Five Years Earlier
3 May 1971
The Imperial Army bus pulled out of downtown Sarum, Lt. Stephan Crofts watching it depart. The railway never made it out this way, which is how Sarum managed to stay a small farming community. No mines, no heavy industry. No radicals. Just a peaceful slice of old rural Ingland preserved in time, a community of farmers, outdoor markets, and old shop keepers.
Crofts took a moment to take in the feeling of being home. He looked up at the overcast sky, it always seemed overcast, and took in the faintly damp aurora of the town, as if he was just a day removed from rainfall. He knew the faint smell well, he had grown up with it.
He just stood there, at the bus stop for a few more moments, standing in a uniform of a soldier of the Imperial army. An unkempt uniform to be sure, but one that was adorned with the Alexandrian Cross, the highest military honour of the United Empire. He had earned it in Australis, serving in the Imperial Army of George VII to put down a native insurrection. He had held his position, alone, for three days before CSSD expeditionary forces arrived to drive the enemy off. He had taken a bullet in the shoulder for his efforts, and honourable discharged after being awarded the Alexandrian Cross. Not like it mattered. Just as the Imperial Army was closing in on the rebel forces Prime Minister Rowan Miller negotiated a settlement that granted amnesty to the insurgents if they accepted Imperial authority. Crofts had spent the return home cursing Miller for that. It was a sign of national weakness, Crofts thought, a lack of resolve to see a fight to its conclusion.
So here he was. Honourably discharged, after risking his life to crush terrorists, only for the government to grant those terrorists Imperial citizenship. And what did he get when he returned home? A country in the middle of a radical miners strike. If Rowan Miller couldn't be counted on to crush God forsaken natives then Crofts doubted his ability to crush white citizens, even if these particular whites deserved a crushing.
A light blue sedan pulled up, a car Crofts instantly recognized. It was his father's.
"Stephan!" Gregory Crofts exclaimed, jumping out of the car almost as soon as parking it along the side of the road, not waiting for his son to even through his bag in the trunk. "Look at you!" the farmer continued, embracing his son. "Alexandrian Cross in the Emperor's service, you have no idea how proud your mother and I are of you."
"I can imagine" Crofts responded in an understated manner he usually employed to try and bring an emotional discussion down a few levels. "But lets get in the car before you get fined for parking at a bus stop."
"They can bugger off if they want to hassle me over seeing my son for the first time in years" Gregory scoffed. Stephen chuckled and gave his father another hug.
"Was that so hard?" Gregory asked, before opening the trunk of the car.
"So things seem the same" Stephen remarked on the ride out of town, back to the farm.
"Here, maybe" Gregory responded, in a way that suggested that this wasn't the case elsewhere.
"The strikes you mean" Crofts implied. "Read about them in the papers on the way back from the colonies."
"First mines, now the factories" Gregory explained. "I don't begrudge a man trying to get his far shake, but these chaps, they're going about it like a bunch of crazed radicals."
"They are" Stephan replied. "They always have been, that's all Syndicalism, Marxism is, radical barbarianism dressed up as an ideology."
"Well I'm not sure about that," Gregory mused, "never gave it much thought really, those types never got a foothold out here."
"And we're Goddamn lucky for that" Stephan replied, somewhat indignantly.
"Well the unpleasantness, that'll get solved. Always has, always will" Gregory stated assuredly. "Now though, we're home. And hope your hungry. Your mother's been spending the entire day preparing this meal."
"I've had nothing but freeze dried bread and canned beans for the last year and a half" Stephan chuckled. "Of course I'm hungry."
"Stephan!" Dorthy Crofts exclaimed, seeing her son walk through the front door."
"Hello mum" Stephen replied smiling.
"Sit, the both of you" his mother stated. "Dinner will be ready soon."
"So Stephan, what will you do now that you're out of the military?"
"I was thinking politics" Crofts answered.
26 November 1973
"UNITY! Unity in deed, unity in struggle, unity in action!" Stephan Crofts yelled from a temporary wooden podium erected on a patch of grass in the courtyard formed by the Imperial Crescent townhouses in Bath. He was dressed in a dark grey mackintosh jacket and dark grey slacks. Dark grey had been adopted as the colour of the Social Commonwealth Party, the organization founded by Crofts two years earlier. A row of young ruffians and fellow veterans from colonial campaigns dressed in dark grey faux military uniforms stood in front of the podium, presenting bot a picture of unity and intimidation. White flags adorned with the movement's emblems, a red and blue boar's head and a red V, fluttered in the wind as Crofts continued to address the sizable crowd that had gathered.
"How much longer are we going to allow radicals hold our society hostage? They ask for more, and more, and more until they hold the reigns of industry. Well I say no more! No more shall a vocal minority of radical syndicalists control Inglo-Scotian society through industry. Social Commonwealth offers liberation from revolution, liberation from chaos, and liberation from uncertainty! What it promises is a national cleansing, to wipe away the coercive elements of our society that we've allowed to fester for far to long!
Unity, friends, is what we offer. Strength through unity! Unity through action! My name is Stephan Crofts, and today we continue our march toward victory!"
The crowd cheered as he raised both arms, his hand loosely open as if he were channelling some divine energy. To the audience that was assembled it seemed fitting. Rowan Miller's Whig government had been hesitant to deploy police or the army on the striking mine workers. Some mining communities in northern and western Ingland had even declared "Workers' Councils" outing mine owners and local government officials. Crofts had sent the paramilitary wing of the SoCom Party, the Guardians, in to fight the radical miners unions and the Syndicalists. To the crowd assembled, made up of members from the middle and upper classes, nationalist radical intellectuals, veterans, and disillusioned young people Stephan Crofts seemed quasi-Messianic. It was Crofts who was fighting the radicals, Crofts who was offering a vision of the future. All while the government remained paralyzed by what seemed like indecision.
"Victory," Crofts concluded, "is possible. We can win this fight, friends. And we will. Our society has been pushed to the edge of oblivion, but we've rallied, and we will see VICTORY!"
15 September 1976
The Rt. Honourable Stephan Crofts, Prime Minister of Inglo-Scotia watched as Prince Andrew Duke of Haddyn became Emperor Andrew III. He rose as the new Emperor did, bowing slightly before straightening back up. A little less then a year ago the Social Commonwealth Party had won a strong Parliamentary majority, and he had been asked to form a government by Andrew III's father, George VII. Now there was a new Emperor, one very few people expected to have. Crofts, however, was one of those few. And now their work could really begin.