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That was not yet something you could do entirely on your own yet. You’d need to ask for help from elsewhere, be it from Leo’s Leagues, or the Augustans, to have proper numbers. Else any fight would be a slow erosion. A bandit’s war. Unideal for your Revolution. “That would force the Utopian Front to work with us, but we could also simply replace the Red Garden as the iron fist to their velvet glove, no?”
“It would still require isolating the <span class="mu-i">Giardino Rosso</span>, which as of now we have…” Antonia bit her lip, angry that she had to admit this, “No proper plan for. We either need more information, or the Red Garden need to perpetrate something so heinous, that the Utopian Front needs to avoid association with them…and considering they said nothing about the attempt to assassinate the Duke Di Larencci, I cannot think of what that controversy might be.”
All in all infiltrating Interres further seemed like it would be much more a challenge than any place in Larencci you’d attempted, but you had to get started somewhere…and once you were in, that would hopefully have been the most difficult part.
>Move from the North into Tramantosogna. Frame it as a display of support to the Vanguards- and arrange the necessary meetings to decide what happens next.
>There’d be no takebacks with the Giardino Rosso. You’ll need to scrape up whatever support you could to go and throw them out of the south of Interres- even if the citizens there didn’t necessarily object to their presence.
>Swallow greater ambitions for now and meet with the Utopian Front diplomatically. It may be more effective to aid them now, especially considering the influence they already held.
>The lack of opportunities to take advantage of yourself was concerning. Why move in too directly yet? Put your Intelligence Apparatus to work… (Doing what and where?)
>Other?
Also-
>Standard 2d6 for the Legion.