568 lines
26 KiB
TeX
568 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-2-invitation}{%
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\section{Chapter 2: Invitation}\label{chapter-2-invitation}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Before embarking on a journey of revenge, dig two graves. One
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for the fool and one for all those pesky relatives.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Vindictive the First
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\end{quote}
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I took me a moment to remember where I was when I woke up.
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They'd taken me to the inn they were staying at when I'd said I didn't
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want to go back to orphanage, though I couldn't remember actually saying
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the words. I was alone in the room, so allowed myself to luxuriate in
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the feeling of a soft bed twice the size of the one I had in my
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dormitory. The Praesi hadn't picked one of the really expensive places
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to stay in, but they hadn't picked a bad one either. The sun filtering
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in through the shutters told me it was late in the afternoon, so I'd
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slept through most of the day. \emph{Who knew that slitting a pair of
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throats would take that much out of you,} I thought. I'd meant for the
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sentence to be a form of self-reproach but when trying to summon up
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regret for what I'd done last night, the well came up empty. I sat up in
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the bed and ran a somehow still-tired hand through my hair. It was a
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mess, the dark locks having gotten all tangled up overnight.
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Now that I had a little bit of distance from the whole affair I was
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starting to think I'd been steered in the direction of taking those
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lives. For what reason, though, I couldn't even begin to imagine. Who
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knew why villains did what they did? \emph{Not that it changes anything.
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I made the decision, and made it for my own reasons.} I wasn't sure if
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my actions had been just, but even under the light of day I didn't think
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my decision had been wrong. I used the large bowl of water by the bed to
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splash my face and wiped it off with the towel next to it, the last
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dregs of sleepiness driven off by the lukewarm water. There was a
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sheathed knife next to it, one I had no trouble remembering the last
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time I'd seen. Distantly I recalled trying to give it back the night
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before and being told it was now mine. \emph{Not too sure how I should
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feel about that.}
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So. What now?
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I was starving, so I might as well see if I could get a meal of this. I
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didn't get the feeling that this whole business was done, but what more
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could the Knight want from me? \emph{No, that's the wrong way to think
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about this.} If he wanted something, he'd get it: I didn't have the
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power to stop him. What I needed to think about was what I could manage
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to get out of this mess. It wasn't like I was going to run into anyone
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that high up the Empire's ranks again anytime soon, so I had to find an
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angle. I'd bought this opportunity with blood, so I'd be damned if I
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didn't make it count. The Black Knight had a lot of pull in War College,
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I remembered hearing -- which made sense, since he more or less
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commanded the Legions the cadets were being formed to join. Maybe if I
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played my cards right I could talk him into getting me a place in this
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year's classes. At the moment I had almost enough to cover my tuition,
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but the trip to the Wasteland was another expense, and not a cheap one.
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I was pretty sure a word from the Empress' right hand would take care of
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that swiftly, though. The only other obstacle I could think of was that
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anyone wanting to go into Praes proper from Callow would need papers,
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but for once being an orphan would be an advantage: the orphanages were
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an Imperial institution, so every one of us had been registered at the
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Governor's office.
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Most Callowans still weren't registered, since forcing it after the
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Conquest would have caused the kind of civil unrest that the Empire had
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aimed to avoid, but it was becoming more common as time passed- there
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were all kinds of restriction on the kind of offices you could hold if
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you weren't. A lot of the older generation muttered under their breath
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that having your name on Imperial record couldn't possibly end well, and
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to be honest I wasn't sure if they were wrong. I'd served drinks and
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talked to enough legionaries that I no longer believed that they were
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always one moment away from malevolently setting fire to the city and
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dancing in the ashes -- they had a better reputation than the city
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guard, these days -- but those records were made for people back in
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Ater, the Empire's capital. From what I'd heard of the nobles that
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dwelled in the City of Black Gates they were not the kind of people you
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ever wanted to have your name. Even other Praesi spoke of them with
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distrust.
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My blouse was still bloodstained from last night, I saw as I inspected
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my reflection in the mirror hung up on the wall. There were flecks of
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dried red on the blue in the shape of the blood spray that had been two
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men's lives and I didn't feel like walking through the streets with that
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damning mark on my clothes. It looked like they'd thought of everything:
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there was a long-sleeved shirt and a pair of trousers neatly folded on
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the dresser. I changed unhurriedly and slipped on my boots before
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leaving the room, procrastinating out of apprehension. Bad habit, I
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knew, but given the circumstances I was willing to let it slide.
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A short flight of stairs down brought me to the inn's common room. It
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was deserted, which was unusual at this time of the day: there should
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have been travellers from outside the city trickling in and regulars
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huddled around their usual tables. Laure had been the capital of the
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Kingdom of Callow, before the Conquest, and even under the Empire it
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remained one of the wealthiest cities around. Whose pockets that wealth
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ended up in was another story, but given that we were a major trade
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centre the good inns should be packed around this time of the year. No
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trace of the innkeep either, just a lone woman sitting at one of the
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tables by the hearth. She had a stack of paper around her and was
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writing on a sheet of parchment, dipping her quill with clockwork
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regularity. She hadn't raised her head from her work as I made my way
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down the stairs, so she must not have heard me.
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``Take a seat,'' she spoke calmly, eyes still intent on the parchment.
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\ldots{} Or maybe she had. I claimed the chair across from her, not sure
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where I was supposed to go from here.
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``The innkeeper will be along momentarily with breakfast,'' the stranger
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said.
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I nodded, then felt foolish when I realized she hadn't so much as looked
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at me yet.
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``I'm-'' I started.
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``I know who you are, Catherine Foundling,'' she cut in indifferently.
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``This is starting to be a pattern,'' I said. ``What should I call
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you?''
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``Scribe.''
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Oh. That wasn't a name, it was a Name. \emph{And that's you shouldn't
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mouth off to strangers. Again.} The Conquest was laid at the feet of the
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five Calamities, in the stories: the Black Knight, Warlock, Captain,
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Ranger and Assassin. The woman in front of me wasn't one of them, and
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she didn't make it to the fore of the legends the way Ranger and Warlock
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did. I supposed her Role didn't exactly lend itself to flashy gestures
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-- but she wasn't an unknown either. It was said that she followed Black
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around like a second shadow, tidying up everything behind the victories
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so that it would run smoothly. Thinking about it, I was a little
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surprised not to have seen her last night. Her actual level of authority
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in the Empire was subject to debate, but there were few people stupid
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enough to disagree that getting on her bad side would be a \emph{very}
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bad idea. The innkeeper broken the awkward silence -- well awkward on my
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part anyway, she didn't seem to notice -- that settled between us by
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striding into the room with a plate full of eggs and sausage, sliding it
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in front of me with a practiced smile.
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``Ma'am,'' he greeted me. ``Lady Scribe, are you sure I can't offer you
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tea or wine?''
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``That won't be necessary,'' she replied.
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It was reassuring to see I wasn't the only one she wouldn't raise her
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head for. The man slunk back to his kitchen after a respectful bow,
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leaving me to dig into my first meal of the day. It wasn't the fanciest
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of fares, but it was fresh and I was starving: I'd never eaten a better
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meal in my life. By the time I was polishing off the last of the sausage
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Scribe finished whatever it was she was doing, signing at the bottom of
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the parchment with a flourish before resting the tip of her quill
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against her inkwell.
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``Black should be back before the evening bell,'' she told me. ``He'll
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be wanting to speak to you.''
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I didn't reply immediately, partially because I wasn't sure how I felt
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about the most famous villain of our age wanting to speak to me again
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but also because I was studying the woman sitting across from me. She
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was rather plain-faced in appearance, with ink-stained fingers and a
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diminutive stature. \emph{Though given we're about the same height,
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maybe I should have used more flattering phrasing.} She lacked the
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presence Black and Captain had shown yesterday, the way they could fill
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up a room just by standing in it. I would have been skeptical she even
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had a Name, if not for the way she'd effortlessly picked out my presence
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earlier. There was something tightly contained about Scribe, and I
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reminded myself that a Name didn't have to involve fighting to be
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dangerous.
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``Any idea what he wants to talk about?'' I asked.
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``The matron at your orphanage has been notified you're still alive,''
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she replied, ignoring the question entirely. ``She was getting
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worried.''
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I let out a vaguely thankful noise. I didn't dislike Matron Nelter, even
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if her lecturing sometimes got on my nerves. She didn't approve of my
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working at the Rat's Nest, sure -- and would have thrown a fit of epic
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proportions if she'd been aware I fought in the Pit -- but then the
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Laure House for Tragically Orphaned Girls had a history of setting up
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its wards for work more glamorous than serving drinks. Girls usually
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left the orphanage with enough education to pick up a trade or serve as
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tutors for noble children. That she took the time to get on my case
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meant that she cared, in her own way. Scribe seemed to have decided our
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conversation was over, because she pulled out a fresh sheet a parchment
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from the pile and dipped her quill. As it turned out, she was right
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about the Knight being back soon: I'd finished the sausage and I was
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halfway through a mug of tea when he strolled into the common room.
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``Good evening, Catherine,'' he greeted me cheerfully. ``Scribe.''
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``Black,'' the plain-faced woman replied, and I had to give her points
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for the amount of guts it took to snub the godsdamned \emph{Black
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Knight} in favour of a sheet of parchment.
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``The numbers confirm it?'' he asked, apparently used to her cool
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indifference.
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``Yes. Not that it matters, given the confession. Captain?''
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``Having a talk with Orim as of this moment.''
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Some of that had gone over my head, but the last name was one I
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recognized. General Orim -- Orim the Grim, his legionnaires called him
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with a fond smile -- was the head of the Fifth Legion, which served as
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Laure's garrison. I finished the last of my tea, waiting for my turn.
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``Catherine,'' Black said after a heartbeat, turning to face me,
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``you\ldots{}''
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He paused.
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``Look like you have a question?'' he finished.
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``This is going to sound a little strange,'' I prefaced myself. ``But I
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mean, I've heard stories and I think it needs to be asked. Could save a
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lot of trouble down the road and all.''
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He raised an eyebrow, remaining silent.
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``So, uh, just to be sure,'' I said. ``You wouldn't happen to be my
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long-lost father who put me in an orphanage so I'd be safe from his
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enemies and is coming to get me now that I'm old enough to take care of
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myself?''
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To my mild horror, I drew a laugh out of the monster sitting across from
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me. He seemed genuinely amused by the question, so I guessed I was still
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an orphan. \emph{Thank the Heavens for that}, I thought. Still, that
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meant I was now drawing a blank as to why he'd taken an interest in me.
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``No,'' he replied, ``I'm afraid I had no hand in your conception.
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Besides, one is never quite old enough to deal with the kind of enemies
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I have.''
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``I can imagine,'' I said, though I really couldn't.
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Couldn't think of a lot of people who'd worry the man sitting across
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from me, truth be told. There was only one Duchess left in Callow and
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the woman in question was Deoraithe, who didn't really want anything to
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do with the rest of the country. The idea of her leading a rebellion
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against the Empire was pretty laughable, and there were no other nobles
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left with enough pull. The First Prince of the Principate, maybe?
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Rumours had it she'd finally put an end to their civil war, so they were
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probably going to start looking at their neighbours again.
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``Speaking of questionable individuals,'' he said, ``I was hoping we
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might have a word on the subject of the Governor.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``I'm told most of the words I'd use for him aren't supposed to be
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spoken by proper ladies.''
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``Are you?'' he smiled. ``A proper lady, that is?''
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I snorted. So he wanted to talk about Governor Mazus, huh. I could do
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that. He might not like what I had to say, but I could do that.
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``He's probably the most hated man in the Empire,'' I told him honestly.
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``Nobody speaks up because if you do the guards come knocking at your
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door, but I don't think there's a lot of people in Laure who wouldn't
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shank him of they thought they could get away with it.''
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Black let out a thoughtful noise, sipping at his cup.
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``I was under the impression he was on good terms with the Guilds, at
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least,'' he said.
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I shrugged.
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``With the amount of gold he's been throwing at the guild masters,
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that's kind of a given,'' I replied. ``The few that didn't want anything
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to do with him met unfortunate accidents and their replacements were a
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lot more cooperative.''
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``Unfortunate accidents?'' he probed.
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``He's not even being subtle about it,'' I scowled. ``Tara Goldeneye --
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she was in charge of the Spicer's Guild and told him she's rather go
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broke than take his bribes -- drowned in a bathtub that barely had a
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inch of water in it. And don't even get me started on the city guard.''
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``I take it incidents like yesterday aren't unheard of?''
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``They do what they're supposed to, mostly,'' I conceded. ``But it's an
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open secret they're his thugs and they tend to get rough when they
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collect the extraordinary taxes.''
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His lips thinned.
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``Ah yes, the famous taxes. He's been making quite a stir back in Ater
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with those.''
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``Funny the way they're all temporary but somehow never go away,'' I
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grunted.
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The taxes were the main reason Mazus was so hated. Everyone expected
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whatever Praesi the Empress appointed Governor to try to turn Laure into
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his personal fiefdom, but after a decade of the Legions running the city
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people had become used to the people in charge being even-handed. As
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long as you didn't make a mess or commit a crime, the legionnaires
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didn't really care what Callowans did. Mazus poked his nose in
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everything, and the nose was usually followed by a hand that grabbing
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for more gold.
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Food prices had been steadily hiking up for the last few years, and I'd
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heard people complain that merchandise that wasn't guild-approved was
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tariffed heavily. And since the guilds took a take of anything they
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approved -- which Mazus got part of, of course -- just the cost of
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joining could put smaller merchants out of business. More than being
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unfair, the whole thing infuriated me because it was \emph{stupid.}
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Laure saw nowhere as much business as it had a decade ago, and these
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days at least half of the people at the Summer Fair were locals. The man
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was so focused on squeezing everything he could out of the city that he
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didn't realize he was strangling it.
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``It's sheer idiocy,'' Black agreed, and I nearly jumped out of my skin.
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Could he actually read minds, of had I said any of that out loud?
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``Your face said it all,'' the green-eyed man told me with an amused
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smile.
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My pulse quickened. I wasn't entirely sure he was telling me the truth.
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But he was agreeing with me. \emph{Why?} Wouldn't more gold for the
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Empire be good from his point of view, regardless of how Mazus got it?
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Even if the situation ended up blowing up in the Governor's face, the
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Legion garrison would be enough to put down the riots. I had a dozen
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questions on the tip of my tongue, but I wasn't so sure I should ask
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them. He'd been reasonable so far, almost affable actually, but it
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wouldn't do to forget that the man across from me had brought an entire
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kingdom to its knees.
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Maybe another girl would have thought that the way he kept smiling meant
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he was my friend, but I didn't have any of those to confuse him with.
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And yet, I could feel that same old itch under my skin. The need to know
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\emph{why} instead of stopping at ``this is how it is'', the compulsion
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to understand the way everything around me worked. And he'd been the one
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to make this a dialogue, hadn't he? He could have made it an
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interrogation -- Hells, he could have asked someone better informed than
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a sixteen year old orphan girl -- but for some reason he'd taken pains
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to prevent this from being one-sided.
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``If he's an idiot,'' I spoke up against my better judgement, ``then why
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is he Governor?''
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Nothing about the Knight's face visibly changed, but there was a
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distinct feeling of\ldots{} satisfaction to him. The kind people got
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when they were proved right about something.
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``Mazus wasn't actually expected to make anything of himself here,'' he
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said. ``It was a purely political appointment.''
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``The Empress wanted to reward him for something,'' I guessed, ``so she
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gave him the richest city in Callow to rule.''
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``It wasn't a reward,'' Black replied, ``it was a bribe. His father is a
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High Lord and after the Conquest we needed to appease them.''
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I blinked in surprise.
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``Appease them?'' I burst out. ``She's the \emph{Empress,} why would she
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need to appease anyone?''
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The green-eyed man finished the last of his wine and put the goblet
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aside.
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``You're thinking of power as an absolute, but that's a false
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perception. If the matron of your orphanage put on a crown and
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proclaimed herself Governess of Laure, would that somehow grant her
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authority over the city?''
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``I'm guessing that's a rhetorical question,'' I replied drily.
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He hummed in agreement, warming up to his subject.
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``It's the same with Malicia. Sitting on the throne doesn't mean all of
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Praes obeys her every whim. She needs the backing of other people with
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power or her authority remains little more than a polite fiction.''
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His tone of voice wasn't all that different from the one the better
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tutors the orphanage hired used when they spoke about their favourite
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subject, which was just\ldots{} odd. The image of the middle-aged
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scholar in charge of our lessons didn't interpose all that well with
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that of the villain in front of me.
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``So she needs all the High Lords on her side?'' I asked.
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A sardonic smile quirked his lips.
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``That would be quite the achievement, given the way they hate each
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other almost as much as they hate her,'' he murmured. ``No, she simply
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needs enough of them under her thumb that the others think rebellion
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isn't feasible.''
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``And the best way to get the people she needs on her side is to give
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them a nice Callowan city to get taxes from,'' I frowned. ``Even if that
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means the people who live in it get stuck with a bastard like Mazus.''
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``More or less,'' he agreed. ``The crown receives a certain part of the
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taxes he collects, which has been a much larger amount of gold than
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anticipated for the last few years. Questions have been raised, as a
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consequence.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``The Empress isn't pleased she's getting more than she thought she
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would?''
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Black's eyes turned cold.
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``Gold doesn't grow on trees, Catherine. Concerns have been raised about
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how well Laure is doing under that kind of a burden.''
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I let out a thoughtful noise.
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``You're worried you're strangling the golden goose,'' I mused.
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His hand waved dismissively.
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``That's part of it, of course, but ultimately it's a minor issue. The
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real problem is that he's been causing unrest.''
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``Not that the idea of the Legion putting down a riot isn't all kinds of
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horrifying,'' I said, ``but aren't they there exactly to deal with that
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kind of thing?''
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I grimaced at myself, a little worried by how easy it had been to slip
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into the Imperial mindset. I planned to go into the Legions myself,
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sure, but I'd made that choice with the idea in mind that when I rose up
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high enough in the ranks I'd be able to prevent the very kind of thing I
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was talking about. Black poured himself a fresh cup of wine, silently
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offering to do the same for me. I shook my head. I wasn't that I
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disliked wine -- I'd tried it a few times at the Rat's Nest and found I
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enjoyed some kinds -- but I'd just eaten breakfast and it couldn't be
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that late anyway. Praesi started drinking early, though, so I wasn't
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exactly surprised he was on his second cup.
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``They could suppress riots easily enough,'' Black conceded. ``But there
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would be consequences.''
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Should I, or shouldn't I? \emph{Hells, wouldn't even the most insolent
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thing I've said to him yet.}
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``I didn't think dead Callowans was something you'd worry about all that
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much, sir.''
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I took pains to keep my tone polite. It was one thing to tug the
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dragon's tail, another to stick out your tongue at him at the same time.
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``I abhor waste,'' the Knight replied, apparently nonplussed I'd just
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implied he was an unrepentant mass-murderer. I supposed I wasn't the
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first to do so. ``And all killing the rioters would accomplish is
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driving the resentment underground.''
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He put aside his cup.
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``The problem is broader in scope, Catherine. Take two nations, of
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roughly the same population. One annexes the other, but has no real
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legitimacy in doing so other than force of arms. How does one keep the
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|
annexed nation from rebelling?''
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|
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|
I wasn't sure why he was keeping the names of Praes and Callow out of
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his hypothetical exercise given how glaringly obvious it was what we
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|
were talking about. Detachment, maybe? I guess it was easier to talk
|
|
about\ldots{} unpleasant measures if I wasn't outright talking about my
|
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countrymen. Still, that was a mighty thing fig leaf.
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|
``Use the Legions -- I mean, the conquering nation's armies -- to turn
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the screws on anybody who steps out of line. Hang enough people and
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|
nobody's going to pick a fight with you,'' I said after a moment.
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|
|
|
In some ways it was a lot easier to rule when you were Evil. Pesky
|
|
little concepts like justice or not murdering your way out of situations
|
|
weren't something you had to worry about.
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|
``Ah, rule through fear,'' he mused. ``That works, to an extent. It's a
|
|
delicate balance to maintain between having people fear you enough they
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|
won't revolt and them being so terrified they think they have nothing to
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|
lose. Which is why, when someone does drive the people to that level of
|
|
terror, it is necessary to step in.''
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|
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|
It clicked into place, like one of those fancy metal puzzles they sold
|
|
in the marketplace.
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|
``Mazus,'' I realized.
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|
``The policy of the Empire is to \emph{use} Callow, not abuse,'' Black
|
|
said. ``The Governor is doing more damage than he knows.''
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|
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|
I kept the mild sense of disgust that caused in me away from my face.
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|
\emph{Who even says something like that?} Yet even of that was still
|
|
fairly evil, as far as policies went, at least it wasn't stupid. I'd
|
|
pick having in charge a competent monster over a vicious idiot any day.
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|
``You really think riots in Laure could spread all over?'' I asked.
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|
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|
``The key to the Empire maintaining control over the lands it conquered
|
|
isn't fear, my dear, it's apathy. As long as the common people can go
|
|
about their business and live their lives mostly untroubled, what do
|
|
they care who their taxes go to? The Governor is making people care
|
|
about who rules them again, and that is a very dangerous thing.''
|
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|
``Huh. That explains a lot, actually,'' I admitted.
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|
|
|
For one, it finally shed light on why the Legions of Terror -- who took
|
|
their cues from the Black Knight -- had been so hands off compared to
|
|
Mazus' tenure as ruler of Laure. That the Governor wasn't exactly an
|
|
ally of the Empress also accounted for why the legionnaires never let an
|
|
occasion to stick it to Mazus' cronies go by. I'd put it down to a
|
|
mixture of disliking the man as much as we did and basic decency but it
|
|
made sense there were also politics at work behind the scenes.
|
|
|
|
``There's also a subtler danger, and that one is the reason I came here
|
|
personally,'' Black added after a moment.
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|
|
|
I raised an eyebrow, curious but deciding I'd pushed enough for the day.
|
|
I didn't know how much rope he was willing to give me, but I had a
|
|
feeling I'd already drawn enough to hang myself with.
|
|
|
|
``Think of it as a story, if you will,'' the green-eyed man murmured.
|
|
``A city, once the capital of a thriving kingdom, now ruined and
|
|
oppressed. Its people are crushed under an ever-increasing burden and
|
|
there is no hope in sight. Enter\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``The hero,'' I finished just as quietly.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Shit.} That did have the potential of becoming a nasty situation.
|
|
Just like if you left dry firewood piled up long enough eventually
|
|
there'd be a spark that set it on fire, if a city like what he'd just
|
|
described was left unattended too long eventually a Role would emerge to
|
|
fill the void. Would the hero beat the Black Knight? I doubted it. The
|
|
last seven to try hadn't, after all, and I'd heard the one from five
|
|
years ago hadn't even been about for a week before Assassin got him. If
|
|
he riled up the people in the city enough, though, he could do a lot of
|
|
damage before being put down. This was on another level, though -- the
|
|
Knight wasn't even fighting a hero, he was making sure the situation
|
|
where a hero would be created never came to be.
|
|
|
|
``Heavens wept,'' I said softly. ``No wonder you kill them every time.
|
|
The arrow's nocked long before you let the sparrow fly.''
|
|
|
|
Black's smile turned sharp as a knife.
|
|
|
|
``Just because I'm winning doesn't mean I won't cheat.''
|
|
|
|
``So why are you telling me all this?'' I asked, waving my hand to
|
|
encompass the whole conversation. ``Wouldn't that make me a liability?
|
|
You don't seem like the kind of person that leaves loose ends behind.''
|
|
|
|
He picked up his cup and sipped.
|
|
|
|
``Because you remind me of someone,'' he replied. ``And because after
|
|
you accompany me to the banquet, I will have an offer for you.''
|
|
|
|
I scowled at the presumption I'd just go with him. It wasn't like he
|
|
wasn't right -- even if he didn't have the authority to force the
|
|
matter, I was already curious enough to agree -- but rubbing it in my
|
|
face that I didn't have much of a choice just made him an ass.
|
|
|
|
``A banquet?'' I grunted. ``Sounds fancy. Should I be bringing
|
|
anything?''
|
|
|
|
``It'll be the Governor's banquet,'' he mused. ``So if nothing else, I'd
|
|
bring the knife.''
|