Dialogue[]
“ | The king embarrasses onlookers by interrupting his son Venef's archery practice to furiously scold him. "You do not take your princely prerogatives seriously enough," the king accuses. "By attempting to please all sides, you weaken our drive to re-impose our authority on the other Berenethtelli clans. Pull your head out of the clouds and show the vigor of your royal blood!" Venef's friends want him to tell his father that it is his own outbursts that undermine the royal cause. But the prince suffers in silence, pretending not to hear.
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— Six Ages 2: Lights Going Out |
Consequences[]
If you keep the council out of this, the people may agree that they had no business getting between the king and the prince; Mood may increase, if so.
Advice[]
- "My son will never become decisive if we coddle him." - Iverlantho
- "I neither accept nor question my father's words." - Venef
- "Venef must assert himself." - Reda
- "Between fathers and sons, raging rivers run." - Sereden
- "The people don't like this, but since Venef isn't putting up a fight it won't lead to a protracted conflict."
- "Father have always been disappointed in sons."
- "The prince must bear this, for the good of all."