Exiled to a Foreign Land: Managing a Destitute Estate
Chapter 54: Heading to Avalondia

Chapter 54: Heading to Avalondia

Part 1

The private jet’s cabin hummed with the peculiar silence of extreme altitude, broken only by the soft whisper of recycled air and the occasional clink of crystal against crystal as Lydia adjusted the refreshment service with practiced precision. Philip stared out the porthole window, watching clouds drift past like cotton battlements against an endless azure expanse, his mind still reeling from the past forty-eight hours.

How had it come to this? The memory remained painfully fresh—that tense call, the way his hands had trembled as he learned that Elora had already rushed to Avalondia the night before the public announcement. Arthur himself had personally informed her on the phone that Kendrick had been severely injured, currently fighting for his life in an imperial hospital. The words echoed in Philip’s mind: critical condition, uncertain prognosis, utmost discretion required.

The entire Avalondian peerage had been quietly recalled. Lydia had briefed Philip about the House of Lords’ secret emergency session scheduled for July 22nd—a gathering that signaled just how grave the situation had become. The Duke’s cryptic warning echoed in his mind with chilling clarity: during times of crisis, "accidents" had a suspicious tendency to befall those who inconvenienced the powerful. It explained why their party was split across three separate aircraft, each taking different routes through carefully randomized flight paths. The Duke would only depart once Philip had landed safely in Avalondia.

His brooding was abruptly interrupted by movement outside the window. Philip’s jaw dropped, his reflection in the glass mirroring his disbelief.

"What in the name of—"

Surrounding their aircraft in perfect formation flew what could only be described as a flock of mythical creatures. They looked like phoenixes carved from living ice, their crystalline wings catching and refracting sunlight into prismatic cascades that danced across the jet’s fuselage. Blue flames danced along their tail feathers, leaving trails of frost in the air that somehow didn’t immediately sublimate despite the extreme altitude. Each bird was easily the size of a horse, their eyes glowing with an intelligence that suggested more than mere animal cunning—there was purpose in their gaze, a sense of duty that transcended instinct.

"Ah," Lydia said, following his gaze with remarkable calm as she set down a fresh pot of Earl Grey. "The Duke’s security insisted on the Frost Phoenix escort. Summoned creatures from the Imperial Menagerie. Quite expensive, but excellent for intercepting any... unexpected aerial threats."

"Frost phoenixes," Philip repeated flatly, his voice carrying a mix of wonder and resignation. Of course. Because regular security wasn’t ostentatious enough, he thought to himself, though he had to admit the sight was breathtaking.

Philip turned from the window, still trying to process this blend of early-1900s imperial grandeur merged seamlessly with modern conveniences through magic. The cabin of the leased jet was surprisingly modest—polished wood panels that spoke of craftsmanship from a bygone era, leather seats that had seen better decades but retained their dignity, and fixtures that whispered of faded glory rather than screaming wealth. Even noble-level services, it seemed, could be rented for singular trips. The Duke’s security team had spent six exhausting hours examining every rivet and wire before declaring it safe, much to the leasing company’s bewilderment and the pilot’s barely concealed irritation.

"Master Philip," Lydia’s voice carried that particular tone of professional concern she’d perfected over years of service, a subtle blend of deference and maternal worry. "You’ve been staring at those clouds for twenty minutes. Shall I prepare something stronger than tea?"

Philip managed a weak smile, appreciating her attempt at levity. "Unless you can prepare something that makes hypersonic missiles miss their targets, I think tea will suffice."

Natalia sat primly in the adjacent seat, her perfect posture making the aged leather look like a throne. She’d been quietly studying a thick tome titled Imperial Court Etiquette: A Comprehensive Guide for the past hour, occasionally making small sounds of interest that Philip found oddly endearing—soft "hmms" and thoughtful "ahs" that punctuated her reading like musical notes.

"I still can’t believe she’s already there," Philip murmured, the worry in his voice unmistakable. "Elora left before the news even broke publicly."

"Sir Arthur called her personally," Lydia confirmed, settling gracefully into the seat across from him with the fluid motion of someone accustomed to navigating turbulence both literal and metaphorical. "The Imperial First Minister may play the fool in public, but he understands the importance of... managing information flow to those who matter."

Philip’s thoughts turned to Albert, left behind with explicit instructions to oversee the compliance and legal aspects of their real estate project sale and to gradually liquidate Philip’s portfolio and trust holdings whenever possible. The urgency to respond to unfolding geopolitical events had made such measures necessary—liquid capital would be far more useful than tied-up investments if the situation deteriorated further.

The thought of Albert brought Philip’s mind spiraling back to that crucial meeting in his study yesterday, a day after his world had been shattered by the news of Kendrick’s potential death. Suddenly, all economic concerns had seemed minuscule compared to what had happened to his closest friend in this world, and its potential repercussions.

The morning sun had slanted through the study windows, illuminating motes of dust that danced like tiny golden coins above scattered financial documents. Garrett had commandeered the entire eastern wall, covering it with charts, graphs, and projections that looked more like battle plans than market analysis—a testament to his view that finance was indeed warfare by other means.

Present were Philip, Laura, Garrett, Albert, Lydia, and Natalia—the latter observing curiously from the side with her characteristic blend of innocence and uncanny insight that never failed to unsettle visitors.

"The fundamental issue," Garrett had said, adjusting his wire-rimmed spectacles with the gravity of a general planning a campaign, "is that markets have priced in a negotiated settlement. The hypersonic missile incident between Arussia and the Osgorreich-led coalition has shattered those assumptions."

He pointed to a bewildering array of curves and indicators with the enthusiasm of a professor revealing universal truths. "See here—sovereign yields in both Republican and Imperial bonds are spiking dramatically."

"Plain language, please," Philip had requested, rubbing his temples as numbers swam before his eyes.

Laura translated from her perch by the window, sunlight catching the highlights in her hair. "The market thought the grown-ups would sort things out before anyone did anything truly stupid. They were wrong."

"Precisely!" Garrett beamed, his excitement at the intellectual challenge temporarily overcoming the gravity of the situation. "Now, let me explain the cascading effects. Rising Continental Republic treasury yields directly impact Yorgoria’s mortgage market, since the Continental Republic is at the heart of the global financial system, and its treasury bills serve as the de facto risk-free rate for pricing assets. Moreover, our fixed-rate mortgages aren’t truly fixed—they reset every three to five years."

"Because the banks have oligopolistic power," Laura added smoothly, her legal mind cutting to the regulatory heart of the matter. "Six major institutions control ninety percent of the market. They’ve successfully lobbied against true long-term fixed rates, shifting all interest-rate risk to homeowners. So if yields spike longer than a few months, many homeowners will be in for a nasty surprise when their mortgage renewals come due from historically low rates taken out a few years ago."

Garrett nodded vigorously, his hands sketching invisible graphs in the air. "And with commodity prices resuming their surge due to renewed escalation risks, inflationary pressures are intensifying. Central banks can’t ease monetary policy without stoking further inflation. We’re effectively trapped in a high-rate environment."

"It gets worse," Lydia interjected grimly, her usual composure cracking slightly to reveal genuine concern. "The escalating tariff wars and heavy taxation to fund defense spending have triggered a wave of quiet layoffs. There’s a complete hiring freeze across government agencies to cut costs, coupled with many older employees being pressured into early retirement."

Laura smoothly continued Lydia’s thought, the two women working in unconscious harmony. "And these layoffs in the private sector are fueling anti-immigrant sentiment. The government’s recent abrupt tightening of immigration policies was a direct response to shifting public attitudes, further diminishing foreign investment interest in our real estate market."

Garrett then stepped forward again, pulling out another chart with the flourish of a magician revealing his greatest trick. "Meanwhile, European capital is fleeing to safety. But with Yorgoria’s reputation damaged by recent civil unrest, that capital is flowing primarily into the Continental Republic’s booming stock market instead."

The System chose precisely that moment to materialize beside Philip as an alluring lingerie model, invisible to the others. She leaned in close, her breath somehow warm against his ear despite her intangible nature, and whispered seductively in his mind, "Such brilliance and confidence. If Garrett were a bunny, I’d have jumped him instantly."

Philip’s nose started bleeding profusely, crimson drops spattering across the financial documents.

"Master Philip!" Lydia rushed forward with her ever-present handkerchief, concern and exasperation warring on her face. "Are you alright?"

"Just... my brain overloading from Garrett’s genius," Philip managed, gratefully accepting the cloth while trying to ignore the System’s tinkling laughter, while Garrett visibly glowed with pride, his chest puffing out slightly.

Garrett, oblivious to Philip’s internal struggle, continued confidently, his voice taking on the cadence of a seasoned strategist. "Given these conditions, our strategic direction is clear: we must prioritize emotional appeal in our retail marketing strategy. Any logically minded person wouldn’t be buying in this market right now, leaving only emotionally driven buyers. Therefore, I recommend spending $10,000 continental dollars on minor repairs across all 167 units to restore them to mint condition—given that the inventory completion occurred a year ago, and minor disrepair has set in from lack of use."

He paused dramatically, glancing at Albert, who nodded supportively. Garrett continued with increasing enthusiasm, "Additionally, we should allocate another $5,000 for landscaping and street renovation to transform the entire development community into a picturesque scene, straight out of a fairy tale. After all, within many aspiring middle-class families, the husband is typically busy working, leaving house viewings to the wife—and in my experience, inside every lady remains a girl dreaming of a fairy tale come true."

Albert neatly summarized, his voice carrying the authority of years in real estate, "In short, Garrett will coordinate the creation of a picturesque summer image that appeals to hearts to boost the retail sales while I will ensure the deals go through with minimal financing issues and leverage the retail sales to boost the negotiated sales price of the entire project to an institutional investor. Of course, I will coordinate with Laura to ensure everything is completely compliant with applicable laws and regulations."

A thoughtful silence briefly filled the room, broken only by the tick of the grandfather clock in the corner.

"So you all think that a further escalation in the war is likely?" Philip asked, his voice heavy with the weight of implications.

"Yes, given the current situation with Arussia and Osgorreich trading accusations at each other and the Empire calling in all the peers for an emergency session, I would say yes," Lydia answered in a matter-of-fact way that somehow made the prospect even more chilling.

"So what has the Empire’s response been? Surely, such an event would require some serious statement?" Philip questioned, leaning forward in his chair.

"Unfortunately," Lydia remarked dryly, her voice smooth and sardonic as aged whiskey, "disputes between states function in a very similar fashion as disputes between individuals. Justice often requires deep wallets to ensure it is served. The only difference is that individuals hire lawyers while states hire soldiers. Both are defense spendings to ensure a necessary response, but just different sorts and scales. But right now, the Empire is in no condition to... afford the necessary response..."

Philip raised an eyebrow slightly, prompting Lydia to elaborate smoothly, her tone taking on the quality of someone revealing open secrets.

"As the Duke candidly pointed out to me," Lydia continued knowingly, "the current administration of the Continental Republic isn’t particularly willing to foot the bill for Avalondia’s necessary defense actions as was traditionally done by the previous administrations behind the scenes. The Empire leveraged its apparent might, sustained by republican funding and weapon supply, to help achieve strategic objectives that are beneficial to both the Republic and the Empire. This way, the Republic’s objectives could be achieved in the most direct and efficient manner without ever tarnishing the Republic’s carefully cultivated image of being the beacon of justice and liberty for all under the Sun."

She paused, a smirk tugging at the corner of her lips, and added with delicious irony, "It’s an open secret in the imperial administration that the Republic is the Shadow Empire, the true empire hiding in the shadow of our Empire. In fact, the Avalondian bureaucrats often refer to the Republic as the Shadow Master, or ’SM,’ for short."

"Where have I heard that term before?" Philip felt the term oddly familiar but couldn’t quite recall why, the memory dancing just beyond his mental grasp.

Natalia, who had been quietly listening with rapt attention, interrupted proudly, her face lighting up with academic enthusiasm, "I know! SM stands for Samarium from the periodic table. That’s why it sounds so familiar!"

Lydia coughed awkwardly, a rare break in her composure, while Garrett and Laura’s faces visibly reddened, suddenly finding the ceiling patterns fascinating.

As the plane banked slightly, adjusting its course to avoid a storm system, it pulled Philip back to the present. Through the window, he could see the Frost Phoenixes adjusting their formation with mechanical precision, their movements synchronized like a well-rehearsed aerial ballet. One turned its head to look directly at him, and he could have sworn it winked—a distinctly un-birdlike gesture that suggested these creatures possessed far more personality than their ethereal appearance suggested.

The System chose that moment to materialize again, perched on the arm of his chair in an outfit that defied description—a crimson bustier paired with stockings that had tax forms printed on them in tiny, meticulous script.

"Quite the lifestyle change, isn’t it?" she purred in his mind, crossing her legs with deliberate slowness. "From mundane mediocrity to magical magnificence. Though I must say, even nobility leases their toys these days."

She struck a philosophical pose, one finger tapping her chin thoughtfully. "Everything is for lease in a world where aristocrats hold declining fortunes but unyielding pride. After all, economics is merely humanity’s art of allocating scarce resources efficiently; politics is the endless struggle over who gets the right to allocate them; and war—war is merely politics enforced through violence. It’s all resource distribution, Philip, dressed up in different costumes."

Before Philip could delve deeper into her philosophical musings—which, despite their source, often contained uncomfortable truths—the System’s expression shifted to something more businesslike, her playful demeanor replaced by corporate efficiency.

"And speaking of resource allocation," she said, producing a glowing ledger from thin air with a theatrical flourish, "here’s your latest bill for Natalia. Better address that now before you’re completely swept away by your emotional reunion with Elora."

Part 2

The afternoon sun cast long shadows across the manicured lawns of St. Celestica’s Sanctuary, a name that existed on no public maps and appeared in no medical directories. From the winding approach road, it might have been mistaken for one of Avalondia’s grand country estates—honey-colored limestone walls draped in climbing roses that seemed to glow in the golden light, ancient oaks providing stately shade with branches that had witnessed centuries, and gardens that seemed to have been painted by the Creator’s own hand with strokes of impossible perfection.

The July gardens were at their peak magnificence, a cruel display of life at its most vibrant. Delphiniums stood in military-precise rows, their blue spires reaching toward cloudless skies like prayers made manifest. Roses of every conceivable hue—from the palest cream that matched fresh parchment to the deepest crimson that echoed spilled blood—perfumed the air with almost narcotic intensity. Lavender hedges hummed with bees whose industrious work seemed to mock the stillness within the sanctuary’s walls, while ornamental ponds reflected weeping willows whose branches trailed in the water like grieving ladies’ hair, creating ripples that disturbed the perfect mirror surface.

It was a cruel joke, Elora thought bitterly as she stood at her dormitory window, that such beauty should mask a place where the Empire’s elite came to die—or worse, to hover in that liminal space between life and death that modern magical medicine had made possible.

She pressed her palm against the window glass, feeling its subtle vibration—a thrumming that spoke of power carefully contained. The windows here weren’t merely glass but crystallized mana barriers, capable of withstanding anything short of a direct Realm Guardian assault. Every pastoral view concealed defensive emplacements hidden with artistic precision. The decorative fountains doubled as mana amplifiers, their pleasant burbling masking the hum of arcane energies. Even the roses had been bred with thorns that could pierce military-grade armor, their beauty as lethal as it was captivating.

Three days. Three days since Sir Arthur’s call had shattered her academic tranquility like a stone through stained glass.

Three days of medical terms that danced around truth like courtiers around scandal, never quite touching the reality they circled.

"Extensive reconstruction required." "Challenging physiological parameters." "Aggressive intervention protocols."

Never the simple words she craved with every fiber of her being: He’ll live. He’ll be himself again. He’ll still be my brilliant, insufferable, beloved brother.

A knock at her door interrupted her brooding, the sound sharp and professional in the medicinal quiet. She turned to find Dr. Amara Okondwo, the chief of neural reconstruction—a woman whose dark skin seemed to absorb light while her silver hair reflected it, creating an almost otherworldly presence that spoke of decades spent mastering the intersection of magic and medicine. The doctor’s accent carried traces of the southern continent, melodious vowels softened by years in the north, one of dozens of international experts the Empire had lured here with promises of unlimited resources and impossible challenges.

"Lady Nernwick," Dr. Okondwo’s voice held that particular gentleness medical professionals reserved for delivering non-news, each word carefully measured to convey concern without commitment. "I wanted to update you on your brother’s progress."

"Progress," Elora repeated flatly, tasting the word like bitter medicine. "That suggests movement toward a destination. Yet you still won’t let me see him."

The doctor’s expression flickered—sympathy warring with protocol in a battle Elora had seen too many times over the past three days. "The resuscitation process is at a delicate stage. His neural pathways are... adapting to the new tissue matrices. Visitors could disrupt the integration."

New tissue matrices.

Elora’s scientific mind translated the euphemism easily enough, her years of medical study serving her too well. They were growing him new parts to replace whatever he had lost in the attack—regenerating flesh and bone and perhaps even fragments of soul. The question that haunted her sleepless nights was: would he ever be the same? Could manufactured flesh hold the same memories, the same essential spark that made Kendrick who he was?

"When can I see him?" she asked, knowing the answer before it came, the words a ritual they performed daily.

"Soon. Perhaps tomorrow, if the overnight observations show continued stability."

Always tomorrow. Always soon. Always dancing around the truth she could see in the careful distance the staff maintained, the way conversations died when she entered common areas like flowers wilting at first frost.

After Dr. Okondwo departed with another apologetic smile, Elora found herself wandering the facility’s corridors with the aimless purpose of the grieving. Even here, in this place of medical miracles and quiet desperation, the Empire’s obsession with beauty persisted. The medical staff might be chosen for brilliance, but the service staff—those who brought meals, cleaned rooms, provided comfort to waiting families—had clearly been selected from a different catalog entirely.

A young man with the bronze skin and jade eyes common to the Eastern colonies brought her tea, his movements graceful as a dancer’s, each gesture choreographed to soothe without intruding. The woman arranging flowers in the lobby could have graced any fashion mirror-zine, her unusual combination of platinum curls and mahogany skin speaking to the Empire’s increasingly exotic diversity—or perhaps its talent for collecting beautiful things from across its domains. Even the security guards, trying to look inconspicuous in their tailored suits, possessed the kind of sculptured features that suggested genetic artwork rather than random chance.

It should have been comforting, this careful curation of beauty amidst medical horror. Instead, it felt like another layer of deception, as if sufficient aesthetic perfection could somehow offset the horrors taking place in sterile rooms behind locked doors—a beautiful mask over an ugly truth.

Elora found herself in the facility’s observatory—a glass-domed space that served as both meditation area and tactical observation post. The afternoon light filtered through treated glass that could turn opaque at a thought, offering panoramic views of the surrounding countryside while preventing any external surveillance. Here, at least, the pretense dropped slightly; the beauty served a purpose beyond mere aesthetics.

She settled onto a cushioned bench, the fabric whispering against her dress, finally allowing her analytical mind to engage with the puzzle that had been gnawing at her for days like a persistent ache.

The timeline didn’t work.

The hypersonic strike had occurred weeks ago, according to the public announcement that had set the Empire buzzing with outrage and fear. Yet she’d spoken with Kendrick via mirror-call the night after she received the news of the hypersonic attack. He’d looked tired, yes, perhaps distracted with shadows under his eyes that spoke of sleepless nights, but whole. Intact. Very much alive and himself, even if something in his eyes had seemed... distant, as if he were looking at her from very far away.

So when had he actually been injured?

Her fingers traced abstract patterns on her skirt as she constructed and discarded theories with the methodical precision of a trained researcher. A second, unreported attack? A gradual degradation from some exotic weapon that killed slowly, inexorably? Or—her mind shied away from the possibility even as it formed like ice in her chest—had the person on the other side of the call been not Kendrick at all, but rather the product of some advanced illusion magic, the kind of which had never been seen before? A puppet wearing her brother’s face while the real Kendrick lay dying?

Before Elora could pursue her increasingly dark speculations further, the observatory’s doors opened again with a soft pneumatic hiss, admitting a young orderly whose cherubic features and riot of copper curls made him look barely out of academy—another beautiful face in this gallery of the aesthetically blessed. His accent, when he spoke, carried the musical lilt of the northern regions of Avalondia, all soft consonants and lilting vowels.

"Lady Nernwick? You have visitors arriving. They’re being processed through security now."

Visitors? Elora hadn’t expected anyone. Her mind raced through possibilities—Philip? Other members of their social circle? She smoothed her skirts and descended to the main reception area, a space that managed to suggest both welcome and warning with its soaring ceilings and strategically placed guards.

The main doors opened with mechanical precision, gears whirring almost silently.

Two figures entered, silhouetted against the afternoon glare like paper cutouts against flame. As her eyes adjusted to the backlight, Elora felt her breath catch—not from joy, but from a familiar cocktail of disappointment and resigned recognition.

They moved with the measured pace of those who’d never needed to hurry because the world had always waited for them, rearranging itself to suit their schedules. The man’s mahogany skin bore the deep tan of someone who spent his days under harsher suns than Avalondia’s gentle rays, inspecting mining operations and calculating profit margins under foreign stars. The woman beside him maintained the pale, porcelain complexion that spoke of carefully controlled environments and religious sunscreen application, every inch of exposed skin protected from the aging touch of ultraviolet radiation. Both possessed the kind of austere beauty that came from generations of selective breeding and careful curation—not the soft beauty of the service staff, but the sharp-edged elegance of those who viewed aesthetic perfection as simply another business asset.

Her parents.

Lord Marcus Nernwick still cut an impressive figure at sixty-two, his silver-touched beard meticulously groomed to convey both wisdom and vigor, his suit clearly tailored in the Continental Republic’s capital rather than Avalondia’s fashion houses—a subtle but unmistakable statement of where his true loyalties lay. The small pin on his lapel—a stylized diamond crossed with a mining pick—declared his true allegiance more clearly than any words: profit before country, resources before relationships.

Lady Josephine Nernwick had aged with the same calculated precision she brought to everything—every line carefully controlled through discrete magical intervention, every gray hair a deliberate choice rather than nature’s insistence. Her dress spoke of Francipanian couture, its understated elegance worth more than most estates, but the hardness in her sapphire eyes belonged to no nation except the empire of profit. Even in her late fifties, she maintained a figure that would spark desire in the hearts of men decades younger.

Three days late. Of course. Even their son’s potential death couldn’t interrupt the sacred rhythms of extraction projects, the holy calendar of quarterly reports and production targets.

"Elora," her mother said, the name falling from her lips like a ledger entry, acknowledged but not felt.

"Mother. Father." Elora kept her voice level, professional, matching their tone with practiced ease. "How good of you to come."

Her father’s eyes swept the reception area with the calculating gaze of a man estimating the value of everything he saw—the marble, the artwork, the very air they breathed converted to potential profit. "The Kimbeer negotiations couldn’t be postponed. Fifty million carats don’t really wait. You must surely understand."

Of course she didn’t, Elora thought with bitter clarity. And neither would a son struggling to survive while you’re counting profits.

"Have you seen him?" her mother asked, the question perfunctory, already knowing the answer from Elora’s presence in the reception rather than at a bedside vigil.

"They say tomorrow. Perhaps."

"Ah." A universe of disinterest compressed into a single syllable.

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