim's tower can be to not be taller than the pillars. Including the elevation.

Natthaporn Hongcharoen

hold on a sec big guy, wasn't done writing the comment so go back and read again plz.

The grand chief

I've mentioned previously that Kiymetl can't interfere in war before, exactly because they aren't a House of War. the same rule goes both ways. I also never said that they would embargo them either. in fact the mention of Amanzhan is exactly there to imply that any "trade" pressure would be done via a proxy. Roshanak even clearly stated that she wont be acting blindly and "hard" at least while she isn't sure Aikerim has something prepared. Something like an embargo is both a "hard" approach and also a blind approach at this moment. Roshanak current plan is classified as "soft" by Parusatis and will essentially coalesce into application of pressure on multiple fronts so that she can test where Aikerim is "weak" first, Or at least force her to stop aggressively expanding and "defend" her current positions (that was also mentioned in this chapter). Outright embargo is an attack, loud and clear.

Snus

granted, i won't argue if you outright state something isn't going to happen. But we the readers don't know that if you don't expressly say so. But on the other hand: Aikerim is heavily pushing on the industries she is currently working on. The machines Erf made not only produce higher quality products but also due so at a lower price than traditional goods. It took only 1 girl 10 days to drown all of Enoch in near-legendary quality steel and everyone knows that. Apply the same logic to the pottery, glass and weaving and Samat would start worrying. And you can't say Samat would know such logic can't be applied across the different industries. Also, you can't say Kamshad isn't going overboard. In general, the kamshad matriarch wouldn't care who sits on the throne of Kiymetl as long as the goods keep flowing. She wouldn't be pushing so hard for one of her sons to marry Anaise, let alone push for the meetings of the matriarchs in order to curb Aikarim. Heck, she would be pushing for Aikerim to be the next matriarch as a richer kiymetl would make for more secure lines of logistics. Also, for Kosenya: Enoch: bad case of addiction to new high quality steel. Kiymetl: Publicly undermines her sister and her cronies and gets away with it. Samat: Not just the aquaduct but also slowly but surely taking the luxury markets of the artisans quarters Kamshad: A rather insulting rejection to the arrange marriage (see kishava remark regarding her spite) in addition to dangling their unavailability right in front of her by going north for the autumn campaign Kishava: didn't know at the time but a potential muscling in of Esca into the slave trade seemed like a chunk Shebet: Everyone knows that Sophia has been tripping over everyone to get her hands on Erf. But as far as the rest could see, Aikerim got the divine ritual to occur during Anaise's entrance feast and it had cost her absolutely nothing.

The grand chief

I would probably say ten floors at best with additional height provided by levitation. They have teleports into the Towers but any movement up and down is done by stairs and I just dont see them bothering to huff and puff 50+ floors up. Ten would be already annoying for a wermage if not exhausting but at least time consuming."

Snus

Well I will make one thing clear. They can't. Not embargoes. Kiymetl is the House of Trade, not them. This is something like Army telling Supreme court that they cant do trials. They have a lot of power and influence but they can't simply tell a House of Trade not to trade. Kiymetl Matriarch will raise hell even if they dare to suggest something like that. A lot of those reasons are mostly known only to readers. Even Aikerim herself still learning about possible impacts of the printing press. Rest are even more unaware and, therefore, won't be acting on this knowledge. Additionally, Aikerim is still guided by her morals and upbringing. She won't be blatantly empowering murks left and right herself as especially wont be spreading news about murks being resistant either. Not only because she, as a wermage and Daimona, is also unwilling to lose her power, but she is aware that if she tries to encourage murk rebellions, it wont be just four Pillars that will get annoyed -- Goddess might return and "fix" the issue. Kishava isnt worried about Esca muscling on slave trade, she is just annoyed. Aikerim does not have full control of even weaving, let alone anything else. She is a large figure is weaving but entire Emanai weaves at home. she is mostly doing high end stuff. Kamshad isnt doing full HAM, they are nowhere close to those levels. This is mostly them being reactive \ preventative. Kosenya doesnt fear. That was once again mostly declaration of support for the other two Houses rather than fear of Aikerim. They might be lean on finances but they arent afraid. Also I am not sure what you mean by taking chunk of every other Pillar Manor?

Snus

So how tall was the pillar tower?

Natthaporn Hongcharoen

Why wouldn't they embargo Aikerim? Firstly, Kishava can't have Esca muscle in on the slave trade nor are they in a position to arbitrarily sanction a pillar manor from a foreign nation. The only option they have is to prevent the slaves from reaching Aikerim. Secondly, Aikerim already has full control of the weaving, pottery, glassblowing, beauty and iron smelting sectors of Emanai. Samat knows that if they allow this to continue she could very easily kick them out of their own city (especially after they find out about concrete and electricity). The only option they have to prevent this is to stop the inflow of raw materials. Thirdly, Kamshad is going full HAM on Aikerim and as such will take any opportunity they can get to extort more gains. Fourthly, Kosenya has to fear for their way of life because Aikerim has already taken a chunk out of every other pillar manor and as such believe themselves to be next and will do anything they can to avoid that, especially because of their dire financial situation and the fact that Nanaya will not intervene if only one of her houses is under attack. And all this is before the printing presses are getting involved, which can instigate a full scale war on their own because: 1. The entire Emanai economy is founded on cheap labor, Samat especially. The problem with education is that is arbitrarily increases the cost of labor, if cost of labor goes up then so will prices and the rest of the manors might not be able to afford that nor would they be willing too. 2. The printing presses would allow Aikerim to spread rather inconvenient information, not just the fact that murks are resistant to flow, but also other pieces of information that would make it harder for the other manors to keep the slaves under their thumb and thereby destabilize their rule. 3. Printing presses would allow Aikerim to fight information wars and be able to arbitrary smear/save people of her choice and turn public opinion against whoever she wants and there is now way the other houses are just going to let that happen. So I ask again, why wouldn't they embargo someone who is about to upend all of Emanai?

The grand chief

They don't want Aikerim in power because she's been one of the 'stepping stones' that is slippery. If they had to cling with their hands, they would fall. So they will do all they can, for as long as they can, to see Aikerim NOT rise in power. Because they know once she makes it to their lofty altitude, she's not even going to slow down long enough for them to grab on. And those who do, will simply slip off. Great chapter, seeds spouting and other seeds sown. Quite the crop this year, harvest should prove interesting.

Encendyo

Pretty much the entire third book is planned as "results" XD

Snus

Well there is an obvious shifts coming and I just don't see more conservative Manors not trying to enforce a status quo. There will be a lot of grandstanding and posturing. But I dont think they will go with something like an embargo that easily it would be more about "Aikerim bad - Amanzhan better" since Kosenya are pretty on point about Kiymetl being necessary to Emanai. They can't afford to cripple\destroy it but they can attempt to get someone more favourable to them into the position of power. I am not sure Mansiya will come soon. She isn't in a hurry within her chambers.

Snus

While Erf is doing a war of blood, steel and magic, Yeva has just started a war of information. Can't wait to see the results.

Yoshiii311

this is getting out of hand. The Matriarchs are about to introduce a full scale embargo on kiymetl and Yeva is about to release enough tech to manually invert all of emanai. Someone needs to interfere. Also, when is Mansiya joining?

The grand chief

Until he has a working industrial complex, Everything will be extremely local. He is still only affecting a single "household" so far

Snus

Was thinking a few more arcs than that but humans were still driving ox carts not that long ago and didn’t have the cumulative knowledge of many millennia to speed them along.

Grayvisc

Car require a bit more than motors XD. Roads would be nice too. While Erf isnt particularly keen on keeping Emanai in the "stone age" I will still try to keep inventions grounded. it won't be high-tech electricity to begin with but more early age electrical dynamos that mostly power industrial motors within factories.

Snus

The tech is moving so fast. They’re gonna have electricity soon and then we’ll be seeing Erf driving around in a Tesla after a few more arcs.

Grayvisc

Eh it is just physical contact, and it mostly segues into her trust with the printing press. I mean Erf was bathing naked with Aikerim and very little came out from that XD. Sometimes displays of affection are merely that.

Snus

Juicy for sure, printing press is definitely top ten -maybe top five- things in human history. Aside from that, there was a line where Yeva squeezed the matriarch's fingers and that's giving me vibes of potential romance developing. Now, you might call me paranoid for thinking that based on a single line, however, with this author every line is a potential clue. Honestly, I hope it wasn't a clue and that I'm just reading too much into it because I expect that the emotional fallout of such a development would drain more energy out of the story compared to any amount of interesting drama it would inject. Either way I'm keeping my eyes peeled.

yeeteris dedmeem

Yeah, I am trying to wrap up the "transition" period and begin the final leg of the book

Snus

Thanks for the chapter, this one was a doozy

Corey Thompson


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