599 lines
28 KiB
TeX
599 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{villainous-interlude-impresario}{%
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\chapter*{Villainous Interlude:
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Impresario}\label{villainous-interlude-impresario}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{villainous-interlude-impresario}} \chaptermark{Villainous Interlude: Impresario}
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\epigraph{``The victor in a war is usually decided before the first battle's
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been fought.''}{Prince Louis of Brabant, later eighth First Prince of Procer}
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Traipsing through Arcadia like some sort of murderous errand boy had
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been oddly nostalgic, Black mused, especially with Wekesa at his side.
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It had been the both of them in the beginning, before they'd ever met
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Sabah or Alaya. Their little jaunt through the realm of the Fae had not
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carried with it the same sense of momentous wonderment he'd felt back
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all those years ago, but there was something refreshing about being just
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a man with a sword instead of the Empress' implacable right hand. Things
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had been simpler, when he was young. The lines between friend and foe
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had been clear, the dangers understandable. He and Malicia had climbed
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the Tower only to then understand the unspoken truth of it: the higher
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the edifice, the narrower the summit -- and the stiffer the winds. These
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days they spent as much time making sure they remained on top as they
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did actually ruling. It was like pulling weeds, he'd once told Hye, if
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ripping out one laid the seeds for a dozen more.
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He'd put aside the thoughts by the time they arrived at the fortified
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camp Istrid and Sacker had established southwest of Vale. The city
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itself had been taken without contest before he'd left for Marchford,
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abandoned by the rebels. They'd only occupied it long enough to make
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sure no armed insurgents would be hitting their supply lines. The
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combined forces of the Sixth and Ninth legions theoretically numbered at
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eight thousand, though in truth they came closer to ten with all the
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camp followers and support personnel. Leaving a garrison in Vale had not
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been an acceptable option, not when the Countess Marchford's host
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numbered twenty thousand. Half of it peasant levies, admittedly, but
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quantity could have a quality of its own. Wekesa dismissed that
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ridiculous chariot pulled by winged horses his husband had gifted him
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years ago as Amadeus rolled his eyes. He dismounted his own horse and
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allowed the necromantic construct to be led away by a legionary.
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``You'll be up to your neck in scheming soon, I imagine?'' Warlock
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asked.
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``I have a few irons in the fire,'' Amadeus agreed.
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His old friend grimaced. ``I'll be in my tent, then. Drinking. You
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always get irritatingly smug when a plan comes together.''
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``I do not,'' Black replied, but Wekesa dismissed the words with an
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absent wave of the hand as he walked away.
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There was no way to win with this lot. He'd always made a point of not
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gloating even if the enemy was dead, but Hye had promptly informed him
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that he made such a point of not gloating that it counted as doing it.
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They never let anything go, really. He'd worn leather pants once at age
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sixteen and it had taken them twenty years to stop mentioning it every
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time they went drinking. It would be another twenty before he lived down
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Stygia, and since Nehebkau now led Tenth the whole `negotiating with a
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dragon' affair would likely follow him to his grave. Sighing, Black made
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his way to the command tent. Eudokia was already waiting inside, the
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pile of parchments that followed her like an obedient dog stacked on a
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table as she read through his correspondence. Amadeus cast a curious
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look around.
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``Sabah?''
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``Gone hunting outriders,'' Scribe replied without looking at him.
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``On a horse, I hope?''
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The plain-faced woman shook her head and he almost frowned. The days
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were Captain had relied on him to cow the Beast were long gone, but if
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she let it out too much she still had\ldots{} issues. He'd have fresh
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meat rations set aside for her. He'd barely poured himself a cup of wine
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when the generals arrived, Istrid striding in without bothering to be
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announced and Sacker following close behind. He'd always liked Istrid
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Knightsbane, in all honesty. She had weaknesses as a commander but she
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was not above taking advice from her staff to make up for it -- and she
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was viciously, viciously loyal. Sacker was another story. Though the two
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greenskins were as sisters, after all those years working together, the
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goblin general had never been part of what could generously be called
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the `loyalists' in the Legions of Terror. Sacker had been a Matron
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before becoming an officer and though the official word was that no
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goblin could sit on the Council of Matrons while serving in the Legions
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he'd always suspected she was the eyes and ears of the Council in the
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army. She would look out for goblin interests above everything else.
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``Warlord,'' Istrid greeted him, clasping his arm.
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``Istrid,'' he replied, then nodded at Sacker. ``General.''
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``Lord,'' the goblin murmured.
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The eye she'd lost at the hands of the Lone Swordsman's attack had been
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replaced by a well-crafted glass one and most of her burns had been
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healed through sorcery. The part of her face that had been touched by
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magic was not as wrinkled as the one that was untouched, making her look
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like she'd grafted the skin of a younger goblin on her face. The effect
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was somewhat gruesome and knowing her she'd been leveraging it ever
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since.
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``Countess Talbot ain't moving,'' Istrid told him, accepting a cup of
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wine when he poured it.
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Sacker shook her head when offered the same, her single living eye
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watching them carefully.
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``She's not retreating anymore, then,'' Amadeus said. ``Good. I was
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beginning to think she'd march all the way to Holden.''
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``She's trying to bait us into joining up with your apprentice and
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sieging Liesse,'' Sacker spoke quietly. ``That way they can cut our
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supply line and fall on our backs.''
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``Catherine has Liesse in hand,'' he simply said.
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``So now the blades come out, eh?'' Istrid grinned nastily. ``About
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time. It'll be like old times, stomping a Callowan host into the
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ground.''
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Black sipped at his cup, still standing. Sacker let out a small noise of
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amusement.
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``There's not going to be a battle, is there?'' she said.
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``Not as such, no,'' he agreed. ``Within three days the Countess' army
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will collapse.''
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Istrid looked like he'd just stolen a dozen sheep from her pens. ``We
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\emph{have} them, Warlord. We force a battle here and it'll be a
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massacre.''
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``That's what we're trying to avoid,'' Scribe said from her corner.
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Both generals jumped, though Sacker much less noticeably. Neither of
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them had noticed Eudokia was in the pavilion -- people rarely did,
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unless she wanted them to. A pair of hasty `Lady Scribe's later, Black
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cleared his throat.
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``Half of that army is peasant levies, Istrid,'' he said. ``Farmers and
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craftsmen.''
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There was a moment of silence.
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``We kill them and there's no one to till the fields when the time
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comes,'' Sacker immediately grasped.
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And there was the reason the goblin was slated to be the next Marshal,
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even with her mixed loyalties. She had an ability to grasp the larger
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picture that Istrid simply lacked.
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``It's not a coincidence that they started the rebellion just before
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sowing season,'' Amadeus said. ``Countess Talbot is holding all of the
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fields in the south hostage. If we break her army too badly or burn the
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farmland to smoke her out, there will be food shortages in Praes. We've
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become too dependent on Callow for grain and fruits since the
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Conquest.''
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He'd tacitly allowed that to happen, with Malicia's blessing. Food went
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into the Wasteland and luxuries into Callow: the trade relationship
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between the two lands bound them together tighter and improved the lot
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of the commons on both sides. Keeping the standards of living for the
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lower classes high enough was the keystone of killing rebellious
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sentiment in its crib, both in the Wasteland and in the former kingdom.
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Well-fed, gainfully employed individuals tended to think twice about
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throwing in their lot with rebels. They had too much to lose.
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``No fight at all, then?'' Istrid asked, disgruntled.
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``I didn't say that,'' Black mused. ``I'll need your wolf riders ready
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for deployment. I am not of a mind to let rats flee the sinking ship.''
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Istrid grunted and from the look in her eyes Amadeus knew she'd be among
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those riders when they left camp. Peace was not something orcs were
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particularly fond of, and the Knightsbane less than most. \emph{Crows
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are already gathering for what's to come, Istrid. All you have to do is
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wait.}
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---
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Morning came and word trickled out from the enemy camp that the Duke of
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Liesse was dead. Amadeus had ensured as much last night by slipping
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Scribe a piece of parchment with the words `Gaston Caen, Duke of Liesse'
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on it. Since being raised by a school of hired killers had left Assassin
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with a particularly vicious sense of humour, the Duke had been found
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drowned in his own chamber pot. Relatively tame, Black decided, compared
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to some past killings. He blamed a twisted upbringing: the people who'd
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taught Assassin had used as a graduation exercise the murder of a target
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by use of as innocuous a tool as possible. Men had been killed with
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teacups, he'd been told, filing cabinets and even once half a blunted
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copper coin. Assassin's own graduation exercise had been the murder of
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every single other assassin using them against each other. The other
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Named had a rather thorny take on irony. Buttering his bread, the
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green-eyed man paused to take a sip of tea as he watched the green
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fields ahead of him and the rebel host beyond them.
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He'd had his table set at the edge of the fortified camp, a handful of
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Blackguards looming behind him in a concession to safety -- not that
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they were particularly necessary, given the very lethal wards Wekesa had
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set around him before stealing most of his bacon and flouncing off to
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bother Sabah. Ahead the Callowan army was milling aimlessly like an
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anthill that had been kicked, hamstrung by the death of the man they'd
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been rebelling to put on the throne. Duke Gaston had been little more
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than a figurehead while Countess Elizabeth ran the campaign as his
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military commander and betrothed, but figureheads were important when
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you assembled an army drawn from the commons. The man's claim had
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derived from being the highest ranked remaining Callowan noble and from
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some extent that the ancient Dukes of Liesse had once been kings in
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their own right, which put the rebels in a spot of trouble.
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The only duchy with a ruler left in Callow was the Duchy of Daoine in
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the north, where Duchess Kegan still watched events unfolding with her
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armies assembled at her capital. She was not a participant in the
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rebellion, though, and more than that nobody wanted a Deoraithe on the
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throne. They might have been a people admired by other Callowans, but
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they were not \emph{liked}. Scribe dipped a wheat biscuit in her own
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teacup, a truly horrible habit. He frowned at her, not that she cared.
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``Why only the Duke?'' she asked.
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Black had been about to reply when he felt a flicker at the edge of his
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awareness. Ah, the pest had arrived. The Wandering Bard sat on the edge
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of the table with a grin, though it disappeared rather quickly when he
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casually palmed a throwing knife and flicked it at her head. The blade
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would have buried to the hilt between her eyes had the Ashuran not come
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out of existence as smoothly as she'd appeared. Amadeus raised an
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eyebrow. As he'd suspected, that was not teleportation. And it did not
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appear to be controlled. Another flicker and the Bard reappeared in
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front of the table, frowning.
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``You know, that's-``
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Black's shadow extended behind him, casually adjusting the aim of a
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mounted crossbow towards the heroine and pulling the trigger. She
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flickered out of existence before the bolt could tear through her lungs.
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The next time the pest reappeared she was standing thirty feet ahead of
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him. A tendril of shadow snuck across the grass as she glared.
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``Gotta say, you're being kind of a d-``
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The tendril punctured the ground, setting off the demolition charges
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buried under the heroine. Black took a bite of his bread and chewed
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thoughtfully. The Wandering Bard did not reappear. Thrice beaten and she
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stayed gone, then. He'd thought that would do the trick: Names like
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Bards lived closer to patterns and were able to use them, but they were
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also more closely affected by them. None of the times where she'd been
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gone had been willingly triggered, he assessed. Odds were she did not
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control where and when she went. More than that, if the ability had not
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been teleportation the implications were\ldots{} interesting. How could
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you be somewhere and then somewhere else, if not teleportation? Simply
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by being there, he thought, although that brought other questions with
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it. The appearances were not instantaneous. Where did the Bard go, when
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she was not in Creation? Possibly a pocket dimension. More likely,
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\emph{nowhere}. Power did not come without costs, certainly not power of
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that magnitude. No wonder she drank.
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``What were you asking again?'' he asked Scribe after a moment.
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``Why you had only the Duke killed,'' she reminded him.
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An apt question.
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``Because the rebels are no more a monolith than we are,'' he said. ``As
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we speak, Countess Elizabeth is likely trying to put herself forward as
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the candidate for the throne -- and she does have the most troops under
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her command. She is, however, widely disliked by the other nobles.
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Gaston picking her as a bride was a slight to the Marchioness Vale,
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whose rank is higher even if she is not as wealthy or militarily
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capable. The Countess also despises, and is despised in turn, by the
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Baroness Dormer. Something about being rivals over the hand of the
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Shining Prince in their youth. The Baroness is currently in Liesse, but
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she is extremely popular with the men she's sent here.''
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``That leaves the Baron Holden,'' Scribe noted. ``The Countess' cousin
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once removed. He'll support her.''
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``He would,'' Black agreed, ``had I not told you to send that letter to
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Grem last month. By now he'll have received a messenger informing him
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that Nekhaub is torching the odd barn in his holdings and that a cohort
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of undead is driving his landholders into the city. Not any real damage,
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you understand, and deaths will be avoided, but to scared civilians it
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will make no difference. He'll want to return to protect his lands. It's
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an ingrained instinct in Callowan aristocrats.''
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``You're dividing them,'' Scribe said. ``Setting them against each
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other.''
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``Under the cover of dark, if I am not mistaken, the men from Dormer and
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Holden will desert,'' Black shrugged. ``Those from Dormer heading
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towards Liesse, the others towards home. That cuts down on their
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professional troops by a third.''
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It didn't, if you counted the mercenaries. Four thousand dwarven
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veterans, the heaviest of infantries. But since he'd had Eudokia deal
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with that matter already there was no need to belabour the explanation.
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As for the Baron Holden, if he followed his men in desertion -- and
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Black was fairly certain he would -- Istrid's wolf riders would be
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taking him. Only when he was out of sight, though. It would not do to
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discourage desertion. Amadeus took another sip of tea. It was a
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beautiful day.
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---
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Wekesa was hogging the wine, as he always did. Sabah was tearing into a
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barely cooked side of lamb, looking vaguely guilty as she did. She
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avoided that kind of behaviour around her husband, who'd never so much
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as glimpsed the Beast, but she did not need to be so delicate around
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other Calamities. They'd all seen her in the fullness of her wrath,
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tearing off heads effortlessly and bathing her fur in blood. Black
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poured himself a cup of Aksum red before Warlock could finish it,
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slapping away the retrieval spell the smug-looking Sovereign of the Red
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Skies tried to hook around the jug.
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``The army looks smaller than it did yesterday,'' Wekesa said, trying to
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distract him as he pilfered some couscous from his plate.
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Black refrained from rolling his eyes. Warlock only descended in petty
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thievery like this when he missed his husband too much, though when
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they'd been younger he'd also done it purely to spite the others. Until
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Hye had nailed his hand to a table, anyway. His lover did not brook
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threats to her morning tea. She'd apparently picked that up from her
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father, who'd been an admiral among the Teoteul until a defeat at Yan
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Tei hands had forced his exile. How he'd managed to cross the Tyrian Sea
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was a story in its own right, as was the way he'd romanced one of the
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few elves to ever leave the Golden Bloom. Amadeus patiently bid his
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shadow to form teeth and began sawing through the back leg of Wekesa's
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chair, but he deigned to reply.
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``The soldiers from two baronies deserted during the night,'' he told
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them.
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His prediction had been mostly accurate, though he'd somewhat
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underestimated the impact of the Duke's death. At least a thousand men
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from the levies had melted away under the cover of darkness, smelling a
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losing fight. Istrid had gone to follow the unfortunate Baron Dormer
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with all of her wolf riders before dawn came. They had standing orders
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to retreat if a hero showed up, but otherwise the outcome of that fight
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was settled.
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``They still have most of their knights,'' Sabah said, clearing her
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throat and setting aside the clean bones of her meal.
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``They do,'' Black conceded. ``And though we've proven we can deal with
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them now, they'll cost us unnecessary casualties if they fight. Unlike
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the levies, they won't desert easily. They badly want the return of
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chivalric orders and only a restoration of the Kingdom can accomplish
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that.''
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``I still have that plague for horses you had me cook before the
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Conquest laying around somewhere,'' Warlock offered.
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``That kind of weapon is hard to put back in the box when it's come
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out,'' Black declined. ``Anyhow, the matter is handled.''
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``Can't be too handled, the horses are still there,'' Sabah pointed out.
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Amadeus reached for his wine and found the cup empty. There was a very
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suspicious magical siphon at the bottom of it and Wekesa hadn't refilled
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his own cup in some time. The Black Knight glared at the other man, who
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grinned mockingly. He set the teeth to saw faster.
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``Contrary to what many treatises preach,'' Black said, ``I don't
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believe that morale shocks off the battlefield are better off delivered
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all at once. Several consecutive blows bring the expectation of more to
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come. That perception comes in more useful than one instance of great
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panic.''
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``He's still hiding more tricks up his sleeve,'' Sabah translated for
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the benefit of absolutely no one.
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``I haven't been around for too long,'' Warlock said. ``He's gotten
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too-``
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The back leg broke and the Sovereign of the Red Skies sprawled on the
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grass in a messy heap. Amadeus stole his cup of wine, pointedly not smug
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to such an extent it looped back around to smugness.
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---
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The third morning showed another chunk of the rebel host missing. The
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dwarven infantry had disappeared during the night, though not before
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quietly butchering most of the knights in their sleep. Their contract,
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though paid with Proceran silver, had technically been held by the Duke
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of Liesse. The fig leaf had been a necessary fiction for First Prince
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Cordelia, who could not be seen to be too directly involved in the
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rebellion if she wanted popular support. Black had simply hired the
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dwarves in advance for when their contract with Liesse expired and had
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the man killed. After that their orders were to stay for a single day,
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wipe out the enemy cavalry in the night and march back to the Wasaliti
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where barges would take them down to Mercantis. It had been a hideously
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expensive measure to take and he'd had to designate a route for the
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mercenaries to follow that wouldn't allow them to loot most of southern
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Callow on their way out, but the results spoke for themselves. The rebel
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army was falling apart at the seams, fights breaking out between
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supporters of the Marchioness and the Countess.
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The levies were staying mostly out of that, leaving the squabbles to the
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retinues of nobles, but seeing their only remaining real soldiers take
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blades to each other was the final nail in the coffin of their
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willingness to wage this war. Which was why Black had quietly sent
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envoys to the most prominent leaders among them and asked for a parley
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halfway between the armies. Idly trotting up on his horse, the Black
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Knight bade it to stop in front of the dozen men and women who eyed him
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warily without ever touching the reins. Those were an affectation, as he
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controlled his mount entirely through his Name -- now and then enemies
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tried to seize them to unhorse him and got a blade through the throat
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for their trouble.
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``Good morning,'' Black greeted them politely.
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Disbelieving glances were exchanged among the envoys, to his mild
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irritation. Why did people always expect him to be uncivil? Being Evil
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was no reason to be rude. Even when it was necessary to execute someone,
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there was no need to be unpleasant about it -- and he had no intention
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of killing any of these people, if they did not force him to.
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``Good morning,'' a heavyset blond woman in her fifties replied,
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sounding as if she did not quite believe what she was saying.
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One of the men, dark-haired and scarred by what he absent-mindedly
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decided to be a legionary's blade, spat to the side.
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``Ain't come to exchange pleasantries,'' the man said.
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Black cocked his head to the side. The face was almost familiar, but
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then a lot of these soldierly types were.
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``I've met you before,'' he said. ``Summerholm?''
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If it had been on the Fields of Streges, the man would not be here to
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stand. The soldier blinked, then shook his head.
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``Laure,'' he replied. ``Was in command at the Muddy Gate.''
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``Your men held for half a bell,'' Amadeus remembered idly. ``Ranker
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thought you would be the first to fold, but she always did underestimate
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the Royal Guard. You were next to last.''
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``Good soldiers, all of them,'' the man glared. ``Most of them dead
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now.''
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``Yes,'' Black spoke softly. ``They fought well. They fought bravely.
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\emph{And they died}.''
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He had not raised his voice or used his Name to inflict fear, but a
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shiver went through them nonetheless. Alaya could weave lies so
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beautiful you wanted to believe them and Wekesa could turn a man mad
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with three words but Black, Black had always preferred to use truth.
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Nothing cut quite so deep as an unpleasant truth.
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``You here to threaten us, then?'' a young woman spoke belligerently.
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``Do I need to?'' he asked. ``You know who I am. You know what I can do.
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Worst of all, you already know how this ends. It's the reason you're
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standing here in the first place.''
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``We still got numbers on you,'' another man grunted.
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``I could carpet this plain with the dead,'' Amadeus said frankly.
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``Make this a victory so brutal the Fields of Streges would pale in
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comparison, and they were bloodier than most. But I don't want to, you
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see.''
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``Yeah, you're a real bleeding heart,'' the young woman from earlier
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said.
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Black smiled. ``What's your name, young lady?''
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She paled, but after so much bravado she was too proud to back down in
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front of the others.
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``Amelia,'' she replied, chewing her lip as she did.
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It seemed the rumours he could steal someone's soul just by knowing
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their name had not quite died out in these parts of Callow.
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``I'm a very bad man, Amelia,'' he said. ``What I am not is a
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\emph{wasteful} one. I could slaughter the heart of southern Callow's
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people today, but all that would accomplish is the making of corpses.
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Corpses don't grow crops. Corpses don't pay taxes.''
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``Neither do rebels,'' the old soldier grunted.
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``So cease being rebels,'' Black shrugged.
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``Just like that?'' the woman who'd returned his greeting asked. ``We
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just walk away?''
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``Go home,'' Amadeus offered. ``Go to your families. No sanctions will
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be imposed, no additional taxes levied or property confiscated. And the
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next time a lord comes to you with coffers full of Proceran silver
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talking of \emph{freedom}, remember today. Remember that mercy once is
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an investment, but twice is a mistake.''
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\emph{And I do not make mistakes,} went the unspoken sentence.
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``There is a price, of course,'' he said and they stiffened.
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Some smiled with triumph, confirmed in their private belief that Evil
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could never negotiate in good faith. Callow was a land of old grudges,
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lovingly tended to.
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``The nobles,'' he said. ``The ones who took the silver. \emph{Give them
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to me}.''
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He leaned back in his saddle, then smiled at them.
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``You have until nightfall to think it over.''
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His horse wheeled away without a word as hushed whispers erupted among
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the envoys. Before the two bells had passed fighting erupted in the
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rebel camp, but it was all a foregone conclusion. Marchioness Victoria
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Lerness of Vale and Countess Elizabeth Talbot of Marchford were dropped
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|
off bound and gagged at the edge of his camp by men who wouldn't meet
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his eyes as the army started dispersing into the countryside. Some of
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the retinues had not fought and still lived. They would be an issue
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later on, he knew. He'd have to assign a legion to the area to prevent
|
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the rise of banditry. The nobles were brought to his personal pavilion,
|
|
where under guard they were allowed to wash up and compose themselves.
|
|
Amadeus only entered afterwards, and calmly invited them to sit.
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|
``Marchioness Victoria,'' he greeted them. ``Countess Elizabeth.''
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|
They were both in their forties, though even he did not look it he was
|
|
older than both of them. The Countess of Marchford was fair-haired and
|
|
still roughly handsome, though too sharply boned to have ever been a
|
|
great beauty. The Marchioness had dark hair braided and showing thin
|
|
streaks of grey, her blue eyes watery but unblinking. Neither of them
|
|
showed the fear he knew they felt.
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|
``The Carrion Lord himself,'' the Marchioness said. ``Should I be
|
|
honoured?''
|
|
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|
``Come now, Victoria,'' the Countess mused. ``Anything less would have
|
|
been a slight.''
|
|
|
|
Though mere hours before they had been at each other's throats, in the
|
|
presence of the Enemy they closed ranks without hesitation. Of all the
|
|
qualities of the people of Callow, he had always admired that one best.
|
|
Praesi never ceased sharpening their knives even when the enemy was
|
|
knocking at the gate.
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|
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|
``I would receive your official surrender, if you would care to give it
|
|
to me,'' Black said.
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|
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|
``Oh, I don't think so,'' the Marchioness chuckled.
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|
|
|
The Countess smiled. ``Your offer, though kind, is declined. As the
|
|
commander of the armies of the Kingdom of Callow, I must inform you that
|
|
our official reply is \emph{go fuck yourself}.''
|
|
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|
\emph{Give me a hundred officers with that kind of backbone and I'd
|
|
conquer all of Creation}, Black thought.
|
|
|
|
``I expected as much,'' Amadeus said. ``Countess Marchford, the offer I
|
|
made you after the Conquest still stands. A position as general at the
|
|
head of a Legion as well as amnesty.''
|
|
|
|
``You don't really get it, do you?'' the Marchioness laughed. ``I
|
|
wouldn't flip Elizabeth a copper if I saw her on the street starving but
|
|
I would never, not for a moment, think she'd make a truce with the
|
|
Enemy. We were born free, Praesi. That's not something you forget.''
|
|
|
|
``The Marchioness of Vale is correct,'' Elizabeth Talbot said calmly.
|
|
``We both know how this ends, hound of Malicia. The noose, the chopping
|
|
block, or whatever else your butchers in the East can think up.''
|
|
|
|
She leaned forward, meeting his eyes.
|
|
|
|
``I would do it again, Carrion Lord,'' she spoke hoarsely. ``Even
|
|
knowing how it ends, I would do it again.''
|
|
|
|
There were a few heartbeats of silence, then he sighed.
|
|
|
|
``What an utter, utter waste,'' Black murmured.
|
|
|
|
But the gears were turning, and didn't that say everything that needed
|
|
to be said? He rose to his feet.
|
|
|
|
``Crucifixion,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``Returning to Triumphant's favourite, I see,'' the Marchioness replied,
|
|
though she paled.
|
|
|
|
``A legionary will be along soon, with a pitcher of wine,'' Black said.
|
|
``It will be poisoned. A painless one -- you'd fall asleep and never
|
|
wake. Whether or not you drink is up to you. Nailing your dead body to
|
|
the cross will have the same effect as if you were alive.''
|
|
|
|
Villains must be graceful in victory, he believed. They knew defeat a
|
|
lot more intimately than the other side. With a respectful nod, he left
|
|
the two aristocrats to their last moments. The rebel army had died
|
|
without the kind of battle that would make a pivot in the story
|
|
unfolding across Callow. Liesse would be the closing of the rebellion,
|
|
Liesse and Catherine. Looking up to the darkening sky, Black hummed an
|
|
old song his mother had taught him.
|
|
|
|
It had been a beautiful day, but he'd always loved the night best.
|