613 lines
28 KiB
TeX
613 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-3-party}{%
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\chapter{Party}\label{chapter-3-party}}
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\epigraph{``I see I'll have to take drastic measures to ensure intelligent
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conversation around here.''}{Dread Empress Maledicta II, before having the tongues of the entire
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Imperial court ripped out}
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``So, aren't we a little underdressed for a palace visit?'' I asked.
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I was still wearing the shirt and trousers they'd had laid out for me in
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my room -- and I was uncomfortably aware of exactly how well it fit. Did
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I want to know how they'd gotten my size? \emph{Probably not}, I
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grimaced. I'd had enough shocks over the last few days as it was. Still,
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the dark grey cotton was more comfortable than anything I'd worn in a
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while. Hopefully I'd get to keep it after tonight, regardless of what
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the man's ``proposition'' was.
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``Armour goes with everything,'' Black replied dryly.
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He was still wearing the same plate set as last night. Now that I could
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get a good look in sunlight I was sure it was, well, regular steel
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plate. It could have been enchanted, of course -- probably was -- but it
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wasn't the dark obsidian or whatnot you'd have expected a man in his
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position to wear. His belt buckle didn't even have a skull on it! That
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\emph{had} to break some kind of Imperial regulation.
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``I guess it does, if you're out to stab people,'' I muttered, eyes
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watching his face closely to see if that got a reaction out of him.
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Nothing. Not all that surprising: I was pretty good at picking up on
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tells in fights -- I'd had to learn, to make it as far in the Pit as I
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had -- but the social stuff had never been my strong suit. A regrettable
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lack of awareness and natural predisposition for insolence, our
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etiquette tutor had called it. I'd called him quite a few less polite
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things behind his back after that lesson, not that it made what he'd
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said any less true. We were drawing attention, I saw from the corner of
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my eye. People ducked into their houses and locked their doors when they
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saw two dozen soldiers escorting a pair of strangers -- Scribe had
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stayed behind -- if you were Lakeside or even Marketside, but we'd left
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both of those behind a while back for the sprawling avenues of
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Whitestone. This whole part of Laure was noble properties and
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guildhalls, all built in the pale sandstone that was the place's
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signature.
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It hadn't expanded in the last few hundred years, mostly because nobles
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had passed a tricky little bit of law to keep everyone else out: every
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addition to the quarter had to be built with the stone from the original
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quarry that had made up the other buildings and, what did you know, that
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quarry had gone dry over a century back. Whoever had come up with that
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probably thought they were clever -- I mostly thought they were an
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asshole. Wasn't that always the way with nobles, though? You got a title
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and a little land, then all these funny ideas started creeping in. Ideas
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like having a separate watch just for the Whitestone, and these were the
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very men and women staring at us right now. They kept their distance, of
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course, but there were more and more of them gathering every time we
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passed by a cluster of chainmail-decked cronies.
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``They gonna give us trouble?'' I grunted as we passed what must have
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been at least twenty nervous-looking watchmen.
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Black cocked his head to the side.
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``That seems unlikely,'' he murmured. ``At best they'll try to send
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warning to their owners in the palace, but as it happens the entrance to
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it has already been secured.''
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I felt my brows raise.
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``There's gotta be at least one of those with a sweetheart that works as
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a cook or a chambermaid,'' I told him flatly. ``They'll know where the
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servant entrances are.''
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The pale-skinned man granted me an amused look.
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``And legionaries should be barring those gates as well, Catherine.''
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Ah. Of course he'd have thought of that. Renowned evil strategist and
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all. I looked away so he couldn't see my cheeks flush.
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``And here's Sabah,'' he mused out loud. ``Everything is going as
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planned, it seems.''
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The latter sentence he said with an odd tone, like he was making a joke.
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I didn't quite get what the humorous part was so I just shot him a
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quizzical glance. I didn't think I'd met a Sabah before, but the
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silhouette that popped around the corner of Peony boulevard was easily
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recognizable. The olive-skinned woman better known as Captain still
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disdained wearing a helmet, but today she wasn't sporting a cloak -- it
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was painfully easy to see exactly how tall and broad she was. Definitely
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over eight feet, and with more muscles to her frame than any orc I'd
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seen, and orcs were built \emph{big}. Just the sight of her was enough
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to scatter the few watchmen still sticking around, though she ignored
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them and headed straight for us.
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``Black,'' she greeted him. ``Miss Foundling.''
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Her voice was deep, though the sing-song Praesi accent was still
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recognizable under it. I nodded back, taking the occasion to get a
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closer look at her. Strong nose and deep-set blue eyes with delicate
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eyelashes that seemed almost out of place on a face that, well, brutish.
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She looked more like an overgrown caricature of a person than someone
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real, and the enormous hammer hanging off her back did little to dispel
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that appearance.
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``Orim has his legionaries in place?'' the Knight asked mildly.
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She nodded.
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``He was unusually eager to lock down the palace,'' she noted. ``Mazus
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managed to get on his bad side.''
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That certainly explained why the legionaries I served drinks too rarely
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had anything good to say about the Governor. That kind of dislike tended
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to trickle down the ranks, and I'd gotten the impression that General
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Orim was a fairly popular leader. \emph{So they covered all the ways in
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and out of the palace.} Now the real question was, what for? That
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strange little talk I'd had with the Black Knight back at the inn had
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left me with the impression that Mazus was on the outs with the Empress.
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She was bound to have other means to discipline the man than sending her
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right hand to do the job, though. A pointed letter with the Imperial
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seal on it would have done it just as well, and without involving all
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the cloak-and-dagger business that was going on right now. \emph{Is he
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getting his governorship revoked?}That would be pretty ideal, as far as
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I was concerned. Laure would go back under martial law until the next
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Praesi bookend from the Wasteland arrived, and with a little luck the
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next idiot up in the palace would be more competent than this one.
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\emph{They wouldn't have gone through all that trouble if that was all
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they'd planned, though,} I decided. \emph{Not unless they expected
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trouble.}
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``Now don't you just look like you're planning murder,'' a voice mused,
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breaking me out of my thoughts.
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Both Black and Captain were looking at me, split somewhere between
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curious and entertained.
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``That's a bit rich coming from you, sir,'' I replied, my mouth forming
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the words before my mind could intervene. Captain snorted, and hopefully
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that meant I wouldn't get murdered in broad daylight.
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``The girl's not wrong,'' she gravelled. ``I've never seen you looking
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like you're not up to something sinister.''
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The Knight wrinkles his nose in distaste. ``'Sinister'? Wekesa's a bad
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influence on you. And to think you were so respectful when we first
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met.''
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The gargantuan woman rolled her eyes and I clenched my jaw so my
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disbelief wouldn't show. I'd never seriously imagined I'd end up meeting
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any of the Calamities, but the few times I'd thought about it there'd
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been a lot less\ldots{} ribbing involved. Banter was something
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\emph{people} did, not whatever they were. Besides, weren't heroes
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supposed to be the witty ones? The best villains got was monologues, in
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the stories, or maybe a disbelieving line about how absorbing power from
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the eldritch abomination bound in stone couldn't \emph{possibly} have
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gone wrong. I pinched myself discreetly, just in case Zacharis had
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messed up my healing big time and I was having a particularly realistic
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fever dream. Captain took a look at the sky and frowned.
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``We need to get a move on, to get here before the little shit's guests
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are drunk,'' she grunted.
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Had she just called the Imperial Governor of Laure a little shit?
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``I think you might be my favourite villain,'' I told the woman very
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honestly.
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The Praesi's lips twitched.
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``We should keep her,'' she gravelled at Black. ``Everybody's been too
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afraid of you to mouth off since the Fields.''
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``Someone forgot to inform Warlock, clearly'' the Knight muttered. ``But
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you're right -- we might have to kill a few to get them in the proper
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state of mind if they're too sloshed.''
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And just like that, it felt like someone had poured cold water down my
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back. The casual way the green-eyed man had just referred to murder had
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jarred me back into reality. \emph{Villains. Funny and almost likeable,
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but still villains.} I'd seen beggar cripples Lakeside with missing
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limbs or a body entirely covered in burns gotten during the Conquest,
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through the handiwork of those two nonchalant people standing next to
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me. \emph{Just because they hate the same people as me doesn't mean
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we're on the same side.} It wouldn't do to forget that. I was joining
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the Legions to exploit the system the Empire had built, not became
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another component of it. I kept my discomfort away from my face and
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followed the two of them when they started strolling towards the palace,
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the Blackguards doing the same without a word.
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It was a little eerie how silent they were, actually. I couldn't recall
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a single one of them saying anything, or seeing one of their faces under
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the helmets.
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There were rumours that all servants and bodyguards to the Imperial
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nobility had their tongues ripped out, but I had a hard time believing
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that. People peddling those stories were the same kind that said the
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reason the Dread Empress was so beautiful was that she bathed in the
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blood of the innocent. \emph{Which is all kinds of stupid.} First off,
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there was bound to be a limited supply of innocents in Ater. Second, a
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bathtub-full of blood was a \emph{lot}. Unless they had some sort of
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special spell to drain blood from people -- which I wouldn't put past
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Praesi, on second thought -- that meant killing at least three adults
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every time, and unless the Empress wanted to go through the rest of her
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day caked in dry blood she'd have to take another bath after. Seemed
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like a lot of trouble for a dubious reason, especially since beauty
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wasn't exactly a requirement for ruling. Emperor Nefarious, who'd been
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on the throne before Malicia, was said to have been a particularly ugly
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old man with a hook nose.
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``I hear you fight in one of the rings,'' Captain gravelled suddenly.
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I eyed the tall warrior in surprise. Hadn't expected the woman to try to
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get a conversation going again, but I supposed that even after my
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unpleasant realization from earlier chit chat was still better than
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walking all the way to the palace in silence.
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``I, er, do,'' I agreed. ``Though I wasn't aware you guys knew about
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those.''
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Captain frowned.
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``Why wouldn't we?'' she asked, glancing at Black.
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``Fighting rings are illegal under Callowan law,'' he told her.
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``Huh,'' the warrior grunted. ``Barbaric.''
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I held back a scowl. \emph{Not sure I want to hear that from a woman
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whose homeland practices human sacrifice.} Still, it had come out of the
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blue that the Imps were aware of the Pit. The reason the fighting rings
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were underground was because they were \emph{illegal}, after all. Booker
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wouldn't have bothered to pay off the guards otherwise. Clearly Mazus
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must have known there were some, since he got a cut, but there was a
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difference between knowing about the Pit and knowing about the fight
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lineup.
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``So Booker pays you off too?'' I asked.
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``In a manner of speaking,'' Black replied. ``You could say we own
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her.''
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``Wait, if you guys run her then why is she paying off Mazus? Wouldn't
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that cut into your profits?''
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``You're assuming that our people and the Governor's are the same.''
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Huh. I was reluctantly amused that Booker was getting fucked over by the
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Praesi on two fronts, truth be told. She'd always seemed so in control:
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it was a pleasant surprise she was being handled the way she handled
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just about everyone else.
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``Anything else you guys are running on the down low?'' I asked.
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The Knight smiled but kept silent. I frowned.
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``You wouldn't bother with small-time stuff like a fighting ring if you
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didn't have the bigger dogs on a leash,'' I realized. ``Shit. How much
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of the underworld do you actually own?''
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Black's smile broadened and he turned to Captain. ``Told you she was
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sharp,'' he said.
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The armoured woman nodded, studying me with a strange look on her face,
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but the compliment did little to stymie my curiosity.
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``The Thieve's Guild, for sure,'' I muttered. ``The Smugglers too?''
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The green-eyed villain shrugged. ``We have a working relationship with
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all of the so-called ``Dark Guilds'','' he admitted. ``Though I could do
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without the melodramatic titles they grant themselves.''
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That was more than a little ironic, coming from a man who'd named his
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personal bodyguards the \emph{Blackguards} and dressed them up according
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to a colour theme.
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``That doesn't really make sense to me,'' I grunted after a moment.
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``The Empire's the \emph{law}, why would they work with you?''
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``You're thinking in terms of legal and illegal,'' Black simply replied.
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``You should be thinking in terms of Good and Evil.''
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Oh. Put like that it made a little more sense. I supposed the kind of
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people who ran Laure's less savoury parts would see people like the
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Calamities as natural allies. And yet, this was still Imperial
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territory. Why would they allow anyone to run thieves and thugs on their
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ground, even if they got a cut? ``Merchants they rob still have that
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much less to pay taxes with,'' I pointed out.
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Captain seemed to have lost interest in the conversation, eyes wandering
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as she surveyed the streets. Couldn't really blame her: we'd kind of
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wandered away from me fighting in the Pit.
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``When Laure was ruled by King Robert,'' Black said, ``the Thieve's
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Guild still existed. Correct?''
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I nodded. That was common enough knowledge -- word had it the Thieves
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had been in business since the the first house in Laure had been built.
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Likely that was just a band of criminals giving themselves a mystique,
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but there was no denying they'd been around for ages.
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``And yet, like all his predecessors, he aggressively pursued it's
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dismantlement,'' the Knight continued. ``The reality of it is that there
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is no city in the world where such activities don't take place. Trying
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to eradicate them would simply drive a band of individuals highly
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proficient at sneaking about in the arms of the first hero to show up.''
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I rubbed the bridge of my nose. The way the man thought was starting to
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give me a headache.
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``So you make a deal with them,'' I guessed. ``They don't steal from the
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Empire and you look the other way?''
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``There are quotas,'' Black replied. ``And all killings of public
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figures had to be vetted beforehand.''
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There was a sort of pragmatic sense to it, but it still raised my
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hackles. The Empire wasn't even observing it's own laws. The Praesi
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weren't so much keeping order as they were making what already existed
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more orderly. \emph{What's the point of having all that power if you
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don't use it to fix the parts of the world that need fixing?}
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Thankfully, I was spared any more small talk by the fact that we'd
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finally arrived at the palace.
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The Royal Palace was all arcs and windows, built in dark grey granite
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instead of the sandstone that infested the rest of this part of the
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city. There was no stone of that kind in Callow itself -- word had it it
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had been built from the remnants of the flying fortress of a Dread
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Empress when it had crashed over the old palace. It was an impressive
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mass, and I couldn't help but stare as we passed by the large ponds that
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dotted the front of it in arcane patterns. There was a low wall circling
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the entire thing with a large gate in the middle, but the people keeping
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watch at the entrance were not city guard: a dozen legionnaires were
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standing at attention in front, decked out in full kit.
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``I guess now's as good a time as any to ask why you brought me along,''
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I said as our group headed towards them.
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Black hummed. ``We're going to ask a few pointed questions to the
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Governor,'' he replied.
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I raised an eyebrow. ``So I just stand there in silence and observe?''
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``On the contrary,'' the Knight murmured. ``You're welcome to interrupt
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as much as you like.''
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Well, wasn't that ominous. ``You're testing me,'' I grunted,
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``Life is a test,'' the green-eyed man replied easily.
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I rolled my eyes. ``I hope you didn't have to meditate under a waterfall
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to come up with that one.''
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Captain snorted, though the conversation was cut short as we passed the
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legionaries. They saluted in silence as we strolled by, taking a paved
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avenue to the palace proper. The entire place was deserted: I'd have
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expected servants to be milling about every which way while the Governor
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was receiving guests, but we were entirely alone. There was light and
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the sound of chatter trickling out through the open windows, gone as
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soon as we entered the torch-lit corridors of the inside. Black had come
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to the head of the party, taking one turn after another without
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hesitation: this wasn't his first time here, I guessed. Spent most of my
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time eyeing the painting and sculptures that covered every open space,
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noting that more than a few of them were in the Free Cities style --
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painted marble, usually of naked people in twisted-up poses.
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``Ah, here we are,'' the Knight mused out loud as we arrived to a pair
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of closed wooden doors.
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The noise of chatter and laughter coming from behind it made it clear
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we'd arrived at the banquet hall. Yet another staple of the Kingdom that
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was now just another trophy in the Governor's hands. ``Captain, if you
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would do the honours?''
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The gargantuan woman stepped forward, laying the palms of her hands
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against the wood and \emph{pushing.} The massive doors swung open
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briskly, hitting the walls with a booming crack. There must have been at
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least fifty people inside, servants aside. Men and women dressed in
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colourful imported silks, drowning in jewel-incrusted gold: most of them
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over forty, though I could see a handful of younger ones. There were
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three long tables forming a U, the man of the hour having taken
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residence at the head of the crowd: his dark-skinned stood out starkly
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across the pale Callowans in attendance. Idly I rubbed my thumb on the
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pommel of the knife strapped at my side -- I wasn't sure whether Black's
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mention of bringing it had been a joke or not, but I certainly felt
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safer standing this close to the pack of cronies with a weapon at my
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hip.
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The noise was snuffed out of the room the moment we walked in, the eyes
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of every single guest in attendance glued to the Knight's face. A few
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glanced at Captain and fewer at me -- it was a little irritating to be
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dismissed so blatantly, but I had a feeling I'd be the one getting the
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last laugh tonight.
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``Out,'' Black simply said. ``All of you.''
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I'd never seen a room clear so quickly before. I could feel the same
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strange \emph{weight} I'd felt last night when he'd stared me down in
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the alley, but this time it wasn't directed at me. It was like swimming
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just outside of a current: the pull was there, but it wasn't dragging me
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in. All those peacocks dressed in silk and carrying enough gold in rings
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and necklaces to feed a family for a decade were hurrying out without
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even bothering to pretend they weren't terrified. There was something
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darkly satisfying about seeing the rich and powerful of Laure jostling
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each other in their haste to get out the door as fast as they physically
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could. I didn't hide my smile. \emph{I'm not here to make friends, and
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even if I was there's no one here I'd want to count as one.}
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``So it's a Name thing, the way you mess with people's heads,'' I mused.
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``Seems like a useful trick.''
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The green-eyed man shot me an amused look.
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``A fairly basic use of my power,'' he replied, looking over the fleeing
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throng, ``but I won't deny it can be entertaining on occasion.''
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It couldn't have been more than thirty heartbeats when the only people
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left in the once-crowded banquet hall were Black, Captain, the Governor
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and myself. I took the occasion to have a closer look at the ruler of
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Laure, now that I was actually in the same room as the damned man.
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Governor Mazus was a tall man in his late thirties, dark-skinned like so
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many of the Praesi were. His hair was cut short and his beard cropped
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close, framed by the long gold earrings dangling from his ears. His
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robes were a riot of green and gold silk, and I was willing to bet
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diamonds to piglets that some of the stitches on them were actual gold
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thread. There was polished quality to the Governor, like every detail of
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his outfit and appearance had been attended to carefully. \emph{He can
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certainly afford the servants to do it.}
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``Amadeus,'' the Governor said, outwardly unaffected by the interruption
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as he leaned back on his chair while loosely holding a sculpted silver
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goblet. ``An unexpected pleasure. I would have prepared a more fitting
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reception, if you'd sent word ahead of your visit.''
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The ice in Black's eyes could have frozen boiling water.
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``There are very few people who get to call me by that name, Mazus,'' he
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replied very quietly, ``and you were never one of them.''
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There was no hiding the flinch that went through him at that, though the
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aristocrat's face went blank immediately after as if to pretend it had
|
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never happened. I took notes: one of these days I was going to manage to
|
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get a flinch out of assholes without raising my voice too.
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``Ah, of course,'' the Governor said. ``I've had a little too much wine,
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it seems. To what do I owe the privilege of your presence, Lord Black?''
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``The taxes you owe the Tower are late, Governor.''
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Mazus let out a regretful sigh.
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``As I already informed Her Most Dreadful Majesty, the convoy was
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waylaid by bandits. I've already drafted extraordinary taxes to remedy
|
|
to that, but the burned Callowans are being obstructive. Borders on
|
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treason, really.''
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\emph{Not that it matters, given the confession}, Scribe had said back
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at the inn. The pieces were starting to come together, and what I was
|
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beginning to think was going to happen to Mazus was enough to smother
|
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the cold rage that flared up when he called it \emph{treasonous} that
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the people of Laure didn't want their children to starve. I could have
|
|
let the smarminess go, but really why bother? Black had already as good
|
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as said he wanted me to interrupt whenever I felt like it.
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``Really?'' I said. ``Bandits attacking an Imperial tax convoy? He's
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supposed to buy \emph{that}? They're outlaws, not idiots. They'd be
|
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swimming neck-deep in legionnaires before the month was done.''
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|
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|
The aristocrat narrowed his eyes at me, apparently unused at that kind
|
|
of insolence coming from one of the people he ruled over.
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|
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|
``I care little if you pick up stray dogs off the streets, Lord Black,
|
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but perhaps you should muzzle this one before she gets her tongue ripped
|
|
out.''
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|
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|
Oh, he did \emph{not} just say that.
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|
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|
``Call me a dog again and I'm going to strangle you with your own
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|
intestines, you filthy Praesi prick,'' I promised, meaning every word of
|
|
it.
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|
Mazus sputtered.
|
|
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|
``You're-''
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|
``Callowan?'' I interrupted. ``A girl? Nobody important? All true. But
|
|
if I were you, the thing I'd worry about is \emph{carrying a knife}.''
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|
``I'd take that warning seriously if I were you, Mazus,'' Black mused
|
|
from my side. ``I've known her for a day and she already has a body
|
|
count.''
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|
He sneered.
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|
``Raising a hand to an Imperial Governor will get you drawn and
|
|
quartered, girl. Your bravado does you little credit.''
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|
``Unless, of course,'' Black murmured, ``said Governor has committed
|
|
high treason.''
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|
Mazus paled.
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|
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|
``That's a serious accusation,'' he replied after a moment. ``Making it
|
|
without proof would have consequences.''
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|
|
|
``Oh, we're still talking in hypotheticals,'' the Knight demurred. ``But
|
|
if say, a hypothetical governor were to report his due to the Tower had
|
|
been robbed, it would be possible that the Empress would get curious and
|
|
send people to look into the matter.''
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|
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|
``Sounds like she'd be a little ticked off,'' I contributed with a hard
|
|
smile. ``Hypothetically.''
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|
|
|
``The Empress has little patience for those who cross her, much less
|
|
those doing it so gauchely,'' the green-eyed man agreed. ``Now, imagine
|
|
that these bandits were found, and that when\ldots{} properly motivated,
|
|
they had a story to tell. Would you care to guess what that story is,
|
|
Catherine?''
|
|
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|
``Someone paid them to rob the convoy,'' I grunted, the words flowing
|
|
out easily. ``Someone who'd then get a cut of the gold and buy their
|
|
silence with the rest of it.''
|
|
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|
Black smiled, lean and mean.
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|
|
|
``A little too clever to be a dog, don't you think?''
|
|
|
|
I stepped closer to the tables, grabbing an empty goblet and a pitcher
|
|
of wine before pouring myself drink. I wasn't going to lie to myself and
|
|
pretend I wasn't enjoying every moment of this -- it was payback for
|
|
every time we'd had half-portions at the orphanage because food prices
|
|
had hiked up, retribution for every time I'd seen the city guard rough
|
|
up a shopkeeper late paying his taxes.
|
|
|
|
``People will say anything under torture,'' Mazus finally said. ``I look
|
|
forward to your trying to convince a court it's enough to have me put
|
|
away.''
|
|
|
|
I frowned, but took a sip of wine -- fruity and strong, probably not
|
|
from Callow. Figured the bastard would be drinking imported stuff. Black
|
|
wasn't an idiot: he wouldn't have strolled in here so confidently if
|
|
Mazus was going to get away with it all, and I was more than willing to
|
|
wait another few moments to see that veneer of confidence stripped away
|
|
from the man's face.
|
|
|
|
``The Empress had taken a personal interest,'' the Knight said coldly.
|
|
``There is no need for a trial when the sentence has already been
|
|
determined.''
|
|
|
|
The Governor sneered. ``This will be the ruin of her, you imbecile. My
|
|
father will whip up the Truebloods in a frenzy when word gets out.''
|
|
|
|
``Really?'' I choked out with a laugh. ``That's your defence -- wait
|
|
'til my dad hears about this?''
|
|
|
|
``He has something of a point, Catherine,'' Black said. ``Or he would,
|
|
if High Lord Igwe wasn't already under arrest himself.''
|
|
|
|
It was the second time that night I saw Mazus blanch, and it was every
|
|
bit as delightful as the first.
|
|
|
|
``You're mad,'' the Governor whispered.
|
|
|
|
``Ever a subject of debate, I'm assured,'' the dark-haired man replied
|
|
with a bland smile. ``Truthfully, Mazus, I'm suprised. You've always
|
|
been a little slow but this? How did you think it was going to end?''
|
|
|
|
``With me Chancellor,'' the other Praesi snarled. ``It's just a matter
|
|
of time until one of us claims the Role, you filthy upstart. You can't
|
|
\emph{destroy} a Name.''
|
|
|
|
``You can't buy one either,'' the Knight replied. ``Though that hardly
|
|
matters now. Tell me, Catherine, how should a ruler deal with treason?''
|
|
|
|
I shrugged, feeling the weight of the Governor's gaze on me.
|
|
|
|
``I'm told Imperial policy about that involves heads and pikes,'' I
|
|
mused. ``Though that always struck me as a little tacky. It's not like
|
|
you can tell \emph{whose} head it was, a few weeks in. The crows tend to
|
|
take care of that.''
|
|
|
|
Mazus slowly forced his spine to straighten and his hands to stop
|
|
shaking.
|
|
|
|
``Fine,'' he sneered. ``I was caught. So be it. Unlike peasants, my
|
|
breed knows how to go when the game is up. Have the mahogany chest in my
|
|
rooms fetched, I'll drink the deathleaf extract with my wine.''
|
|
|
|
Black laughed and unlike the few laughs I'd heard from him before this
|
|
one was a wintry, sharp thing.
|
|
|
|
``You don't seem to understand your situation, Mazus,'' he smiled. ``You
|
|
belong to us, now. Your life, your death -- all ours. And you're not
|
|
dying a dignified death sitting on your throne. It's the gallows for
|
|
you, Governor of Laure.''
|
|
|
|
The Blackguards fanned into the room at Captain's order. Mazus tried to
|
|
get up, eyes white and wild, but by the time he'd pushed back his chair
|
|
there was a pair of plate-wearing soldiers grabbing his shoulders.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' he screamed. ``Black, you can't -- you wouldn't dare-''
|
|
|
|
They dragged him out of the room, his screams of protests echoing even
|
|
as he disappeared into the corridor. I put down my goblet of wine,
|
|
leaving it half-full. I felt a little guilty at the waste, but
|
|
considering the banquet tables were full of food I was hardly the worst
|
|
offender tonight.
|
|
|
|
``So,'' I said calmly. ``Now is when you make your pitch, I'm
|
|
guessing?''
|