Home The Andes Dream Chapter 273: Dividing The Elites

The Andes Dream

Chapter 273: Dividing The Elites
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Chapter 273: Dividing The Elites

He walked slowly down the line, his spurs clicking softly against the stone floor. The sound carried in the silence, measured and deliberate.

He stopped before the House of Velásquez.

Men he knew. Men he had once dealt with when he was still an agent of the Crown, negotiating cargo and favors under its authority.

"You waited," Carlos said, meeting the gaze of the eldest Velásquez. "You waited to see whether Krugger would hang from a gallows... or take the river."

A brief pause followed.

"You played both sides, hoping to preserve your estates—no matter who came to occupy the Governor’s palace."

The older man shifted, his expression tightening.

"We were being prudent, Don Carlos. For the sake of our families—"

"Prudence," Carlos interrupted, his voice sharpening just enough, "is for merchants in times of peace."

He held the man’s gaze.

"In war, it is only cowardice... dressed in better language."

Silence settled again.

"I have no interest in your excuses."

Carlos turned away from them and faced his captains. There was no speech, no attempt to persuade—only an order.

"I will keep the families that i need, but of course thats only a part of the families ," he said. "The rest—lets say one fifth of these houses will be cleared by sunrise."

A murmur began, low and uneasy.

"You will decide among yourselves which families remain and which must leave," he added. "I will accept your judgment."

The effect was immediate.

The hall shifted—from collective shock into something sharper, more dangerous. The silence that followed was no longer passive; it was calculating.

Carlos leaned back against the heavy oak table, watching them.

He understood exactly what was passing through their minds. He had not merely divided them—he had altered the balance between them. What had once been a network of mutual support had become a contest of survival.

The great families—those with the oldest names and the deepest coffers—began to look upon their allies differently. Cousins, partners, in-laws... all now weighed against risk.

They knew the truth of it. If all the families stood together and refused, Carlos would face difficulty. Removing them all would not be simple—not without cost.

But Carlos had already accounted for that.

"Consider your position carefully," he said, his voice cutting through the growing whispers. "I command the Army, and I hold the keys to this lands."

He straightened slightly.

"If you choose to stand together in defiance, I will treat you as a single hostile body. And I have no need for a hostile body within my walls."

A pause.

"I would sooner raise a new elite in these lands... than keep traitors at my side."

The threat remained unspoken in its full extent—but it was understood.

Among the great houses—the Londoños, the Restrepos—recognition came quickly.

It was a trap.

To defend the smaller families—the Herreras, the Velásquez—would be to risk everything. Their wealth, their position, their security... all could be lost in a single decision.

The ties that once strengthened them now became burdens.

Marriage alliances, shared ventures, old loyalties—no longer bridges, but weights capable of dragging both sides into ruin.

At last, the patriarch of the strongest house stepped forward.

He did not look back as he moved, placing a clear distance between himself and those already marked by uncertainty.

"Don Carlos is correct," he declared, his voice firm, though its conviction rang hollow upon closer hearing. "We cannot risk being cast out."

Behind him, the great families began to confer in low voices.

They understood the stakes.

Even if the decision brought temporary disorder, Carlos possessed the means to endure it. They, however, stood to lose everything—especially if those displaced were replaced by new families, loyal to him and shaped under his authority.

And in that realization, another truth became clear.

This—this was why Carlos had written the Cincinnatus Mandate.

Not merely as an idea.

But as a tool.

For with the army at his back, he could give form to it... and enforce it.

the troughts of the great houses did not escape the notice of the smaller families.

They understood it immediately.

If the great families chose unity against them, it would be over—swiftly and without recourse. There would be no negotiation, no appeal. At least in exile, there remained a possibility, however distant, of return. But if they pressed Carlos too far—if they forced his hand—there would be no future left to recover.

It was, in its essence, a calculated betrayal.

The great houses had offered up the lesser ones—the so-called "small kings"—as a sacrifice to preserve themselves. In doing so, they revealed a truth long concealed beneath custom and alliance: property weighed more heavily than blood.

The union that had once defined them dissolved in that moment.

In its place remained a room of men who would never again trust one another.

Once the selections were made, Carlos gave the order.

The chosen families were to be escorted to the river and sent away by boat, beyond his territory. They were permitted to take their movable assets—coin, goods, and personal effects—but not their lands.

Those would remain.

What awaited them elsewhere would be their own concern.

They would begin again, from nothing.

With the matter settled, Carlos turned to governance.

He began to distribute political and fiscal authority among the remaining families. Taxation rights, local administration—these were granted with deliberate calculation.

Yet he was not careless.

A fixed portion of all taxes was to be directed to the army. The method by which the families collected those funds did not concern him. In truth, he expected disorder—mismanagement, perhaps even embezzlement.

He allowed for it.

Such failures, in time, would provide cause.

Months passed.

Mompox endured constant assault from Spanish forces. Attack followed attack, each one pressing against the defenses with determination—but none succeeded.

Krugger had prepared well.

The cannons under his command—British-made, among the finest in the world—rendered any direct assault a costly endeavor. Against such firepower, wooden vessels and conventional formations stood little chance.

Still, the bombardments did not cease.

And though they failed to take the city, they transformed it.

Mompox became a place of smoke and ruin. Trade diminished, homes were abandoned, and the rhythm of daily life collapsed under the strain of war. What had once been prosperous turned unstable—almost uninhabitable.

Many fled.

El Banco, despite its own hardships, became a refuge for those who could escape.

By October, after months of futile effort, the Spanish forces withdrew.

Krugger stood atop the battered ramparts, looking out over the scarred remains of the city.

Smoke lingered in the air. The cannons—long-ranged, precisely engineered—rested in silence, their metal still warm from recent use. They stood like sentinels, unchanged by the destruction around them.

A scout approached, handing him a spyglass.

"The Viceroy is not as foolish as he first appeared, General," the man said. "He has realized that retaking Mompox is... impractical. He is shifting his efforts."

Krugger raised the glass toward the southern horizon.

"Explain."

The scout moved to a nearby crate, where a map had been spread.

"He is concerned with the river," he said, pointing. "With the loss of the Middle Magdalena and El Banco, he has lost control of the flow. Without it, he is blind."

His finger traced further inland.

"If he loses Honda, he loses access to the capital. The Viceroy has ordered all available forces from the Caribbean coast to withdraw toward the interior. They are no longer attempting to hold the river—they intend to block it."

Krugger remained silent, watching.

"Our agents in Santafé de Bogotá report constant activity," the scout continued. "The church bells have not ceased for days. Armories have been emptied. Heavy brass cannons—some untouched since the conquest—have been dragged down from the highlands."

He tapped a narrow point along the river’s course.

"They have constructed a fortified position at the head of the rapids. Stone and earth. Reinforced."

A brief pause.

"They are calling it El Tapón de la Reina."

Krugger lowered the spyglass slightly, his expression unreadable.

The war, it seemed, had only begun to change shape.

Krugger let out a low whistle, the sound barely audible over the distant crackle of settling embers.

"A fort at Honda..." he murmured. "If they have mounted Bogotá’s heavy ordnance there, they could sink anything attempting the rapids before we even sight the town."

He lowered the spyglass slightly, his expression tightening.

The scout inclined his head.

"It is more than a fort, sir. It is a killing ground."

He gestured toward the map, his finger tracing the course of the Magdalena River.

"They have reinforced every passage leading from the river into Spanish territory. Trenches have been dug. Palisades raised along the mule trails toward the highlands. It is a deliberate design."

A pause.

"If they cannot use the river to reach the coast, they will ensure we cannot use it to reach the mountains."

Krugger spat into the dust at his feet.

So, at last, the Spanish had chosen their ground. 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮

They could not match discipline. Nor firepower. But they still possessed the one advantage that required neither—terrain.

The geography itself.

The choke point at Honda was no accident. The river narrowed there, broken by rapids and elevation, forming a natural barrier between the interior and the lower valleys.

Turn that passage into a fortress... and it became something else entirely.

A trap.

Krugger’s eyes returned to the horizon.

"So," he said slowly, a faint, grim smile forming, "they have turned this ’Plug’ into a fortress."

He shifted his stance, resting one hand against the parapet.

"They believe that with the high ground—and a collection of old brass guns—they can force me to remain in the lowlands."

Another pause.

"They would keep us here, in the heat and decay... while they wait for reinforcements. From Caracas. From the south."

The smile lingered—but there was no amusement in it.

Only calculation.

The war had changed again.

And this time, it would not be decided by a single battle—but by who understood the land... and who dared

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