Caillech was troubled. There was a rift between factions in Mega City that she thought was damaging to the Merovingian’s plan. Her faction, Consequence issued an order to all it’s members that anyone helping The Commission would be subject to discipline. The Commission was under an interdiction, according to her faction head, by all Merovingian factions. The reasons for this were not clear to Calliech. She’d asked and been told that the Commission had withdrawn their support from other Merovingian factions in the ongoing wars at Mara Central. Wara Central she preferred to call it because the fighting was constant there between Zionists and Merovingians, Zionists and Machines and Machines and Merovingians. Rarely had she visited Mara Central without seeing fierce battles, in which many loyal warriors of all factions fell. Battles she chose to avoid, except to offer the opportunity to resurrect to the warriors of her faction who fell in battle.
There was rumor that the Commission had accepted money from a faction to withdraw their support from other Merovingian factions at Mara. A rumor that Don Luccadello of the Commission heatedly denied. Caillech was confused. An old adage came to mind, “follow the money.” In this case she interpreted that adage to apply as a need to puzzle out who stands to gain, and who to lose by the interdiction against the Commission. She admitted to herself however, that she had inadequate information and that her poor brain alone was not capable of reasoning out this puzzle.
She believed though that an interdiction against the Commission was not in the best interest of the Merovingian factions. The Commission had been around a long while, and had always been, to the best of her knowledge, loyal to the beliefs and purposes of the Merovingian. She hoped to be able to mediate some solution. She hoped that the faction heads would be open to the idea to clarify the reasons for the interdiction and to heal the breach.
There was rumor that the Commission had accepted money from a faction to withdraw their support from other Merovingian factions at Mara. A rumor that Don Luccadello of the Commission heatedly denied. Caillech was confused. An old adage came to mind, “follow the money.” In this case she interpreted that adage to apply as a need to puzzle out who stands to gain, and who to lose by the interdiction against the Commission. She admitted to herself however, that she had inadequate information and that her poor brain alone was not capable of reasoning out this puzzle.
She believed though that an interdiction against the Commission was not in the best interest of the Merovingian factions. The Commission had been around a long while, and had always been, to the best of her knowledge, loyal to the beliefs and purposes of the Merovingian. She hoped to be able to mediate some solution. She hoped that the faction heads would be open to the idea to clarify the reasons for the interdiction and to heal the breach.
