07-28-2022, 03:02 PM
Unstable Government, Danger of Collapse
Sandra Pavía was irate. She strode along the corridors of the parliament building while typing on her tablet, causing aides and security to jump out of her way. After everything she had done to try and prevent another conflict between Xiomera and Huenya, it appeared that one was inevitable. She was angry at Calhualyana, yes, but more importantly she was angry with herself for being taken in by the propaganda that the Empress had wanted peace, and that she had acted to try and preserve something that would never stay.
Pavía did not want to go down in history as a useful tool of a totalitarian empire-builder. In spite of what Minister Arana of Milintica liked to tell the media about her, Pavía was a committed democrat who had merely made poor decisions and believed foolish things for a short while. But her eyes were open now, and Calhualyana would not be able to draw the wool over them again.
Her aides had drawn up the proposed extended sanctions package that Pavía now flicked through as she walked. The edits she made were not to weaken, as Arana would have accused, but rather to strengthen the sanctions and make sure that Xiomera felt the financial consequences of her actions. A military solution was out of the question, for numerous reasons ranging from the Coalition dispute down to the obvious lack of resources given the situation in Auria and the need to continue to monitor Mallacaland.
“Stop,” came a voice and Pavía had to come to a sudden halt or risk walking into the human who now stood, arms crossed, in front of her. She looked up to see Samantha Clavell, Pacifist, and current Minister for Culture & the Arts, ahead of her.
“Samantha,” Pavía said, her tone dripping with polite disdain. “To what do I owe the pleasure?”
“Your warmongering,” Clavell replied, glaring. “You continue to try and provoke Xiomera with every move you make. Let me tell you now, there will be no increase in sanctions if you and Alvarez expect this coalition to continue working.”
“Arana should’ve accused you of being a Xiomeran spy, not me,” Pavía muttered half under her breath.
“Minister Arana of Milintica is clearly working with you and your anti-Xiomeran plot to hide your true agenda with these false accusations. It is clear to me that people like you will not be happy with anything short of a world war to remake the world in your image. You are incapable of letting other nations exist without them conforming to your ideology.”
Pavía blinked. She paused for a second, then reached up and pinched her own arm. “No, I seem to be awake. Forgive me, Minister, but since when were you a subscriber to these bizarre conspiracy theories? You always seemed more intelligent to me than that.”
“You call this a theory, but I’ve seen the evidence in Auria. You violated the agreement between us, you have been using us, and so have the Greens. We should not have joined in alliance with them, and we certainly should have refused to work with you.”
“Are you on drugs?” Pavía asked. “No, really. I am so confused as to what’s happening right now. Maybe you should go speak to a doctor because I don’t think you’re well.”
“Just you wait,” Clavell warned, then she abruptly turned around and stalked away, heading back in the direction of the government offices. Pavía thought for a minute, and then turned to follow, part of her actually concerned that the Pacifist leader had been drugged or was ill. She couldn’t hope to meet the speed with which Clavell had vanished, so she traipsed along in the same direction instead.
Upon arriving back in the corridor that she came from, Pavía came to a halt as she noticed the scene in front of her. Lucie Scott, Green leader, and Clavell, were shouting at each other in the middle of the corridor while several Green-Pacifist ministers and their staff were packing up their offices.
“You talk of cooperation and then it turns out you intended this all along?” Scott was yelling. “Poach our members and then bring down the government to fit your agenda of punishing the Liberals? Instead of actually, you know, working to make Lauchenoiria better?”
“We would not be resigning if you hadn’t sold out to the warmongers!” Clavell replied.
“Oh really, then what’s with the leaked documents that suggest this was planned? Before the war in Auria, before even the 2020 elections? You won’t be happy until every member of the Liberal and Communist parties both are in jail or something? I’ve got news for you, Samantha, everyone lost people in the war, and they’re not going out there trying to collapse the government in some ill-considered revenge quest.”
“You will never understand,” Clavell hissed, and then clapped her hands together, spun around and began to leave, trailed by the others intending to resign. As she passed Pavía, she knocked against her shoulder, faking an accident. They turned the corner, leaving Pavía and Scott looking at each other.
“Sandra, you need to see this,” Lucie Scott said, crossing the distance and handing the Foreign Secretary a file. Pavía glanced down.
“We need to speak to Alvarez, don’t we?” Pavía groaned.
“Yeah,” sighed Scott, “we really do.”
Sandra Pavía was irate. She strode along the corridors of the parliament building while typing on her tablet, causing aides and security to jump out of her way. After everything she had done to try and prevent another conflict between Xiomera and Huenya, it appeared that one was inevitable. She was angry at Calhualyana, yes, but more importantly she was angry with herself for being taken in by the propaganda that the Empress had wanted peace, and that she had acted to try and preserve something that would never stay.
Pavía did not want to go down in history as a useful tool of a totalitarian empire-builder. In spite of what Minister Arana of Milintica liked to tell the media about her, Pavía was a committed democrat who had merely made poor decisions and believed foolish things for a short while. But her eyes were open now, and Calhualyana would not be able to draw the wool over them again.
Her aides had drawn up the proposed extended sanctions package that Pavía now flicked through as she walked. The edits she made were not to weaken, as Arana would have accused, but rather to strengthen the sanctions and make sure that Xiomera felt the financial consequences of her actions. A military solution was out of the question, for numerous reasons ranging from the Coalition dispute down to the obvious lack of resources given the situation in Auria and the need to continue to monitor Mallacaland.
“Stop,” came a voice and Pavía had to come to a sudden halt or risk walking into the human who now stood, arms crossed, in front of her. She looked up to see Samantha Clavell, Pacifist, and current Minister for Culture & the Arts, ahead of her.
“Samantha,” Pavía said, her tone dripping with polite disdain. “To what do I owe the pleasure?”
“Your warmongering,” Clavell replied, glaring. “You continue to try and provoke Xiomera with every move you make. Let me tell you now, there will be no increase in sanctions if you and Alvarez expect this coalition to continue working.”
“Arana should’ve accused you of being a Xiomeran spy, not me,” Pavía muttered half under her breath.
“Minister Arana of Milintica is clearly working with you and your anti-Xiomeran plot to hide your true agenda with these false accusations. It is clear to me that people like you will not be happy with anything short of a world war to remake the world in your image. You are incapable of letting other nations exist without them conforming to your ideology.”
Pavía blinked. She paused for a second, then reached up and pinched her own arm. “No, I seem to be awake. Forgive me, Minister, but since when were you a subscriber to these bizarre conspiracy theories? You always seemed more intelligent to me than that.”
“You call this a theory, but I’ve seen the evidence in Auria. You violated the agreement between us, you have been using us, and so have the Greens. We should not have joined in alliance with them, and we certainly should have refused to work with you.”
“Are you on drugs?” Pavía asked. “No, really. I am so confused as to what’s happening right now. Maybe you should go speak to a doctor because I don’t think you’re well.”
“Just you wait,” Clavell warned, then she abruptly turned around and stalked away, heading back in the direction of the government offices. Pavía thought for a minute, and then turned to follow, part of her actually concerned that the Pacifist leader had been drugged or was ill. She couldn’t hope to meet the speed with which Clavell had vanished, so she traipsed along in the same direction instead.
Upon arriving back in the corridor that she came from, Pavía came to a halt as she noticed the scene in front of her. Lucie Scott, Green leader, and Clavell, were shouting at each other in the middle of the corridor while several Green-Pacifist ministers and their staff were packing up their offices.
“You talk of cooperation and then it turns out you intended this all along?” Scott was yelling. “Poach our members and then bring down the government to fit your agenda of punishing the Liberals? Instead of actually, you know, working to make Lauchenoiria better?”
“We would not be resigning if you hadn’t sold out to the warmongers!” Clavell replied.
“Oh really, then what’s with the leaked documents that suggest this was planned? Before the war in Auria, before even the 2020 elections? You won’t be happy until every member of the Liberal and Communist parties both are in jail or something? I’ve got news for you, Samantha, everyone lost people in the war, and they’re not going out there trying to collapse the government in some ill-considered revenge quest.”
“You will never understand,” Clavell hissed, and then clapped her hands together, spun around and began to leave, trailed by the others intending to resign. As she passed Pavía, she knocked against her shoulder, faking an accident. They turned the corner, leaving Pavía and Scott looking at each other.
“Sandra, you need to see this,” Lucie Scott said, crossing the distance and handing the Foreign Secretary a file. Pavía glanced down.
“We need to speak to Alvarez, don’t we?” Pavía groaned.
“Yeah,” sighed Scott, “we really do.”
LIDUN President 2024 | she/her | Puppets: Kerlile, Glanainn, Yesteria, Zongongia, Zargothrax

