Part 2
On one occasion Danella questioned his society and his wealth in another vain attempt to turn his mind from the traditional acceptance of a harsh system of living.
"Valery, we're only here on this planet for 80 or 90 years if we're lucky, a lot less for many people. We don't have time to waste in this life. There are too many things to do and achieve which are worthwhile than to waste it. Valery all this concern for maximising the return on your investments, for making sure your companies grow in business, is a waste of your energies."
"How can you say that?" countered Valery. "It is my attention to detail and my consideration of the options which have made and kept my companies profitable and ensured that they grew into what they are today."
"That is true but do you really need to scrutinise them so closely. Will an extra few pounds of wages to the workers harm you so much. Is the sale of one company to someone who wishes to use the assets and close it down, ridding the workers of their jobs, so necessary if it covers its costs and makes some profit. Why not keep it running? Why do the workers have to be dismissed for a small profit advantage for yourself? Why take these unpleasant decisions? I know why you feel unease when you make such a decision - because it is wrong!"
"Valery - free your workers from the hard toil. Relax the workload. Allow them to return to wives, families, mistresses at an earlier hour. You have the power to raise the quality of their lives. But for your perfectionism and your greed they could be leading valuable lives."
Valery was quiet as he listened to her opinions. This stranger from a strange land had come to him, bringing him great joy and sexual adventure, but what did she understand about his culture. All her ideas were wishful thinking and fantasy for his world. Did she think he could have achieved his eminent position in Prancir without taking difficult and sometimes unkind decisions. His companies would long since have collapsed under the competition of opponents if he and his directors had not made ruthless decisions. What would be the effect if he did as she bade him and used his wealth to lobby the representatives of Parliament and the Government to withdraw from the war. He would be acting directly against the interests of his companies. If he were able to change the government or parliament's minds he would have used considerable of his reserves, and his wealth would be further denuded by the end, or at least reduction of his contracts with the military. He would lose vast portions of his present wealth and his future earnings, and there was no guarantee the strategy would work to end the war. Vanmandria and the others would continue the campaigns against Pirion and become stronger than Prancir. How could he change the tack of his business goals to weaken not only his own wealth but that of his country.
And these proposals of hers to pay his workers more, and allow them less working time made no commercial sense. How could he get other shareholders and investors to understand? They would seek to sell their holdings and the reputation of his companies would suffer. They would not be able to raise more capital or funds for a long time if they acted alone in changing working structures when other firms acted as before. Many people in all the states of Vanmar wanted to improve the income of ordinary workers and grant them an easier life. Valery would have liked to see it too if it were possible. Maybe one day after this war and the others they had fought before in this century with Vanmandria and its allies, (far more bloody than this one) there would be no more wars. He believed that the ties of trade would bind nation to nation, Prancir to Vanmandria, and to the Empire of Pirion alike, in the future, when wars were done. his companies would turn their efforts towards other products, only now in the process of being invented, which would cause the economies to turn to the trade of peace. Perhaps then there would be a time when labour would be more highly valued, as the economies expanded in new directions. But Valery saw it not as his role to instigate the changes of the future. The time was now and events must take their course. And so he answered her sagely to educate her in the real truths of his world, and to explain why the modern world could not be as she wanted it.
And so she decided she could not stay with Valery any longer. His attitude towards the war was impossible. She realised he had no intention of using his power and fame to influence anyone in Prancir or elsewhere in Vanmar against the war. He evidently enjoyed the practices of Pirion and was keen to involve his friends in the new sexual freedom because he could acquire for himself more sexual partners and more sexual pleasure that way. He enjoyed group activities. He enjoyed being watched and watching. He probably was pleased to help his friends to enjoy themselves and also was perhaps aware that they would be more loyal to him if he helped them. She realised that he was not opposed to anyone learning and experiencing the ways and pleasures of the Empire of Pirion. If the whole people of Prancir became Pirionite in their behaviour he would not be displeased, nor stand in their way. The war would surely cease if that were to occur, but Valery had no concern for the war. He seemed to feel that he would be happy if Pirion were conquered, but that Pirion's culture might nonetheless affect Vanmar's own culture. Presumably any Vanmarian who worked and lived in occupied Pirion would be affected by the 'easy' attitude of the Pirionites towards sexual communion, and might begin to lead their own lives differently. Perhaps Valery saw in the conquest of the Empire of Pirion as the opportunity to change Vanmarian culture by direct contact with Pirion's culture.
However Danella suspected it was not from lofty long term vision that Valery determined his own policy of non intervention. That must surely stem from Valery's innate selfishness. He cared perhaps only for himself and perhaps those few dear to him. He was not married so he had no close family to care for, but he did have illegitimate sons and daughters, whom he did finance, along with their mothers, his mistresses. Valery had told her of his intention to employ his sons (when old enough) in his business empire, so that they would eventually be in a position to inherit all of his wealth between them.
His daughters also might be employed in his empire if that were appropriate and would certainly inherit some of his wealth. His many mistresses and their families were a part of Valery's wider 'family' then, as were the friends in Danella's 'sexual the circle', some of whom by now included his mistresses, those whom he believed would be amenable to shared experience. Some of his most favoured employees and business colleagues, she suspected, he gave loyalty to, men such as Philippe his lawyer, and Alfred, one of his directors.