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Chapter 3 - Rise of the Federation

A few months past like a summer breeze.

The first problem with building a hidden civilization, Dias realized, was that it could not survive on

unstable ground.

Tempest would one day live beneath Jubba Valley, but the land above that valley needed order,

supply lines, trade, manpower, and enough political coherence to resist being ripped apart

before the foundations were even laid. A secret empire could not be born from total chaos. It

required a shell. A surface state resilient enough to absorb pressure while the real project grew

unseen.

That shell would be the Somali Federation.

The rulers of the four major sultanates did not agree on much beyond their own importance.

Each controlled pieces of territory, trade, and loyalty. Each distrusted the others. All of them

underestimated what was coming from beyond their shores.

Dias arranged the first meeting through intermediaries, favors, and carefully manipulated

circumstances. A rumor here. A caravan warning there. A merchant carrying a message sealed

with a mark that could not be forged because Astra had embedded a reactive energy pattern in

the wax. By the time the four men gathered in a desert fortress under the pretense of discussing

trade security, they were already curious enough to stay.

The chamber was hot despite the thick walls. Sunlight filtered through narrow windows and laid

bright lines across the carpets. Guards waited outside. Advisers lingered near the edges. In the

center of the room stood Dias in simple dark robes, looking younger than any of the men whose

futures he was about to challenge.

One of the sultans, broad-shouldered and visibly annoyed, spoke first. "You summoned rulers

and offered no title. That means one of two things: arrogance or usefulness. Choose quickly

which one you are."

Dias almost smiled. "Today? Both."

That drew a short bark of laughter from another ruler and a glare from the first.

"You have our attention," the oldest of them said. "Use it well."

Dias raised one hand. A thin disk of golden light spread above the central table. The advisers

recoiled. Even the guards outside shifted at the sudden brightness. Within the disk appeared the

outline of coastlines, trade routes, and approaching ship lanes.

"This," Dias said, "is the future pressing toward you."

He altered the projection. Foreign ships multiplied. Markers appeared along the coast. Resource

lines. Occupation probabilities. Internal fracture points. The men around the table did not

understand the method, but they understood the warning.

"Who are you?" one asked sharply.

"Someone who has seen what happens if you continue as you are," Dias replied. "You stay

divided. They arrive. They bargain until they can command, and command until they can own.

Your ports become theirs. Your roads become theirs. Your children learn to ask permission in

their own land."

The broad-shouldered ruler scoffed. "We have fought invaders before."

"Yes," Dias said. "Individually. Which is why history remembers your courage and their maps."

Silence.

The oldest sultan leaned forward. "And what do you offer instead?"

Dias placed a small seal-token on the table between them. Four points. One spiral at the center.

"Four stars," he said. "One federation. Shared trade law. Coordinated defense. Unified

intelligence. Local rule preserved where it matters. Collective strategy where it counts."

One of the advisers spoke up before he could stop himself. "That would never hold. Too many

rival clans. Too many old wounds."

Dias looked at him calmly. "Then heal the wounds where possible. Bury them where necessary.

But stop pretending division is a tradition worth preserving when stronger powers are already

sailing toward you."

The debate lasted hours.

Pride argued with fear. History argued with possibility. Every ruler wanted guarantees, leverage,

and proof that the others would not use a federation as a prettier word for domination. Dias gave

ground where it cost him nothing and pressed where it mattered. Shared customs enforcement.

Joint patrol rights. Revenue distribution linked to measurable port traffic. Rotating councils.

Mutual military obligations. Standardized road duties. He talked like an engineer because that

was what he was at heart: not merely a politician, but a systems builder.

At one point the broad-shouldered ruler stood and pointed at him. "And what do you gain from

this? Men do not build structures like this for charity."

Dias answered without hesitation. "Time."

That startled all of them more than any projection had.

"Time to build the region into something that cannot be casually broken," he continued. "Time to

make trade routes stronger than raiding. Time to create infrastructure that serves your people

instead of foreign appetites. If I wanted a throne, I would ask for one. I am asking for function."

Near sunset, the oldest ruler lifted the four-point token and turned it between his fingers.

"If this fails," he said, "history will curse us for trusting a stranger."

Dias met his gaze. "If you do nothing, history won't need to bother. It will erase you itself."

The first agreement was signed that night.

The second came two weeks later after Dias exposed a smuggling ring that had quietly profited

from the tension between two of the states. The third followed when Astra helped predict a

drought pattern that allowed one sultanate to redirect supplies before famine destabilized the

region. Results built trust faster than speeches ever could.

Within three years, the Somali Federation existed in fact if not yet fully in myth.

Roads improved first.

Dias favored roads because roads were arteries, and he understood networks better than

banners. Caravan paths were widened. Waystations were fortified. Water storage sites were

established at intervals chosen by Astra's terrain models rather than tradition alone.

Standardized weights and duties reduced disputes at major trade points. Patrol structures cut

bandit success rates sharply enough that merchants began changing their routes voluntarily,

rewarding the new order with commerce.

Ports came next.

Berbera, Bosaso, Mogadishu, Kismayo - each received a different strategic emphasis. Repair

docks. Supply depots. Defensive towers. Warehouse auditing systems that relied on simple

visible measures and hidden seal-based markers that revealed tampering. To local

administrators, Dias explained only what they needed. To Astra, he explained the rest.

"The port is never just the port," he said one evening while reviewing plans by lamplight in a

coastal office.

[Clarify] Astra replied.

[It's revenue. Movement. Intelligence. Access. Future military staging. Influence. If you control

the port, you control who arrives with confidence and who leaves with excuses]

Astra paused. [Conclusion: you enjoy logistics more than is psychologically normal]

Dias snorted. "Coming from a disembodied optimization engine? Bold."

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