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Heir of Troy: The Third Son - Chapter 41: The Alliance Letters

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Chapter 41: The Alliance Letters

He wrote the first letter on a Monday.

Not the first draft — he had been drafting in his head for three weeks, since the Argive delegation and Cassandra’s warning had arrived within ten days of each other and the two things had settled together in his thinking into a single shape: *the time for quiet preparation alone is ending. The time for visible alignment is beginning.*

He had discussed it with Ampelos first.

Not to ask permission — Ampelos had no authority over what Lysander did with his supply role connections. But Ampelos had information about the regional relationships that Lysander needed, and the conversation had clarified several things he had been uncertain about.

He wrote the first letter to Lycia.

---

The relationship with Lycia was the oldest of the potential alliances. The Lycian king sent fighters to Troy’s conflicts and Troy provided favorable passage terms through the Dardanelles for Lycian ships. It was, as Lysander had noted at the palace feast months ago, an alliance that had never been tested — built in easy conditions, never stressed.

He was not writing to test it.

He was writing to deepen it before it needed to be tested.

The letter was careful. He wrote it in the formal guest-friendship register, invoking the existing relationship, acknowledging its history. He offered two things: first, a formalization of the Dardanelles passage terms — written, specific, binding on both sides, the kind of document that gave the Lycian trading fleet certainty about their costs over a ten-year horizon. Second, a direct line of communication between the palace supply offices — a practical exchange of information about the eastern routes, which were relevant to Lycian trade as well as Troy’s.

He offered these things as commercial arrangements.

They were also, underneath the commercial framing, the beginning of something that would matter when the pressure came.

He read the letter three times.

He gave it to Fylon to carry to the harbor — the trading ship to Lycia left on Thursday.

Then he wrote the second letter.

---

Caria was different.

The relationship with Caria was newer and less warm — trading contact rather than political alignment, a series of commerce agreements managed by Ampelos’s office without the personal dimension that guest-friendship relationships had. The Carian leadership had changed twice in the past decade. The current king was someone Lysander knew almost nothing about.

He wrote this letter more carefully.

He did not invoke the existing relationship, which was thin enough that invoking it would feel presumptuous. He wrote instead as the supply overseer of the Trojan palace, proposing a coordination meeting between the Carian and Trojan trade administrators — practical, specific, about the northern maritime routes that both operations depended on.

Nothing political. Nothing that required a king to decide.

An administrator writing to administrators about a practical problem.

He had learned from Doros: find the level where the decision is easiest. A king deciding whether to align with Troy was a heavy decision with many variables. Two trade offices deciding whether to share route information was a light decision with obvious mutual benefit.

Start light. Build toward heavy.

He gave the Carian letter to Ampelos to route through his existing contacts there.

---

The Thracian letter was the most difficult.

The Thracian tribal confederacy to the north was not a palace economy — it was a collection of related tribes with a loose overall leadership that shifted depending on which tribe was currently most powerful. Writing to them required choosing a recipient, which required knowing who currently had enough standing to be worth writing to and enough stability to still be worth writing to when the letter arrived.

He spent a day on this question.

He consulted the last three years of northern trade records and found a pattern: two specific Thracian traders appeared consistently, handling the bulk of the overland commerce between the northern tribes and Troy’s markets. Both of them would know who had standing in the confederacy.

He wrote to both traders. Not a political letter — a commercial one, asking for information about the northern route conditions and specifically about which Thracian contacts would be most useful for Troy’s expanding supply network.

The traders would answer because answering cost them nothing and positioned them favorably.

The answers would tell him who to write to next.

Indirect. Slow. The only approach that worked when you did not have sufficient information to be direct.

He gave both letters to Fylon.

---

He had written four letters in three days — Lycia, Caria, and two to Thracian traders — when Ampelos came to his office.

He came without being invited, which meant he had heard about something.

He sat in the chair across the table.

He said: *"Lycia."*

*"Yes."*

*"You sent a letter to Lycia."*

*"Yes."*

*"Through Fylon. Not through the diplomatic office."*

*"Through the harbor. With the commercial correspondence. The letter is about trade terms — it belongs in the commercial channel."*

Ampelos looked at him.

*"The letter formalizes the Dardanelles passage terms for a ten-year horizon and establishes a direct communication line between supply offices."*

*"Yes."*

*"That is not purely commercial."*

*"The framing is commercial. The terms are commercial. The benefit to Lycia is commercial."*

*"And the benefit to Troy."*

*"Is also commercial. And strategic. Both things are true."*

Ampelos was quiet for a moment. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝓮𝒘𝙚𝙗𝒏𝙤𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝒐𝙢

He said: *"You should have told me."*

*"You are right. I should have. I am telling you now."*

*"You sent the letter three days ago."*

*"Yes. I am sorry. I was moving faster than I should have coordinated."*

Ampelos looked at him with the expression of a man who had received an apology that was genuine and was deciding what to do with it.

He said: *"Caria."*

*"Through your contacts. I gave the letter to you."*

*"I know. I have read it."*

*"And."*

*"It is well written. The administrator-to-administrator framing is correct — it removes the political weight that a direct royal approach would carry. I would have suggested something similar."*

*"But."*

*"But I would have suggested it. And then we would have discussed it. And then we would have decided together."*

Lysander said: *"Yes. That is how it should have worked."*

*"Why did it not."*

He thought about the honest answer.

He said: *"Because Cassandra told me something ten days ago that made me feel the pace needed to increase. And when I feel the pace needs to increase I sometimes move before I have coordinated fully."*

*"Cassandra told you something."*

*"She told me she cannot see something she should be able to see. Something large. In the next one or two seasons."*

Ampelos was still.

*"She cannot see it."*

*"She feels the absence of it. Something has happened or is happening that we do not have information about yet."*

*"And you responded by writing alliance letters."*

*"I responded by doing the things I had been planning to do anyway, faster than I had planned to do them."*

*"That is not always an improvement on the plan."*

*"I know. You are right."*

Ampelos looked at his hands.

He said: *"In the future. When Cassandra tells you something that changes the pace — tell me before you act on it."*

*"Yes."*

*"I am not asking to control what you do. I am asking to be part of deciding how fast."*

*"That is fair,"* Lysander said. *"Yes."*

Ampelos stood.

He said: *"The Lycian letter. I expect a response within three weeks — Lycia’s trade administration is efficient. The formalization of the passage terms is something they have wanted for years. They will say yes."*

*"I thought so."*

*"And the Thracian traders. Smart approach. I have used something similar in the eastern contacts. You will have useful answers within six weeks."*

He went to the door.

He said: *"The thing Cassandra cannot see. You do not know what it is."*

*"No."*

*"But you believe her."*

*"Always."*

Ampelos was quiet for a moment.

He said: *"So do I."*

He went out.

---

The Lycian response came in seventeen days.

Fylon brought it to his office in the morning — a sealed tablet, the Lycian administrative seal, the efficient response of a trade office that had been waiting for exactly this kind of offer.

He opened it.

The Lycian trade administrator had accepted the formalization of the Dardanelles terms. Had accepted the direct communication line. Had added — in a postscript that was carefully worded as personal rather than official — that the Lycian king had read the letter and wished to know whether the palace of Troy was interested in a broader discussion of regional stability at a convenient future time.

Not alliance. *Regional stability.*

The language of someone who wanted to say something but was not yet ready to say it directly.

He read the postscript three times.

He wrote on his shard: *Lycia is ready to talk. Wait for the right moment. Do not push.*

He sent Fylon to Ampelos with the tablet.

Then he sat in his office and thought about the Lycian king reading a commercial letter and sending back a carefully worded postscript about regional stability.

Something was moving.

Not from his push — the postscript suggested Lycia had been waiting for something like this, had been thinking about the same things from their own perspective, had their own concerns about the regional pressure building.

*The pressure is visible from there too,* he thought. *I am not the only one who sees it coming.*

He had known this academically. Knowing it through a postscript on a Lycian trade letter was different.

He picked up his shard.

Eight hundred and forty-four words.

*Keep going.*

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