Epilogue 2.3: Noticed Imperfections
The governance of the Blackgard Union, and the imperial family as proxy for it, was as much a product of excellent circumstance as it was excellent governance. Without the Last Calamity as a foundational event, it’s highly unlikely that such sweeping and effective changes could be implemented. It was a great reset of the board, leaving behind a power vacuum that was taken advantage of for positive effect.
In the Age of Fury, cracks in the foundation began to show themselves. These cracks were even apparent in the imperial family, who reeled after learning of Prince Enrico’s death. It affected their largely blissful lives deeply. The necessity of controlling the situation in the Great Chu meant that their parents weren’t as present as they normally were, and this generation of the imperial family grew up differently because of that.
Third Princess Rose of Vasquer
Born 10AC
As the eldest, Rose was least affected by the Age of Fury. Named either for a birthmark on her neck or after the daughter of the former House Parbon, Rose has proven to be her mother’s daughter in more than appearance alone. She is a scholar of some acclaim, a magic researcher, and a curiosity-seeker who remained largely uninterested in other people during the whole of her childhood and most of her adulthood. She and her father were quite close before the Age of Fury, but its events put some distance between them.
During the Age of Fury, she was the one to discover and publicize the cause of Prince Enrico’s death—specifically, a poison that targeted the magic within the imperial family’s black blood. That finding further stoked the flames of rage prevailing in the country at the time, because it meant it was a deliberate attack on the imperial family. Garm claims that she expressed regret for publicizing this fact, as it only added fuel to the fire.
Beyond her own work, she patronized institutions that discovered great things under her direction. Most notable among these discoveries is the printing press, black powder, the microscope, and most of all what would become the foundation of the form of power vital in the Age of Revolutions.
She took little credit for each of these discoveries, claiming her father’s stories had inspired the majority of them.
Fourth Princess Lieselotte of Vasquer
