Silverwall wrote:She will be placed on a capital ship, you just don't put princesses of the blood on tin cans. ----> Points at the future George the 6th serving on HMS Collingwood a St Vincent class Dreadnought.
pappilon wrote:
But ...but wait! Abigail didn't serve on an SD for her snotty cruise. She's not much less the daughter of a head of state. And our (and their) Duchess Steadholder Alexander-Harrington is also a head of state. (Dang those Graysons, they'll hang a steading around anyone's neck)
I wouldn't be surprised over a plot twist that puts her on a Havenite ship. GA and all that. Possibly a brand spanking new one fresh out of refitting in Beowulf from Bolthole.
Silverwall wrote:To be blunt Abigail is in WW1 terms a princess of Denmark or luxemborg. Rachel is Literally in the same position as the future KG VI. Second or third in line for the throne of a great power.
While Abigail is in line for her father's Steadholdership, Rachel is
not in line for the Protectorship of Grayson:
Ashes of Victory, Chapter 14 wrote:For once in her life, however, not even Allison Chou Harrington's intransigence had been enough. The fact that the Conclave of Steadholders had accepted Faith as Honor's heir, formally named Howard Clinkscales her regent, determined the composition of her Regency Council (which had not, as originally structured, included the Steadholder Mother), and transferred the Harrington Key to her as the second Steadholder Harrington had represented an enormous concession on the Conservatives' part. Of course, all those arrangements had come tumbling down when Honor turned out to be alive after all, but Faith remained her legally designated heir, and Allison was well aware that most of the steadholders, even those who belonged to what passed for the Keys' liberal wing, would really have preferred for her to be clever enough to have made sure James was born first. Since she'd been so inconsiderate as to produce a girl child first, however, and since Protector Benjamin had insisted, they had grudgingly agreed that it was time to allow female children to inherit their fathers' keys. They'd insisted on grandfathering in a stipulation to guarantee the succession of the sons of those among them who'd already produced male heirs, even if, as most Grayson men did, those sons had older sisters, and they'd specifically exempted the protectorship itself, despite Benjamin's best efforts, but they'd accepted yet another of his reforms.
Italics are the author's, boldface and underlined text is my emphasis.
So Rachel's midshipman's cruise may have much in common to Abigail's in the choice of what ship she would be assigned to (it should be noted that High Admiral Matthews was directly involved in that decision, as well as directly meeting with Abigail to inform her of the details--primarily political--of her midshipman's cruise). The fact that she is
not in line of succession for the Protectorship of Grayson makes it more likely she would make her cruise on a non-capital ship similar to HMS
Gauntlet. The fact that she
is the Protector's eldest daughter, even while not in line of succession, would tend to push back on that choice, however. I suspect that Benjamin's input would play a very large part on what ship she would end up on.