Chapter 126:

Words : 1043 Updated : Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 126: "I fear we have no friends in this room, only architects of silence.”The docks at Naples were full of activity before sunrise. Troop columns moved in silence, their boots making noise against the wooden floor. The Alpine divisions, fresh from training camps in Trentino, carried rucksacks nearly their size, ice axes strapped to their sides. Their mountain-gray uniforms looked strange in the heat of southern Italy as if someone had painted snowmen into the sun. Colonel Ricci walked the rows of men boarding the SS Sardegna, barking names from a clipboard. "Keep them tight. No press." Lieutenant Sirotti nodded. "They’ve cordoned off the pier. Ciano’s orders." The soldiers said little. Most were conscripts. Some were veterans of Libya. All were told the same story. "This is not a war. It is a necessary operation." A young private coughed under his pack’s weight. Another muttered, "Ethiopia has no Alps. Why are we even going?" Ricci overheard and snapped, "Because when Rome commands, you climb whatever mountain she tells you." At the far edge of the dock, a small group of foreign journalists tried to glimpse the loading. They weren’t allowed past the checkpoint. Not today. One of them, John Gunther of the Chicago Daily News, scribbled in his notebook behind a cigarette. "That’s the third transport this week," he whispered. Beside him, a British reporter from the Manchester Guardian muttered, "And still they say they’re hoping for peace." A military policeman approached. "You’ll have to leave. Orders from the Ministry." Gunther nodded, not looking up. "Of course. Freedom of the press...within reason." The guard didn’t smile. That same afternoon, inside the Ministry of Press and Propaganda in Rome, new directives were handed down. A young assistant entered Ciano’s office with a folder labeled. RESTRIZIONE TEMPORANEA . CORRISPONDENTI STRANIERI Ciano read the summary. "No interviews with soldiers or officers without written authorization. All stories involving troop movement, military supplies, or statements on Ethiopia must be approved before publication." He looked up at the aide. S~eaʀᴄh the Novёlƒire.n(e)t website on Google to access chapters of novels early and in the highest quality. "And the Americans?" "They’re annoyed but cooperative. The British less so. The French don’t care." Ciano smirked. "Then we’re already winning the narrative." In Geneva, the League of Nations building gathered once again. Inside a long wood-paneled room, the Council met without formality. No press, no transcripts. Seated around the table were representatives from Britain, France, Ethiopia, and Italy though the Italian delegate was uncharacteristically silent. Ethiopia’s delegate, Dr. Wolde Mariam, spoke firmly. "There have now been four recorded incursions. One at Walqait. One south of the Tekezé River. Civilians have reported confrontations with Italian patrols near the border." He paused. "Our government has submitted formal protest. We await action." The British delegate, Lord Cranborne, cleared his throat. "The Foreign Office is reviewing the most recent maps. As you know, the precise delineation of the border remains... sensitive." "Sensitive to whom?" Wolde Mariam asked. "The men losing their homes, or the nations losing their conscience?" There was silence. The French delegate, Léon Noël, finally spoke. "Monsieur, we understand your grievance. The situation is regrettable. Truly." "Regrettable?" Wolde Mariam repeated. Noël pressed on, calmly. "But France is not in a position to judge before all facts are established. And we must encourage a spirit of negotiation." Cranborne nodded. "We hope to avoid escalation. We propose that a commission of inquiry be assembled... in September." Wolde Mariam folded his arms. "By then, your commission may be stepping over Italian corpses and calling it diplomacy." The Italian delegate said nothing. He adjusted his glasses and took notes. When the meeting adjourned, the Ethiopian walked slowly past the French and British representatives. "You delay. They deploy." Neither man responded. In Paris that same evening, Foreign Minister Laval stood beside a radio set in his office, the blinds half-closed. A junior aide entered with a report from Geneva. Laval scanned it. "The Ethiopians expected more," the aide said. "I’m sure they did." "They’ll accuse us of indifference." Laval took a sip from his teacup. "Let them." "Sir?" Laval sighed. "Let them accuse. What else can they do? They have no allies. No army to rival Rome. The League is a theater without actors. The script is written in oil and colonial treaties." "But they are an independent state. We have a duty..." "To protect French interests," Laval cut in. "Which include not antagonizing Mussolini before we finish with Morocco. Let the English play referee. We will stay quiet." He handed back the telegram. "This is not our war. Not yet." Back in Rome, Mussolini met privately with Ciano in the Duce’s study. The radio played opera faintly in the background. On the desk sat a globe with small pins already stuck into Eritrea, Tigray, and Addis Ababa. Ciano reported the League’s inaction. "They’ve agreed to... nothing. Britain is cautious. France indifferent. Geneva might hold a vote next month." Mussolini smiled faintly. "The war has already begun," he said. "They just haven’t admitted it." "And the papers?" "Working well," Ciano said. "We’re running a five-part series in Il Popolo d’Italia on the ’civilizing mission.’ I had one article rewritten as a children’s story. The headline ’Little Giorgio Goes to Africa.’" Mussolini chuckled. "Excellent. Make sure schoolteachers read it aloud." He stood and walked to the window. "History does not wait for diplomats. It moves with armies. And Rome is moving." Meanwhile, on the SS Sardegna, now three days out from Naples, Private Enrico De Santis leaned over the railing and stared at the endless sea. "You ever been to Africa?" he asked the man next to him. "No," came the reply. "But they say it smells different." Enrico nodded slowly. "Smells like someone else’s land." In Geneva, Wolde Mariam sat alone that night in his hotel room, writing a letter by hand. "Your Majesty, They have delayed again. The French will not move. The British only watch. I fear we have no friends in this room, only architects of silence." He paused, then added. "But I will continue. Let the world record that Ethiopia asked first for peace. And when peace was refused, we stood alone." He folded the page.

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contents
Contents
Reincarnated: Vive La France
Reincarnated: Vive La France Author:Clautic
Chapter 1: The Awakening in a Foreign Past Sep 9th, 2025
Chapter 1 - 1: The Awakening in a Foreign Past Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 2: Orders and Realizations Sep 9th, 2025
Chapter 2 - 2: Orders and Realizations Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 3: First Moves in a Stagnant Army Sep 9th, 2025
Chapter 3 - 3: First Moves in a Stagnant Army Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 4 - 4: Machines of War Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 5 - 5: The First Exercise Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 6 - 6: The Resistance Within Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 7 - 7: First Report Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 8 - 8: Beyond the Barracks Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 9 - 9: The Calm Before the Storm Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 10 - 10: Fault Lines Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 11 - 11: Summon Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 12 - 12: The Train to Paris Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 13 - 13: The Machinery of the Republic Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 14 - 14: The Hearing Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 15 - 15: A Conversation in the Upper Rooms Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 16 - 16: Sudden Explosion Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 17 - 17: Military Police Investigation Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 18 - 18: The Investigation Begins Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 19 - 19: Caught Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 20 - 20: Who Paid you? Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 21 - 21: Moreau and Fournier Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 22 - 22: Another Conversation Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 23 - 23: Elise Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 24 - 24: A Day in Verdun Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 25 - 25: Mission & Marching Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 26 - 26: Missing Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 27 - 27: Morning Patrolling Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 28 - 28: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 29 - 29: The Plot Thickens Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 30 - 30: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 31 - 31: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 32 - 32: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 33 - 33: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 34 - 34: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 35 - 35: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 36 - 36: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 37 - 37: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 38 - 38: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 39 - 39: Illegal Arms Trade, Human Smuggling, Organ Trafficking. Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 40 - 40: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 41 - 41: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 42 - 42: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 43 - 43: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 44 - 44: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 45 - 45: LOAD..AIM... SHOOOOT!!! Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 46 - 46: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 47 - 47: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 48 - 48: Family Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 49 - 49: Leave Granted Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 50 - 50: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 51 - 51: Family Reunion Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 52 - 52: “To friends who don’t forget you exist. Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 53 - 53: Sep 10th, 2025
Chapter 54 - 54: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 55 - 55: “That this country doesn’t make heroes. It devours them.” Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 56 - 56: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 57 - 57: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 58 - 58: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 59 - 59: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 60 - 60: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 61 - 61: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 62 - 62: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 63 - 63: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 64 - 64: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 65 - 65: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 66 - 66: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 67 - 67: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 68 - 68: Two countries, one stage. One king, one minister. Both dead before their time. Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 69 - 69: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 70 - 70: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 71 - 71: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 72 - 72: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 73: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 74: The world would indeed forget everything soon. Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 75: “France let him die. Now France dies in return.” Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 76: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 77: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 78: Two soldiers beneath the marble dome of a battered democracy Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 79: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 80: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 81: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 82: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 83: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 84: “Then he knows war is not a question of if, but when” Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 85: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 86: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 87: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 88: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 89: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 90: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 91: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 92: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 93: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 94: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 95: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 96: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 97: Somewhere east of them, invisible in the night, an army had taken to the sky. Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 98: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 99: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 100: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 101: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 102: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 103: Sep 12th, 2025
Chapter 104: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 105: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 106: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 107: “It’s a trench weapon, not a parade piece.” Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 108: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 109: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 110: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 111: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 112: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 113: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 114: “And that is the most useful delusion in Europe right now.” Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 115: THE ANGLO-GERMAN NAVAL AGREEMENT Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 116: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 117: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 118: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 119: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 120: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 121: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 122: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 123: Thousands of voices, Black voices, American voices, voices tired of waiting. Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 124: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 125: “This is the march of a civilization. This is the rise of a new Rome.” Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 126: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 127: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 128: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 129: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 130: “Let Adwa bleed again, if it must. But it must not kneel.” Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 131: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 132: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 133: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 134: Second Italo-Ethiopian War - I Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 135: Second Italo-Ethiopian War - II Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 136: Second Italo-Ethiopian War - III Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 137: Second Italo-Ethiopian War - IV Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 138: Second Italo-Ethiopian War - V Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 139: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 140: Two empires. One victorious. One on its knees. Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 141: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 142: LÉON BLUM ELECTED PRIME MINISTER Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 143: Even birds know when it is time to vanish. Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 144: “This is no longer politics it is a holy war!” Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 145: “They’ll call it a civil war. But it will be Europe’s first bloodletting.” Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 146: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 147: “I said yes the moment Madrid mocked our warnings.” Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 148: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 149: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 150: Sep 17th, 2025
Chapter 151: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 152: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 153: “Tell them this battlefield is no longer theirs. Moreau is just a child in front of me. Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 154: Foreign commanders using Spain as conceptual battleground. Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 155: The Duel between Moreau and Guderian. Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 156: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 157: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 158: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 159: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 160: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 161: “You’re already burning. At least do it standing.” Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 162: “No flag. No grave. Let him rot.” Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 163: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 164: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 165: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 166: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 167: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 168: The Anti-Comintern Pact. Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 169: Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 170: Rome and Berlin form the axis around which Europe shall revolve. Sep 19th, 2025
Chapter 171: Directive No. 12(Rhineland). Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 172: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 173: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 174: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 175: “History will walk on bones. Let mine be useful.” Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 176: “Two more professors. A librarian. And a painter.” Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 177: Carl Gustaf 20 mm Recoilless Rifle (m/42) Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 178: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 179: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 180: They had built a weapon before history needed it. Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 181: General Delon is back. Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 182: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 183: When a tool is forged in darkness, those in daylight fear what it might build. Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 184: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 185: The weapon stood like a strange new sentinel foreign to many, but undeniably real. Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 186: Delon mouth is more toxic than Paris sewer. Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 187: A whisper of defiance in a century of war. Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 188: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 189: Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 190: Even the birds feared what was to come. Sep 21st, 2025
Chapter 191: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 192: Diplomacy however frail is the last defence against a world once more descending into madness. Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 193: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 194: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 195: “Where they burn books, they will also burn people.” Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 196: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 197: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 198: “We’ll make them bleed in drills so they don’t bleed in battle. Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 199: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 200: “To cuisine militaire keeping morale low since Napoleon.” Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 201: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 202: “Lube it. Fast.” Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 203: “You’re not allowed to speak anymore, Benoit.” Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 204: Not with war balancing on a single passing footstep in the woods. Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 205: “I don’t care if it’s the Pope in a Luftwaffe cap. We shoot.” Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 206: “COME AND TAKE THEM, YOU BASTARDS!” Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 207: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 208: Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 209: “I don’t know how you did it, but... they’re coming.” Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 210: Men broken by wars, abandoned by commands, hunted by their own country, scarred by betrayal. Sep 23rd, 2025
Chapter 211: Ahead of him were questions. Behind him revolution. Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 212: Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 213: “I’ve been waiting twenty years for someone to have the balls.” Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 214: Ghosts are waking, Vidal. And they’re walking. Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 215: Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 216: “What has happened tonight is not a coup. It is not ambition. It is restoration.” Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 217: Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 218: Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 219: Speech of the Century Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 220: Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 221: “We do it not to secure power but to relinquish it soon. That promise will hold us honest.” Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 222: Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 223: “You point the direction and I will cut the Germans.” Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 224: Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 225: Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 226: “France must endure beyond any man. My name will not weaken it.” Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 227: He’s fighting for dignity. That costs more than defeat. Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 228: Let this Tribunal be the last - of retribution, and the first of civilization. Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 229: Law may be broken but without courage, order crumbles. Sep 25th, 2025
Chapter 230: If France endures thanks to one man’s quiet diplomacy, then his breach is pardonable. If not, table that to history. Sep 25th, 2025
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