Thursday, April 23 · Day 8
Morning Edition

The Almaria Herald

“The truth, carefully.”

Politics · Crown

Cordoba answers the pump with fidelity; Crown weighs reserves as ministries convene

Patriarch's statement from Almaria Vella steadies public temper as King Juan weighs the release of reserves and the Chamber awaits the Prime Minister's address on Tuesday.

By V. Aldama·3 min read

The patriarch of Almaria Vella broke a week's public silence yesterday with a statement addressed, in his own phrase, 'to the households of Almar,' promising that the weight of the current fuel shock would not be permitted to fall upon the fisherman unable to cast his nets or the widow unable to warm her rooms. The statement, issued from the offices of El Clarín de Almar and reproduced through the editor network, has been received in the capital as the steadying word that a nervous kingdom had awaited.

Don Alejandro Córdoba, whose family houses have stood upon the Cordoba littoral since the reign of Alfons III, framed the present distress not as an occasion for political agitation but as a summons to fidelity. 'The household that endures,' he wrote, 'is the household that does not quarrel at the hearth when the wind is loud at the door.' The phrasing, characteristic of the patriarch in his pastoral mode, was read aloud at the Chamber canteen and, we are told, copied out by more than one provincial mayor before the luncheon bell.

The occasion for such counsel is no mystery. The Almarian Energy Regulatory Authority confirmed that petrol prices at the capital's pumps and at Almaria Vella rose eight percent overnight, the highest level in nearly three years, and heating gas tariffs are expected to follow before the month is out. The shock is imported: global markets have convulsed over renewed tensions at a distant eastern chokepoint, and the refinery fire in the neighbouring littoral has added a second tremor to the first.

His Majesty King Juan is understood to have held two audiences yesterday at the Palau Reial, one with Prime Minister Cardenal Marín and one with the Minister of Energy, before retiring to consider the recommendations of the inter-ministerial committee convened earlier in the week. The Crown's disposition, as those familiar with the discussions describe it, is one of deliberation rather than haste: the strategic reserve is a finite instrument and, once drawn, cannot be drawn twice.

That deliberation has not pleased every quarter. The Leader of the Opposition issued a press statement and an op-ed demanding the immediate release of reserves and the suspension of the May fuel duty increase, and accusing — in language we decline to reproduce in full — the Crown and the Cordoba houses of maintaining a 'duopoly' over Almarian life. The Herald notes the demand and records our view that the case for reserves is a matter of arithmetic, not of rhetoric, and that arithmetic is presently being done by those qualified to do it.

Cardenal Marín, for his part, issued a second pastoral letter from the Primatial See calling the faithful to charity and prudence, and urging, as he has urged all week, that humanitarian corridors be kept open in the eastern waters where the fire still burns. The Prime Minister is expected to address the Chamber on Tuesday.

Doctora Laia Ferré, speaking for the Foreign Ministry outside the Palau de la Diplomàcia, separately acknowledged 'evolving security arrangements among allied nations' but reassured the kingdom that Almaria's own treaty posture is unchanged. 'Almaria remains committed to its treaty obligations,' she said, 'and to the collective security architecture that has underpinned regional stability since the post-war era.'

What comes next, in the Crown's own preferred cadence, is patience. Reserves may yet be released; duty may yet be suspended; the Chamber will debate both. In the meantime the patriarch's counsel holds the field: that the household which does not quarrel at the hearth is the household which endures the storm.

(continued on p. 1)

Opinion

The hearth and the household

By V. Aldama, Director

It is the oldest observation in our trade that a kingdom in a hard week reveals its preferences in small gestures: the passage a citizen underlines, the phrase a minister repeats, the silence a patriarch breaks. This week has been no exception.

Continued →

A letter from the littoral

By Ines Cordoba

I write from the salt-stone terrace at Almaria Vella, where the gulls this morning were earlier than the news. My grandfather's statement has been read, I am told, from a canteen in the Chamber and from a quay at Port de Cala Rossa, and I find I am neither surprised nor moved to comment upon its reception. I write instead to say what the younger members of our house have been saying at breakfast.

Continued →

Gossip from the Vella

A certain opposition op-ed, submitted this week to three papers including our own, has been printed in only one of them; the author is said to be considering a fourth channel, which the Herald wishes her well of.

The long luncheon at an Almaria Vella address on Tuesday was, we understand, convened by the Nationalist bench and ran to the dessert course without a formal agenda — the mark, old hands say, of a serious agenda.

Doña Marisol's hat at the Palace of Justice rally on Wednesday has been discussed, at some length, in quarters where hats are not usually the leading question.

The junior member for the interior was overheard at the Chamber canteen copying out, with evident pleasure, the patriarch's sentence about the hearth; he is said to be drafting a speech around it.

The pop singer Lucia del Mar has declined to lend her name to any fuel-duty petition, citing, with admirable professional prudence, that her songs do not concern tariffs.

Classifieds

· WANTED — experienced bookkeeper for established fishing cooperative, Port de Cala Rossa; discretion essential, Catalan a plus.

· FOR SALE — pair of brass oil lamps, Almaria Vella provenance, never used under modern current; enquiries to this paper.

· ROOM TO LET — second floor, Bloc del Puerto, three windows to the quay; references from the parish priest of Sant Joan preferred.

· LOST — a grey tabby answering, when it chooses, to 'Canonge'; last seen near the Primatial See; reward offered.

· NOTICE — the Almarian Road Haulage Federation will hold its ordinary quarterly meeting on Thursday at the Chamber annex; members only.

Obituaries

Don Eulogi Ramonet de la Vega

Retired harbourmaster of Port de Cala Rossa, 88; kept the tide book in his own hand for forty-one years and refused, to the last, the offer of a typewriter.

Senyora Amàlia Prats i Coll

Schoolmistress at Sant Joan for a generation, 79; remembered for the phrase 'copy it out again, neatly,' which an entire littoral can still recite.