In order to ensure and sustain the necessary degree of unity among any and all groupings of individuals and populations, tactics must demonstrate in practice that it is only The Infinite Game brings all together.
The Eternal War | Doctrine | Tactics | Responsibles’ Principle
“How good of you to join me.” Lord Commander Harrison says with his patrician English voice, as the aged woman seats herself across from him. “A meeting is long past overdue, I should think.”
“Our meeting is a nuisance I would be done with quickly.” Mehthilte responds in her terse Swiss-German voice, as she seats herself, then looks across the high polished teak table into Harrison’s unique elder eyes.
There’s a polished scalpel’s edge, Harrison notes, to this woman’s tone. She’s one used to exercising power and control over others, from arm’s length. One not used to meeting with her enemies.
It hadn’t been easy to arrange, this meeting, quickly after the incident in San Francisco, the strike on the sanctuary, shortly after the abduction of the Lord Commander and his people. A meet here in the old port of Monaco, guests of His Royal Highness, on his private motor yacht. Neutral terrain for both parties, The Order and l’Insitut, for the leaders of each organization.
Both had their teams deep sweep and scan the vessel before this historic sit-down between the heads of each organization, never before in history, having sat face to face. The sweeps had been done out of habit. As there’s little concern of subterfuge nor of threat from the Prince and his people. Not given his need, as a small indefensible principality, to remain neutral in the great power games of the elites who lived and worked and who met in and passed through the little state run straight up the cliffs from the sea.
Mehthilte cannot stand this man, instantly, this leader of an order of men very little to nothing is known about. This unknown order of men had stopped three well-planned, coordinated and executed attacks, greatly disrupting plans. The greater part of the distaste she feels, deeply. Is that this one personifies the World of Man, something can’t be fully understood, subverted, suborned. Something must be fought with all vigor and every dirty trick there is. But worse, he and his organization, the members thereof, obviously secure the enemies of l”Insitut, those who’ve not joined in the great change. Those who could stand against it. These must be destroyed!
Oh but, careful. She knows this man, aged as he may be, is yet exceedingly dangerous. Not only given the physiological differences between a man and a woman, even at the advanced age they share. No, because this one will have come to this meeting fully prepared to die. His organization prepared for his death. Kill this one, kill the top three of their organization, and nothing will change. The organization will go on as if nothing happened. This being one of the great threats when dealing with the World of Man, unlike when dealing with the World of Woman. These men, even the most powerful among them, are always actually fully prepared to die.
“We find your watchers and your private military assets to be rather predictable.” This, a pure supposition on the part of the analytic team of The Order. That the abduction of himself three weeks ago, the strike against Prince Peter in Singapore two years prior, and the recent strike on San Francisco sanctuary, were all of a piece supported, if not orchestrated, by l’Institut, with at least the permission of this woman sitting across from him now. Her reaction confirms it. The almost imperceptible perturbation at the right corner of her mouth, corresponding with a slight shift in the posture and muscular tension of her torso.
Yes! These men, whatever organization they belong to, must be identified, rooted out and destroyed! But who are they? Who do they represent and work for? This man, these men, they know too much, far more than any nation state intelligence entities. How? L’Institut and its many predecessors had remained hidden by the most sophisticated and well-resourced information operations the world has ever known. Hell, her predecessors had invented information warfare, millennia ago. She’d need give her best performance to date, if she’s to attain such knowledge, get out of here to share the knowledge of who these men are with the watchers and their people.
Harrison looks out the wrap around windows of the salon of HRH’s eighty-five-meter motor yacht. Out to the old port beyond, not a single other vessel within this area of the port. As he looks out, he can’t but appreciate the effort and cost HRH must have incurred to ensure not another vessel was within proximity to his own, for this meeting. Favors must have been called in; obligations must have been incurred to make this so.
Harrison and Mehthilte, seated opposite one another, at one end of the highly polished massive, long teak table takes up the entire center of the salon deck of HRH’s private yacht. The yacht's interior a masterpiece of understated elegance, with minimal artificial trimming. Instead, the focus is on the rich, natural wood that lines the walls and floors, complemented by brass accents and plush, cream-colored furnishings. There is as little artificial in the salon as is possible. Speaking of immense cost born, immense care given, in the making of this vessel and its fittings. A reflection of respect for the new while hearkening back to an older time now receding rapidly into the distance behind. As evidenced by this very meeting between implacable enemies who’ve battled one another for thousands of years, though never before so directly meeting.
Private and state provided security are out in the perimeter of the port, ensuring no one approaches the yacht and the meeting occurring there. This, of course, is augmented by security assets of l’Institut and The Order, with medical and heavily armed and prepared men of both on the vessel and in the immediate surround. Close in security augmented by layers out to sea, and spread throughout the city and up the hillside, full-spectrum security in depth. Only royals and heads of state experienced such security in Monaco. Neither had come unprepared for betrayal and violence.
“We see you.” The message had been delivered by courier directly to her office only three days ago. Message delivered along with one other item in the wax sealed envelope; the Swiss ID of the Watcher assigned to Prince Peter. On the back of the message being the contact number of an attorney in Paris. An attorney with a fascinating story to tell, of how much this man and his organization, whatever it is, knows.
“What exactly are we seeking here?” Mehthilte with her most carefully practiced imperial maternal tone of voice.
“Why, the future of the species, of course. Is this not what we’re always seeking?” Harrison, in his most loving paternal tone of voice. Testing assumption number one. The visceral negative response to the tone of loving and protective father in his voice is immediate, rippling through Mehthilte’s entire system.
“What exactly does we see you and to be predictable imply?” What the Parisienne attorney had shared with her in their secure call, regarding this organization and its men, had been enough to bring her to the meeting on such short notice. Only just enough. For The Order’s analysts, what had been shared was enough to provide a testable proof for a supposition.
Ah, so, the supposition’s correct. Harrison thinks to himself. This lady and her l’Institut are behind all three incidents. The immense resources and capacities necessary for just such actions implies there’s far more to this organization and their mission than merely preventing the restoration, than genetic manipulation. There’s more here, far more than the extensive intelligence capacities of The Order have yet identified. Time to test assumption number two.
“The species is bifurcating. One path the organic, the other synthetic.” Yes, that struck home. The echo of it in the old blue eyes of this woman of power, obviously of real power, though not yet fully known nor understood power. The analysts will want to know how far this goes, where that power may reside. Harrison continues, “The course of life must be controlled. Great change must be brought about.”
That did the trick. Hours upon hours of analytic meetings had been held aboard the Aquitaine, elsewhere, beginning hours after the attempted murder of Prince Peter. Analytics and intelligence efforts which had taken on a furious pace and energy hours after Harrison’s return from his allowed abduction. Efforts stepping up yet again when the signals of a pending strike on the San Francisco Sanctuary and Princess Morozov began to come in, days prior to the betrayal and attack. No matter these efforts, nothing precise nor obvious had been determined about this lady and her l’Institut, other than their heavy investment in genetics research. Not till now, not till her reactions to these probes.
“The shackles and freedom of sexual reproduction are to be broken.” Mehthilte responding, in kind. She and her people must know who and what this man represents. Could it be there are allies out there which are not only not owned, but which are not known? Whoever this man is, whoever he represents, to get her here, in this fashion, means he has real power, dangerous power. How could such an entity even exist after all these millennia of careful manipulation and control?
“Are we not now the masters of life?” Harrison asks in reply. Might it be? The great mothers, the true matriarchs, had long whispered of just such an, ancient, shadowy group of women and their pet males, their predatory parasitic men. Men allowed to prey on women and children as payment for the cover and security these males provide to this coven of women bent on one thing, total and absolute control of human reproduction, human genetics.
Allies? Mehthilte must find how deep this goes, this possible shared ground. Though, more likely, this man merely spouts words. Words meant to deceive. Men being little more than useful idiots. She must be wary, however. Even useful idiots can be dangerous. “For too long we’ve allowed randomness. Look at the rot in human genetics.”
“We’ve become far too comfortable having lost the old ways of death and control once kept our species healthy.” Harrison, in response, probing further. The paternal father, the loving father, dropped from his voice and posture. These now matching the cold and efficient tone and presence of his guest, this aloof and haughty elder woman. Her tone and posture that of the all-consuming mother. His now that of the all-destructive father, to match.
“Now the old divisions have mostly been restored, the old distinctions, they must be forced to existentially fear one another.” Could it be? Mehthilte must know the truth of this man and his people. Her people must know if these are allies or no. And if no, then this man and his people cannot be allowed to leave this vessel alive. No matter if their death means a fight out of the port and Monaco itself.
“Fear to such degree they allow a solution. A hard and ugly solution.” Now he’s placed her and her people, from the slight smile at the corner of her lips. These are those warned of, the ancient eugenicists, their undesirables lists yet the same as the last time this genetic control malevolence flared its ugly head in the last century.
“Hard shift to the right of the left proceeds now, does it?” This he asks in the most all-loving father voice at his disposal. A voice and tone matched fully by the relaxed yet poised posture of his body, that of a man prepared for battle in defense of his children. The reaction in his guest is immediate. Shock and rage! Her hand going up to the right lapel of her woolen jacket, her fingers tracing the seem there. Not out of nervousness. No, a woman like this doesn’t get nervous. Ah, yes! A weapon contained therein, one the sensors and search missed. Toxins!
“You’ll share with us all your genetic repair knowledge.” This stated calm and mellow, yet firm and deathly serious. Not a request, but an outright ultimatum and threat. “The damage you’ve done over the course of the past century will be undone.” A cold hard smile of a battle-hardened man emanates from Harrison. “We’ll not allow the genocide you’ve so carefully prepared and set in motion.”
Her reaction is immediate. Mehthilte presses the two cannisters containing the genetically engineered pathogen, woven into the seam of her jacket. Exhaling strongly as she does. Both to spread the pathogen more broadly and as a defense. Even though the virus is coded to be inert to those with the proper genetic sequence, it doesn’t do to take anything for granted when dealing with biological weapons. History has shown they far too often turn on their creators.
The smile which spreads across the face of this disconcertingly calm and mellow, yet still lithe and fit old man, is the most frightening thing Mehthilte, born and raised in deadly power, has ever experienced. He should be dead now, less than a minute after she’d released the pathogen intended to kill him and his men outside. They should all be dead by now. Her men having had their own cannisters immediately release, carbon radio keyed to her own cannisters, as they were.
“You do realize, we’ve been at this genetic warfare game for as long as you.” Not a question, merely a statement of fact. “Yes, I do mean for millennia.” Let that sink in. Let her and her people realize they’re not the only centuries and millennia old entities still extant, hidden and immensely capable in the world. Some few of the old Orders are yet capable l in the world. In the old ways of hidden warfare. Some equally well versed in genetics and technology, in weapons and counters.
At a whistle from Harrison, the main door to the salon from the aft deck opens, two of his men slipping inside before closing the door, taking up positions beside it, casually yet prepared for violence. Mehthilte catching a glimpse of her men seated ‘detained’ outside. All so innocent looking to anyone observing from a distance.
“Who are you?” Mehthilte, her anger not containable any longer. Anger tinged with a bit of dread.
“We’re the keepers of life.” Harrison growls. The façade of calm and mellow old man having intentionally been let slip. “The guardians of the old houses, the matriarchs.” Let that sink in a moment. “My name is Harrison and I’m the Lord Commander of these men and this order.” Let that sink in even further.
“Then I ask again. Que cherchons-nous ici?” Mehthilte, her composure restored once more. So, there’s a real enemy in these men and the women they support and secure! These men who’d thwarted the vast efforts of her people across three continents. It must have been these. What had appeared to be the randomness of shadow war, now appears to never have actually been random. If these’re to allow her to walk out of here alive, to tell the tale, which must be the only reason they‘re showing themselves now, only reason she’s alive. Then she must learn all she can about this implacable enemy. Apparently, an ancient enemy.
“Einführung und Artikulation der Zukunft.” Harrison, Lord Commander of The Order, once more calm and mellow. The all-loving father so hated and despised by Mehthilte and her people. This very archetype, this male become man, the very enemy so fought against for so very long. An enemy now nearly defeatable due to technology. Or are they?
“Then, who are you and what is this future you reference?” Mehthilte, once more the cold and ruthless all-consuming mother The Order was established centuries prior, its predecessors millennia before, to push back and fight with all vigor and purpose.
“A precise introduction of who we are exactly, is quite unnecessary. Suffice it to say, we’re your counterpart, enemy, if you so force it.” Harrison, his aged grey-green eyes staring into her soul in that way so angers a woman like Mehthilte. Her mind immediately screaming internally, who does this man think he is to talk to me so. “Let us just say, we’re the keepers of the old ways.”
“Which are.” There’s no hiding nor holding back the disdain in her voice and posture. Now they’re obviously enemies, no common ground to be found. Might as well act like it! No need for the illusion of peace and understanding.
“Those sustained across many thousands of years. Those of the pre-Westphalian World.” Harrison smiles at her, the loving father, caring man. The dangerously capable kind sacrifices himself always for those he loves. The very antithesis of Mehthilte and her many followers and subjects, those wittingly committed and those unwittingly enslaved to the great change.
“You, you statists, have failed. Oh, you can’t see it yet. But you have. Westphalia is done and gone. Bureaucratic feudalist slavery has run its full and historically inevitable course.” Harrison pauses to gauge the reaction in his direct counterpart. “Your replacement of Westphalia, total technology enabled state control, total slavery of all, has also failed. Though, you naturally fail to see this also.”
“You cannot defeat us.” Mehthilte, smugness firmly in voice and posture. “Nor can you stop what’s already in motion.” Her disdain for men, for the world of man, for whoever this order of men is, dripping like acid from her voice and the way in which her body trembles with vitriol.
“No. We can’t. But new matriarchs are rising, are binding to themselves Princes, both shielded and protected not by state assets but by knights, in the old manner of such things. All greatly updated of course. This all funded and supported by vast fortunes protected in untouchable offshore multigenerational trust structures.” Harrison pauses briefly allowing the fullness of his statement, intended to get out through this woman to take hold. “We can, are, and will, prevent the worst of what you’ve set in motion, what you intend to bring about. And we accept this as the extent of what we can do. As it has always been throughout the many thousands of years of conflict and war between us.”
“You will be rooted out and destroyed.” This Mehthilte states with utter ruthless and cold angered and resolute woman’s genocidal blood committed calm. “You’ve grossly underestimated what you face, the power yet wielded by us and the states and institutions we own and control.”
“Some of us will be, yes. Many wealthy families will fail to understand, to prepare, to remain on wartime footing, to become fully self-sufficient principalities as in the old world. None-the-less, we of The Order and those houses that do transition and sustain can and will hurt you.” Harrison, instantly the hard killer he once was.
“For every one of ours you kill, we’ll kill ten of yours. For every one of our assets you move against, you’ll lose assets worth ten times as much.” This isn’t an idle boast. These men are never braggarts. No, she takes this for the statement of fact it is. This is the old way of total war, of all out genetic warfare masquerading as economic warfare between ancient power structures, between the Nobility and the Bureaucracy.
“The organic and the synthetic once more at all-out war.” Mehthilte states, looking at who she’s accepted is her archenemy. A man she knew not at all, nor at all about, before this meeting. That men such as he, this Order he leads, could be out there all this time, moving against the great change. That there are great houses in the ancient model still extant, emerging, recognizing who and what they are and the threat posed to them and humanity. This is disquieting, to say the least. Though, perhaps, not to be unexpected!
“I presume a form of multigenerational aristocracy and feudalism is what you’re referencing is returning?” This more a statement than a question from Mehthilte.
“As I presume you’ve mostly already installed and instantiated bureaucratic feudalism and modern slavery as your organizational structure and economy.” This from Harrison. Also, more statement than question.
“The old ways once more. For those who survive.” There’s a smile now on Mehthilte’s face. Cold and ruthless sort of smile. They’d not been engaged in this war between the organic and synthetic, organic status hierarchies versus artificial status hierarchies all these many thousands and thousands of years, without faith their enemy might falter. These men and the women they represent and secure may yet be defeated. If only they knew the fullness of what is already in motion. So much damage to the organic already done across every generation alive!
“Yes, the old ways. Women own and control the assets. Women once more contracting with men through marriage, to protect. Matriarchs who know their people, who match man and woman and assets to protect their estates and fortunes, their families.” Harrison states, almost as an aside.
“You won’t find enough unbroken women to bring about this return to historical patterns. They’ve fallen for the lies of independence and empowerment consumes them into nothingness. You’ll not find unconditioned women in sufficient numbers for you to be a threat to us. We own them! Populations are already collapsing. Marriage and pair bonding between men and women is already nearly impossible. Soon only by coming to us and our technology, will humans be able to have children at all.”
Mehthilte sneers at Harrison who only smiles back with that limitless, unquenchable paternal love shines through him. The very thing so enrages Mehthilte. This very thing she’d never known in her life, not growing up, not since. Needing to be loved, that weakness she’d never wanted.
“Your women will control your systems of artificial power. They’ll continue to manipulate, use and weaponize the weak and parasitic predatory men they attract, trap, confine, enable.” Harrison continues. “But life has a way of resetting, rapidly. As it always has and does. No more so than when forced into an artificial biological and economic bottleneck such as those you and yours have undoubtable already unleashed.”
Mehthilte only shrugs in response. If only this man, these men, the women they support and protect knew what’s already been done, what’s already been unleashed, what is yet prepared no matter what they do to counter.
“How do you see this playing out?” She asks. Genuine question this time.
“The full extent of your genocide will be denied. Your forever war of machines on machines will also be denied. Instead, what’ll emerge is a war between the synthetic and the organic worlds. Your world and ours.”
“You are far too vulnerable to win such a war. Your faith in biological systems is misplaced in this technological age.”
“We too have mastered science and technology. More importantly, we’re far ahead of you in actual medical care and health.” Harrison smiles again, warmly. “You forget, our ancient orders were not initially martial, but were instead medical. Our never having lost our focus, life as the sole purpose of life. Does provide us many advantages.”
“Biology alone is far too fragile.”
“Four and a half billion years of life on this planet, recovery from mass extinctions, refutes just such argument. There’s much about biology and the biological your synthetic thinking prevents you from seeing and knowing.”
“You don’t have the men or the women nor the time for them to come together and have children, for those children to grow up.” Mehthilte sneers.
“We’re not luddites.” Harrison cautions. “We merely place the machine, synthetics, where they belong, neither replacement nor master, but as servant once more.” With this the Lord Commander motions the two men at the door to open the door and prepare to leave. “Never underestimate the power of love to bond, to heal and to restore. Nor of civilizations come to across thousands of years to restore themselves.” This last Harrison states, looking his enemy straight in the eyes, with the most genuine and heartfelt expression of paternal love at his disposal. Her reaction is immediate and overpowering, rage, genuine hatred, that ripples throughout her entire system as if shot by a gun.
“I would caution you and your people not to try anything. You will find, His Royal Highness is equally our friend.” He smiles once again, with his most loving father smile. Letting this bitter and loveless woman know he cares, even for her and her people, for the enemy. It’s truly astounding how pleasant open war can be declared and discussed. Harrison chuckles to himself at the thought, as he moves to follow his men out of the salon.
As he moves, with his close in team, outer cordon moving out beyond sight in concert. Harrison cannot but wonder what his Lordship, the Earl, will do when he learns of this meeting. Oh, first, he’ll be stunned, then angry. And then? Forty minutes after departing the old port, boarding the Aquitaine, sea anchored off the coast of Monte Carlo, the Lord Commander recognizes, humbly. What’s done is done. The Order is no longer a hidden organization, now openly the enemy of the anti-humanists, the transhumanists. Soon, future of our long history will be in your hands, subject to the decisions you make, Early, Lord Rothbury!
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