477 lines
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477 lines
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\hypertarget{epilogue}{%
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\chapter*{Epilogue}\label{epilogue}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{epilogue}} \chaptermark{Epilogue}
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\epigraph{``What say you, Empress of Praes?
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Here you lie upon the blood-soaked ruins of your dominion,
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surrounded by the corpses of the legions that once swarmed over the
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world. Hundreds of thousands dead for the sake of your wretched
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ambition, your mad design to bring to heel the kingdoms of man. In all
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the history of Creation no one woman has been so wicked as you, and I
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will have my answer.
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Why, o Empress of Ruins?''
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She shrugged.
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``Why not?''}{Last lines of the ``The Fall of Empress
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Triumphant, First and Only of Her Name''}
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\textbf{(Six Months Later) 1324 A.D., 5th of Mawja, Marchford}
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A year ago, the commander would have given him trouble. Now? William
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tore the Penitent's Blade out of the orc's throat with a casual flick of
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the wrist. The sword keened mournfully, taking the greenskin's life with
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it as it withdrew. The officer had died bravely, as bravely as one of
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his filthy species could, but with the orc's blood on the floor the last
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of the resistance was over. It was to the Countess' credit that she'd
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managed to turn a force of mercenaries and peasant levies into a
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coherent fighting force in less than a month -- though it had certainly
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helped that their first battlefield had been her own fiefdom. If only
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all the allies he'd gathered were so competent. The Duke of Liesse had
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yet to set foot in the city, remaining with the baggage train under the
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impatient protection of the Exiled Prince.
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The hero in question had been miffed he wouldn't get to blood his men on
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Praesi legionaries today, but Countess Elizabeth had been correct when
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she'd pointed out that his troops were singularly unsuited to surprise
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attacks. No doubt the Duke would insist on a triumphant victory parade
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when the time came for him to enter, and for that the polished lancers
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of the Silver Spears would serve perfectly. They'd make a stirring
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enough image, and the story would spread: the Duke of Liesse had
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returned, to free the Kingdom from the yoke of the Tower.
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Putting a complete imbecile on the throne of Callow was something
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William was going to have to live with, unfortunately. Oh, the Duke did
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have a sort of low cunning -- he'd left Callow before Laure had even
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fallen, during the Conquest, and taken his treasury with him -- but it
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was the kind of cunning a cockroach would have. He was a master of
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survival and little else, not to mention hopelessly self-important. That
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he was the First Prince's creature walked the fine line between a virtue
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and a liability: this entire rebellion was being bankrolled by Proceran
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silver, but William was not so much of a fool as to be unaware the
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cold-eyed woman had designs on Callow herself. That was fine.
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He was already leading a rebellion against the Empire, and he was more
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than willing to lead one against the Principate if it came down to it.
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The Kingdom Under was a much greater worry. That two thousand hardened
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dwarven veterans had suddenly decided to form a mercenary company in
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Mercantis just when he'd been buying up every contract he could get his
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hands on was not a coincidence. The dwarves had a history of sending
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troublemakers up to the surface to die in other people's wars, but the
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Sons of Stone were not your usual malcontents. If the King Under the
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Mountains was meddling in topside affairs William was going to have to
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keep a very, very close eye on it. Over two thirds of Calernia stood
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above dwarven tunnels and cities: no single nation had a military whose
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size equalled even the tenth of what the dwarves could muster if they
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felt like it.
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It would not matter, in the end.
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Only eight months had passed since his defeat at the hands of the
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Squire, but her words still rang whenever he closed his eyes. \emph{Run
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and hide and muster your armies in the dark. Make deals you'll regret
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until you have nothing left to bargain with. I'll be waiting for you, on
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the other side of that battlefield.} The dismissal had been a lash on
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his back all the way to Refuge, where he'd knelt at the feet of the Lady
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of the Lake and asked to be taken as a pupil. She'd denied him, not
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unkindly. After the defeat at Summerholm, that had almost been enough to
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break him.
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What could you say, when the great swordswoman in Creation told you you
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weren't good enough to beat her old pupil? The sword was all he was good
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for. His Name was a paradox, in a way: heroes were supposed to galvanize
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others into something greater than themselves, but his Role thrived on
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being solitary. The Eyes of the Empire had failed to find him because
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he'd never been part of a band of heroes, eschewing more blatant heroics
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for quiet work in the dark. He'd found his answer through pure
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happenstance, that blessed golden luck that smiled on heroes from above.
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He'd found the gates to Arcadia Resplendent, and petitioned the Lady for
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the right to use them. This boon she'd seen fit to grant, and so began
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his year in the realm of the Fae. A full year he'd spent fighting for
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his life against the denizens of that eldritch place, hunted for sport
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by the horrors of the Wild Hunt. But he'd survived, and learned. There
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was no comparing his power now to what it had been in Summerholm. On the
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last day of the year, the gates had opened to let him leave and he'd
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returned to Creation. Barely a month had passed outside of Arcadia: he
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would crush the Squire when they next met, and they \emph{would} meet.
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The pattern had been set, there was no avoiding it. And when the time
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came, he would cram her words back down her sneering throat before
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raising the banner of a liberated Kingdom over her corpse.
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Sheathing his sword, the Lone Swordsman left the room and stepped down
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the stairs. Countess Marchford should have set things up by now,
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assembling her peasantry in the city square. It was a shame the woman
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was so ambitious, but as far as commanders went she was by far the best
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the nobility had to offer. She'd stalemated a Marshal for an entire
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month during the Siege of Summerholm, holding out until the Legions
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landed a force on the other side of the Hwaerte and finished the
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encirclement. Had Grem One-Eye not been driving his army into the depths
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of the Duchy of Daoine at the same time, it would have been long enough
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for the Deoraithe to come relieve the siege.
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\emph{And now she wants to be Queen of Callow, as she would have been
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had the Shining Prince not died at the Fields.} Less of a bitter pill to
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swallow than the Duke having the best claim to the throne, all in all.
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She would not be any more inclined to trade a Praesi occupation for a
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Proceran one than William himself. The streets were full of dead
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legionaries, the fighting having gotten brutal in its last gaps. A full
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quarter of the Twelfth Legion had spat in the face of offered surrender,
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eerily singing that damned Legionary's Song as they made their last
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stand against thrice their number. In a person that kind of courage
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would have been worthy of respect, but greenskins were barely more
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sentient than animals. Just another horror crafted by the Hellgods to
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plague Creation, an endless horde of foot soldiers carrying the banner
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of Evil.
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His steps took him all the way to the central market, where the citizens
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of Marchford stood as an uneasy crowd in front of the gallows erected by
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the Legions. Fifty prisoners, goblins and orcs and humans, already stood
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on the wooden platform with nooses around their necks. His idea, that:
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William had not forgotten Summerholm, and neither would those fucking
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Praesi butchers. He hopped onto the gallows and with a few lazy strides
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he stood in front of the people, whispers of his Name spreading among
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the crowd when they recognized his white-gilded armour. There'd been a
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time where he would have avoided such glaringly heroic garments like the
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plague, but the time for subtlety was long past. Eyes staring down the
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masses, the hero took a deep breath.
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``Twenty years ago, Praesi boots broke the spine of this nation,'' he
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said, and the words carried perfectly.
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Utter silence greeted him.
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``They were strong, we told ourselves,'' he continued. ``Too strong.
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What could we possibly have done?''
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His eyes narrowed.
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``\emph{Cowardice},'' he barked.
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The crowd flinched as if he'd lashed them.
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``There is no bargaining with Evil,'' he thundered. ``No truce with the
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Enemy. That we ever gave in to the Tower is a stain on the history of
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this Kingdom.''
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Slowly, William unsheathed his sword.
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``But we are not yet beyond redemption,'' he told them. ``Shame can be
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expunged. Today, for the first time in two decades, some of us rose to
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our feet.''
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His Name burned within him, a cold flame that turned his blood to smoke
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and dust.
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``Tell me, Callowans, do you want to spend the rest of your life
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kneeling?''
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He could feel it swelling up. He could see it in their eyes, the light
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ground out by decades of occupation. His power spread through the air,
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thick and lingering.
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``Do you want to continue licking the Empress' boot, and let your
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children inherit that life?'' he bellowed.
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The whisper first came from the back, twisting and winding and gaining
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strength as it made its way to the first row and the answer came out as
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a \emph{NO} that clapped like thunder.
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``Neither do I,'' he admitted when silence returned. ``Take heart,
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citizens of Callow. Today the Kingdom is born again, and I make you this
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oath.''
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Green eyes burned.
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``CALLOW WILL BE FREE.''
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Behind him the legionaries dropped, one after another, the cheer from
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the crowd drowning their dying struggles out. William closed his eyes,
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letting the sound wash over him, and smiled. There could be no defeat.
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The Heavens, after all, were on his side. Why else would they have
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granted him Triumph as an aspect?
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---
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\textbf{9th of Mawja, Ater, Inner City}
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Akua had never particularly enjoyed playing shatranj, though she was
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skilled at it. The only reason she was currently playing Barika was
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that, traditionally speaking, it was expected of her to play shatranj
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while discussing the demise of her enemies. The way the Unonti heiress
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played was too conservative, much like the girl herself. Had she not
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been so reliably loyal, she would never have made it as high in Akua's
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council as she currently stood. That was the problem with many of the
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Trueblood's children. The old nobility was too stiff, too set in its
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ways, and it had transmitted that disease to their inheritors.
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Thankfully her own mother was much more flexible in her ways, and had
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raised her as such. The truth was that the Empire was no longer the same
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as it had been in ages past. The Reforms had granted rights to the
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greenskins, and there would be no withdrawing those without a civil war
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-- one the nobility might not win, given that the vast majority of the
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current generations of orcs and goblins were Legion-trained.
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The old truth that greenskins were inferiors to the Soninke in every way
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was no longer valid, and so had to be discarded. The aristocrats who
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refused to admit this were betraying the guiding rule of all Praesi:
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truth was mutable, and changed according to one's purposes. Akua was not
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above using orcs and goblins as tools, though she found the matter
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distasteful. More importantly, the old hatreds some Soninke still held
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against humans had to be set aside. Taghreb inferiority, while a fact,
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was marginal enough in nature it should be ignored. Even the Duni had
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proved they could have worth, by spawning the most viciously dangerous
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Black Knight the Empire had seen in centuries. It was a shame the man
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had declined to take her a pupil, and she truly regretted that she had
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come to be at cross-purposes with him. Removing Foundling should neuter
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that liability cleanly enough, and the Knight was much too pragmatic to
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hold a grudge over such a trifling matter.
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``I do not understand why you let the goblin's death pass without making
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an issue of it,'' Barika said, moving a legionary forward in an unwise
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gambit that was going to cost her a priest in three moves.
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``I tried to press the issue through Court,'' Akua noted. ``Before I
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could, a member of the Blackguard dropped a basket with the head of my
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proxy in it at the mansion gates.''
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The warning had been clear enough, and she'd never particularly expected
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that particular plot to bear fruit anyway. She'd had four people out for
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Foundling's blood in the melee, but the goblin had been the only one to
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get close enough for an attempt. The scheme had been worth making, and
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had cost her nothing of worth to implement -- much like the entire war
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games affair. Blackmailing the instructor to change Squire's beginning
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position and meddle with the memory magic might have been a more
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expensive endeavour, had the man in question not been caught trying to
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escape the city and been crucified for his troubles. A rather mild
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reaction, by the standards of the Black Knight. The last time he'd
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caught a noble meddling in College business, he'd had their entire
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family eaten alive by spiders. Malicia was tightening his leash, as she
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had been for several years.
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``Then it was a failure,'' Barika said, barely hiding a wince when she
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lost her priest and found her chancellor trapped in a corner.
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``You're assuming that the point of this enterprise was to deny
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Foundling the appointment,'' Akua said. ``While it would have been the
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optimal result, it was not my main objective.''
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In the long term, there was no real way to ensure that Squire did not
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get to lead troops. She was, ironically enough, too well-connected for
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that. At best the process could be delayed, and Akua's assessment of the
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cost of keeping her out of the Legions for another year had been too
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much to stomach. And so she'd planned with the eventuality of failure in
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mind. By making this a public play through the Court, she'd forced her
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support in the nobility to be open in their backing. The minor loss of
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face that ensued from Foundling's victory had caused her fair-weather
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friends to immediately withdraw their support, allowing Akua to separate
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the wheat from the chaff. She'd immediately move on those and made
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examples of them, of course.
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Her position in Court was now stronger than it had ever been.
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And while Squire had been tearing out her hair over inconsequential
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collegial games, she'd prepared to place agents in the Fifteenth Legion.
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\emph{That} plot, the one that mattered, had been a success. That one of
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Foundling's senior officers had become a spy before they were even
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appointed to the rank had been a source of great amusement to her over
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the last few months. It was unfortunate that she'd been unable to find
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leverage on the officers of the former Rat Company, as they seemed to be
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Squire's most trusted. Ratface's familial situation had seemed promising
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but the boy had flatly told her intermediary that if the subject was
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ever broached again blades would come out. Legate Juniper's open
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distaste for what she called ``human squabbling'' made her a lost cause
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in this regard, and had she not been the daughter of a general Akua
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would already have her had assassinated. A shame, that such talent would
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be put to work in her rival's favour. Barika knocked over her empress in
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a concession of defeat, letting out a sigh.
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``So,'' she murmured. ``Are you finally going to tell me what was in the
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letter that came this morning?''
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Heiress smiled.
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``Every major city in the south of Callow has risen in rebellion,'' she
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replied.
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``\emph{What?}'' the other girl replied, openly aghast.
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Akua pretended she hadn't seen the loss of composure, for her childhood
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companion's sake.
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``The Sixth and the Ninth Legion are to be deployed to put the unrest
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down,'' she informed the other Soninke. ``The Fifteenth will be joining
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them, still at half-strength.''
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The purpose behind keeping the numbers of Foundling's legion at two
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thousand legionaries only still eluded her, in truth. Part of it must
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have been the fact that Fourteenth was being raised simultaneously and
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the recruitment pool was limited, but that answer was too\ldots{}
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obvious. There was always more than one angle, when one dealt with the
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Calamities.
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``So that's why you've been recruiting mercenaries,'' Barika suddenly
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breathed.
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Akua's smile broadened, never quite reaching her eyes. Mercenaries were,
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technically speaking, illegal in Praes. It would have been too obvious
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of a way for the High Lords to get around the household troops
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restrictions put into place by Malicia. But the moment southern Callow
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had risen in rebellion, it had stopped legally being Praesi territory.
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The roughly four thousand troops she'd hired in Mercantis would be able
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to operate there without consequence.
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``It won't be enough,'' a third voice rasped from the corner of the
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room.
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Akua's eyes flickered to the mangled goblin. Half of her face was
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missing, chopped off by a brutal -- and lethal sword wound. Various
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parts of her body had been snapped by falling rubble and even now still
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remained at unnatural angles, barely functional. Not even the best
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necromancers on her payroll had been able to restore Chider to something
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palatable to look at.
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``That would be where you come in, Commander Chider,'' Heiress replied
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softly.
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The goblin let out a horrible rasp Akua took a moment to recognize as a
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laugh. Raising a mere enemy of Foundling from the dead would have been a
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waste of gold, but Heiress had no interest in the greenskin's skills. It
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was her nature that was of import. Raising a Claimant from the dead, on
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the other hand, had been worth every denarii. Picking up her own
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empress, the Soninke aristocrat felt her Name coil inside of her
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silently, like a snake preparing to strike. She'd wondered, when she'd
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first come into her Role, what exactly it meant. It was a question every
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Heir and Heiress had to answer on their own. Was she the inheritor of
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the stewardship of the Empire, the return of the forbidden Name of
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Chancellor? Was she the next warlord of Praes, the successor of its
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Black Knight? Or was hers to be the hand that cast down Dread Empress
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Malicia, the woman still hated behind closed doors? Wrong, all wrong.
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Paltry ambitions of lesser souls.
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She was Akua Sahelian, and she would inherit all of Creation.
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---
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\textbf{7th of Mawja, Ater, the Tower}
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Black put down the letter, face expressionless.
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The rebellion was not, all in all, unexpected. He'd moved Istrid and
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Sacker further south to deal with the eventuality, assigning the
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Eleventh to Summerholm instead. More importantly, Ranker and her Fourth
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were keeping an eye on the Deoraithe. Scribe's agents had found out the
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Duchess had placed an observer with the rebels, but according to the
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rest of the network that was the only move she'd made. His personal
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assessment of Kegan had been accurate, then: she would not take action
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unless the Liesse Rebellion looked like it had decent chances of
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succeeding. That Afolabi had lost a full thousand at Marchford would be
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a black mark on the general's record, but it was a tactical defeat and
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not a strategic one. No rebel force had yet to dare move north of Vale,
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and he'd already sent Catherine orders to mobilize her Fifteenth: by
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dawn tomorrow they'd be moving for the Blessed Isle to join the muster
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in central Callow.
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``So that was your gamble, then,'' the dark-haired man murmured into the
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silence.
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He'd wondered about the exact form his Squire's actions had taken, back
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in Summerholm. Obviously she'd let the Lone Swordsman go when she could
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have killed him -- the damaged connection to her Name betrayed as much
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-- but it seemed she'd freed the hero for a specific purpose. The boy
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had shown no inclination to gather large-scale strength before his
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encounter with the orphan, and such a sudden change in doctrine would
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have had to be Name-enforced. \emph{She branded instructions on his Name
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as the price for sparing him, then} \emph{let him disappear into the
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wilds.} Black had not even bothered to try tracking the Swordsman after
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his run-in with Catherine: the confrontation had initiated a pattern of
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three, and the hero was therefore beyond his reach. The only person who
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could feasibly kill him now was Squire, unfortunate as that was.
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Still, none of this was beyond the parameters he'd set. The rebellion
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would have happened anyway, there was no denying that. The numbers did
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not lie: in the last decade the number of heroes appearing had shot up
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from once every several years to at least two a year. They were all dead
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now, of course, but that wasn't the point. Sooner or later, one of his
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people would make a mistake. When he'd put down the Unconquered Champion
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last year, he'd been stuck in a pocket realm for what had ended up being
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three days in Creation proper. Within that lapse of time he'd been
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impossible to reach, and the Calamities had\ldots{} not reacted well.
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Captain had slaughtered an entire village in a fit of blind rage and
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Warlock had actually mutilated the soul of an informant in his search
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for answers. He shuddered to think of what might have happened had
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Assassin or Ranger gotten involved.
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No, the rebellion had always been a given. All it meant was that he had
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to have measures in place so that the event benefitted the Empire
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instead of weakened it, and he had managed that much. Barely.
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Catherine's intervention had the uprising beginning ahead of schedule,
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and had he not spent the last twenty years preparing the Dread Empire
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for war it might have been taken by surprise. As things stood, the
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rebellion would be crushed before the next harvest and Catherine would
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blood her troops on real battlefield in the process. The inevitable
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losses would teach her some valuable lessons and temper her reckless
|
|
streak as well as strengthen her emotional attachment to her soldiers --
|
|
and by extension the Empire.
|
|
|
|
``Not a bad plan at all,'' he decided.
|
|
|
|
Trading a weakened Name for a few months against an opportunity to
|
|
advance through the ranks in wartime was bold but not overly so. She
|
|
wouldn't have known she was damaging her connection to her Role by
|
|
letting the Lone Swordsman go, of course. He had, after all, carefully
|
|
kept her in the dark about the way Names functioned. The results of that
|
|
spoke for themselves. Not even a year into her power and she was already
|
|
beginning to Speak. She had absolutely no idea how absurd that kind of
|
|
progress was, no inkling that it had taken Black several years into the
|
|
same Role before managing it. Ignorance on the subject of what she could
|
|
and couldn't do with her Name had allowed her to progress through leaps
|
|
and bounds instead of a slow grind. It was fortunate that this approach
|
|
was the best available to him, because Black had no real idea how to
|
|
teach her.
|
|
|
|
He'd become the Squire when there was no Black Knight and most of what
|
|
he knew was either self-taught or derived from Name dreams. He'd had two
|
|
teachers in his lifetime and both tutelages had been purely related to
|
|
swordsmanship: first his mother, when he'd been young, and then Ranger
|
|
later in his career. Deciding how to treat Catherine had been something
|
|
of a problem for him, in all honesty. He could not treat her as an
|
|
equal, the way he and Ranger had been, but treating her purely as a
|
|
subordinate was doomed to failure. In the end he'd settled for moulding
|
|
her instead of teaching her, carefully exposing her to specific
|
|
influences so that she would grow through them.
|
|
|
|
And grown she had, in the eight months he'd known her. The reports from
|
|
his agent in the orphanage had indicated she had potential, but they'd
|
|
underestimated how much. It was a good thing he hadn't had her smothered
|
|
in her sleep, as the local overseer's recommendation had originally
|
|
been. \emph{Morals too heroic in nature}, the assessment had stated.
|
|
He'd been ready to tie up that particular loose end should it prove
|
|
necessary when he'd gone to deal with Mazus, but their unexpected
|
|
meeting had opened a better alternative.
|
|
|
|
The dark-haired smiled, rising to his feet and coming to stand by the
|
|
window. The view offered from the Tower's one hundredth floor was
|
|
breath-taking, but he'd become inured to the sight over the years. Black
|
|
had been amused, when Catherine had mentioned that she felt her Name
|
|
like a living, breathing beast. The way a Named felt their Role revealed
|
|
much about them. Warlock said his own was akin to opening floodgates,
|
|
for he rightfully feared the capricious nature of his power. Malicia
|
|
compared her own to slipping on a pair of gloves, perfectly fitted to
|
|
her. And him? Gears. An enormous machine made up of a hundred thousand
|
|
gears, all of them turning. Slowly. Coldly. Implacably.
|
|
|
|
The moment his agents had gotten him the news he'd felt his Name
|
|
react\emph{. Lead. Conquer. Destroy}. All three of his aspects were
|
|
awake. He hadn't felt this alive in decades, and even as the south of
|
|
the kingdom he's conquered resumed the war he'd won he felt a strange
|
|
joy welling up inside of him. Interesting years were ahead. And this
|
|
once, just this once, he was willing to break a rule of his. Baring his
|
|
teeth at the Heavens, Black dared them to deny him.
|
|
|
|
``Just as planned,'' he said.
|