The British Empire (Wagers and Spies)

 In Great Britain, dating back since before the Roman battle versus Boudica, the British have relied upon wagers; men for the military, or through a man placing for a woman, politics for any matron, a woman with grandchildren, and the link to the ancient trade lines of Arabia, the gildsmen; those volunteered since infantry to be subjects of literature, the gold thread in the left arm.

A "bauble", is a Commodore; a one star admiral, a "spymaster"; not for an MI-6 bet, a wager, between two spymasters and a recruited allotment of "hexadecimels"; Rom from a British township, anywhere with a counter-cryptoanalysis method used on students.

Any family, holding baubles, or competing to take or create from another (a wager against betters, or an "M", a request to join as a family), may request a highly paid soldier, a one star admiral, raised in British admiralty.

From Nelson to Garvey, we've had plenty of Commodores of notoriety.

The British Empire works on SIS (secret intelligence services, psychiatric agents), SAS (beer men, liquor and distillery trained workers), and RAF (pilots and cargo, trained as marijuana agents).

Anyone else, is a promise from your country, to Britain, based on a wager; in repayment, your line of gemetria, closed (unless a "Mason", a "steward"; a product of a hooker, and the Grand Tour; a police deacon, a Hebrew speaking detective on the force, to assist priests; the police chief).

To break a wager, is criminal; a war against your country.

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