393 lines
19 KiB
TeX
393 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-39-countdown}{%
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\chapter{Countdown}\label{chapter-39-countdown}}
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\epigraph{``Maybe I won't go to Heaven but you've never owned a pit full of
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man-eating tapirs so who's the real loser here?''}{Dread Empress Atrocious, best known for comprehensive tax reform and
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having been eaten by man-eating tapirs. They were later executed by her
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successor for treason after a lengthy trial.}
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Liesse was almost too pretty to be a real city.
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The walls circling the city were forty feet high, a concession to the
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invasions that had plagued Callow since its inception, but they were
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also white or pale tan stone, with ornate crenellation sculpted to look
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like mated pairs of swans. That was the city's unofficial name, among
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Callowans: Liesse, City of Swans. The jewel of the south, never marred
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by war. That was a myth, of course. When the Dukes of Liesse had still
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been kings they'd been brought forcefully into the fold by the fledgling
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Alban dynasty based in Laure and then then slapped down twice when they
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rebelled for independence. Under the later Fairfax dynasty they'd
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settled down, but the south had always looked to Liesse for instructions
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first. That was the whole reason Duke Gaston had been able to serve as a
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figurehead for the rebellion in the first place. They'd never had to
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throw back a Praesi army, though, and that showed in how the city had
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been built. A third of the city stood outside the gates, mostly trades
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like tanners and dyers that would have stained the pretty inside with
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their stink and mess. Poorer folk had shacks too, though, those who
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couldn't afford the stone houses of the city proper.
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It was not enough to spoil the sight. The city was all wide main avenues
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covered in flowers and trees, garlands hanging everywhere and sparrows
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flying from one church to another. While Liesse, unlike Laure, did not
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have a proper cathedral it had no less than seven smaller basilicas. The
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House of Light had a strong presence in the south, where it had grown in
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strength unchecked while its northern chapters were struggling to strike
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a balance with royal authority. Southern Callow was full of monasteries
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and rural chapels, all of which had fallen on hard times after the
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Conquest. My teacher had not outlawed worship of the Heavens -- he'd
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been well aware he'd be dealing with constant rebellions of he did.
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Instead he'd repealed all the exemptions the House of Light had been
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granted under the Kingdom and made them just as subject as property
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taxes as everybody else. The brothers and sisters didn't work for coin
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or keep it, though, it was a religious obligation for them. So they had
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to rely on donations from Callowans, who grew to resent having to pay
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for the upkeep of grand cathedrals and sprawling churches from their own
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pockets.
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Here in the south the monasteries had been the worse off, with their
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cloistered communities suddenly forced to sell the wine and crops they'd
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once offered people for free. The priests couldn't even do that
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themselves, they'd had to ask lay brothers and sisters to do it for
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them. Inevitably some unscrupulous bastards had managed to get some of
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the jobs and the ensuing scandals had further diminished the credibility
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of people who spent their whole lives interceding for others with the
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Heavens and offering free healing to all those that needed it. I'd never
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been a great admirer of the House of Light -- they asked too many
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questions and their horses were a little too high for my tastes -- but I
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did not approve what the Empire was doing to it. Priests saved lives all
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over my homeland every day and forcing them to focus on worldly matters
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was of no help to anyone but the Imperial coffers. I understood the
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political necessity of damaging their credibility with Callowans, since
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they'd be a hotbed for rebellion otherwise, but pushing them towards
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uselessness was not the answer.
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I'd rather they be legally mandated to provide healing away from their
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own churches for a set amount of months a year, where they might make a
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positive impact but not become entrenched in the community. The Heavens
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weren't going anywhere, I'd have to make my accommodations with them.
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``Pondering an assault?'' Pickler probed, coming to stand besides me.
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I'd called for my Senior Sapper earlier. We were less than half a day
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away from Liesse proper, and now that we were in sight of the ramparts I
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wanted her take on how the siege should proceed. Juniper and I had our
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own notions, but a fresh set of eyes was never a bad thing.
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``We'll bombard them first,'' I replied. ``We've got more hours to spare
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than men. I want them as softened up as possible before we go in.''
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With Black keeping the Countess Marchford busy we had free reign in the
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are. I'd expected to have to watch out for raids the moment we got
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within a fortnight of Liesse but all we'd seen so far was outriders. The
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lack of resistance bothered me. The Lone Swordsman had holed up everyone
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he could behind the walls, and that was a \emph{lot} of mouths to feed.
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Even with full granaries that meant he had only a couple of months
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before starvation set it. Maybe he understood I couldn't afford to let
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the siege go on this long. \emph{Or maybe he's still got cards up his
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sleeve.} That was the problem with William: he was an idealistic idiot,
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up until he started carving sinister messages in people's foreheads. The
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combination of high-minded rhetoric and brutal terror tactics had proved
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a surprisingly potent mix.
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``We won't be able to collapse the walls entirely without taking out the
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houses,'' Pickler said. ``But we wouldn't need to -- we just collapse
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the upper half, which'll much easier, and then we build ramps up to that
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using the shacks. How costly going up those ramps will be depends on the
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amount of siege weapons they'll have.''
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They wouldn't have much, I knew. Callow had never been a great user of
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those. The Kingdom had only rarely waged offensive wars and the few
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cities that did use siege weapons had fielded them to counter Praesi
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ones. Summerholm had plenty ballistas and small trebuchets, rote models
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imported from the Kingdom Under. Dormer and the Red Flower Vales, as the
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other Callowan marches, had been similarly garnished. Liesse, though,
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Liesse had not had to deal with an enemy army in several hundred years.
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Unless the rebels had bought siege weapons through Mercantis they'd have
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next to none.
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``It's not the siege weapons that worry me, it's the army,'' I said.
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The only professional soldiers inside the city would be the Stygian
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phalanx and the Baroness Dormer's retinue, but that wouldn't matter. Not
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with a hero leading them, a hero I couldn't even face directly: my
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pattern of three with the Lone Swordsman was coming to a close, and that
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one was supposed to be his victory. Funny thing, though, the word
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`victory'. Covered a whole range of meanings, some of which left me
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standing with all my limbs intact at the end of them. And when the
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pattern was done, well\ldots{} William and I no longer had Fate pulling
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our asses out of the fire. It was anybody's game then, and while he
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might flatly outclass me with a sword there was more to my arsenal than
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that.
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``Heroes can accomplish strange and terrible feats,'' Pickler finally
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said, shaking me out of my thoughts. ``They'll survive nearly anything.
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What they \emph{can't} do is save their armies from being pounded into
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mulch by artillery.''
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There was a fervent light in the goblin's eyes, her usually placid face
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split with a hungry smile.
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``Before the sappers were made into a corps, we were just
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knight-fodder,'' Pickler said. ``But oh, the things we've learned since
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then. A man can only swing a sword as hard as man can. A goblin behind a
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machine can pulverize a fortress.''
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She turned to look at the walls of Liesse and for once I thought she
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looked as full of malice as Robber.
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``They fight with their arms, Lady Squire,'' she said. ``We fight with
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our minds. Clever beats strong every time.''
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I understood why she needed to believe that, and so did not contradict
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her. But in my experience, there was a threshold of strength that pure
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cleverness could not triumph over. I'd learned that in the Pit, taking
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one hit for every ten I landed and still ending up the one unconscious
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in the mud. Sometimes you were too small, too weak, too light for your
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traps to matter much. It was not a pleasant thought and I tried not to
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linger too long on it. I'd been in a foul mood all day, ever since I'd
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learned\ldots{} well, that was another unpleasant thought I was trying
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not to linger on. The betrayal still felt too fresh, even if it had
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apparently been an old one.
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``At the moment we don't believe Heiress will betray us in the early
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stages of the siege,'' I told my Senior Sapper. ``One of the things I
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wanted to talk you about was contingencies for-''
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There waves. Not just ripples but \emph{waves}, coming from the south.
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My eyes turned to the city, still looking peaceful, but it had to be a
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lie. This was major, an even stronger presence than when Heiress had let
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the demon out. I could feel my Name howling in anger, fighting back a
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presence anathema to it.
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``Fucking Hells,'' Pickler gasped. ``What is that?''
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I eyed her in dismay. If I'd felt that because I was Named it was one
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thing, but the goblin was as mundane as it got. If even she could feel
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what was going on in Liesse, what were dealing with?
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``I don't know,'' I said. ``But we've got people who might.''
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--
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I kept the meeting as small as it could possibly be.
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Juniper, of course, Hakram as my second and Apprentice as someone who
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could give answers. Heiress did not grant me the same courtesy: she
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brought her entire entourage. Fadila Mbafeno, a Soninke mage I'd already
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met in the Tower and that Masego had told me since was one of the most
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promising casters of their generation. Barika Unonti, whose finger I'd
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broken during the same meeting and was now eyeing me with poorly-veiled
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hatred. She was a mage too, and heiress to a lordship sworn to Wolof.
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The only Taghreb among her minions I also knew already, though Aisha had
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been the one to tell me his name: Ghassan Enazah, a lord in his own
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right sworn to Kahtan. Which put him in an awkward position, since he
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was openly a member of the Truebloods while his liege lady was an ally
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of the Empress'. The Taghreb were a fractious people, though, Aisha had
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told me. The High Lady of Foramen might have been one of the Truebloods
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but half her vassals were aligned with Malicia, the same holding true
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for the High Lady of Kahtan's loyalist allegiances compared to her
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dependents'. The last two were the important ones, though. Not powerful
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in their own right but because of who they'd become in a few years:
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Fasili Mirembe, heir to the High Lordship of Aksum and Hawulti Sahel,
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heiress to the High Ladyship of Nok. Two major imperial cities,
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fully-fledged kingdoms before the Miezans came from across the Tyrian
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sea.
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Not a single one of them was ugly. None as good-looking as Heiress
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herself, but it showed that Praesi aristocrats bred for looks as well as
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magic and lineage. I was used to feeling plain, though, so I put the
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envy aside easily. Their looks had come at too high a price anyway.
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Akua's little minions stood behind her as she claimed the seat across
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from me, somehow draping herself across a folding chair like it was a
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godsdamned throne. If her dress wasn't exquisite red silk from the Yan
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Tei lands I'd eat my own fingers: she was wearing a bloody fortune on
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her body, and said fortune was displaying her prominent cleavage. I'd
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long made my peace with the fact that I'd never grow into anything like
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those, but would it have killed her to wear a godsdamned collar for
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once? The heiress to Wolof smirked at me. One day, maybe even soon, she
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would die on a fire. Those tits wouldn't show on a fucking skeleton,
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would they?
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``This is an emergency meeting, so spare me the smarm,'' I said.
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``I will, of course, give you exactly the respect you are due,'' Heiress
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said.
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Her acolytes smirked as a group like they'd practice it.
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``See, that's exactly what I'm talking about,'' I smiled. ``You mouth
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off like that again, and I'll execute one of your little hanger-ons at
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random.''
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That certainly got rid of the smirks, though they condensed on Juniper's
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face instead. I checked on Hakram from the corner of my eye: he was
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immersed in a staring contest with the Ghassan lordling. He'd been the
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commander of Heiress' host when she'd still had a host, I remembered.
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He'd been in charge when her Proceran mercenaries had been whipped
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bloody by the Stygians, though he'd apparently got off without a single
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wound to show for that defeat. If he wanted to start a rivalry with my
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Adjutant he was in for an even rougher ride.
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``That would be a grievous abuse of your authority,'' Heiress said
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sharply.
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``So complain to the guy I answer to,'' I shrugged. ``Oh wait, that's
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Black. And he'd pat me on the back and call it a good day's work. Allow
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me to be perfectly clear, Akua. \emph{I am in no mood to be fucked
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with}.''
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The last part came out as a bark and to my satisfaction several of her
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minions flinched at the sound.
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``You've been summoned here because, though you might be constant pain
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in my ass, you might have something to contribute.''
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I paused.
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``Actually, now that I think of it, this is my godsdamned meeting and
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you're the only who could be useful. All of you Wasteland brats, get out
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of my tent.''
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Several of them opened their mouths but I raised a finger.
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``At random,'' I reminded them.
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``Make them draw lots,'' Juniper suggested.
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``Hear that, we've even got a method now,'' I smiled savagely.
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``Don't kill Mbefano, she'll be useful during the siege,'' Apprentice
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spoke up lazily.
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``Hear that, Fadila?'' I said. ``You get an exemption. Feel free to
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speak up, someone else will get the axe.''
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Fadila did not, in fact, take me up on my offer. She did look like she'd
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been force-fed a barrel of lemons, but given that she'd been the one
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allegedly in contact with several of the mage spies in the Fifteenth she
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was lucky I wasn't having her drawn and quartered on principle. I was
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only allowing that stay of execution for so long, though. If she didn't
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hightail back to Praes the moment we took Liesse, it was the quick stop
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and the sudden drop for Lady Mbefano. She was on my list, now. After
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checking in with Heiress, who gave them a curt nod, the lordlings filed
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out of the tent in a huff and puff of offended noble privilege. Hakram
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was showing the barest edge of his teeth in what was either a display of
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amusement or hunger. The line between those two was might thing with
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orcs.
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``Have you finished throwing your tantrum?'' Heiress asked flatly.
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``I don't know,'' I said. ``Have you finished bringing in your fucking
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posse at important staff meetings? I'm trying to work with you, Akua,
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but if you want to turn this into a pissing contest don't get snippy
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when I put you in your place. You're just a commander, here. Lesser than
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even Nauk and Hune, because they have more troops and \emph{they've
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never summoned a demon in the middle of a city full of civilians}.''
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Yeah, I wasn't going to let that go anytime soon. Maybe when she was
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dead, and even then I'd probably deface her tombstone with the words ``A
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demon? \emph{Really}?''.
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``I tire of you saddling me with the responsibility with your
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blunders,'' Heiress sighed.
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I would have believed her had I, you know, not not summoned a demon.
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That kind of damaged her credibility. Still, it was a testament to how
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skilled a liar she was that I almost wanted to to trust her version of
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things.
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``That conversation's not going anywhere, so let's put it aside,'' I
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said. ``We've got a bigger problem now. Masego?''
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``That ripple in Creation came straight from Liesse,'' Apprentice said,
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pushing himself up in his seat. ``It was angelic in nature.''
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Juniper barked out a laugh.
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``We whipped the get of Hells already,'' she said. ``I suppose we were
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due a fight with the other side of the field.''
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``Your are overly simplifying matters,'' Heiress said, and to my
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surprise this was not wrapped in a coating of insinuation.
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She was actually contributing, would you look at that. Any time soon
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we'd be buddies, except that apparently she'd owned Nilin body and soul
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since the beginning and I'd thought he was \emph{my friend} and -- I
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stopped when I heard the table splintering, every eye on the room on me.
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I took my hand off the wood, sweeping away the shards.
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``Continue,'' I ordered.
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``The Hells and the Heavens are equivalent only in terms of absolute
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might, not numbers,'' Heiress said warily. ``Devils are endless and
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ever-spawning, but angels are a set and allegedly unchangeable number.
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Divided in Choirs, they can never be more or less than they have always
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been and always will be.''
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``So we won't have to deal with a swarm of comically naked cherubim,'' I
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said.
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The House of Light taught these were the among the most powerful of
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angels, associated with the Choirs of Compassion and Fortitude. A few
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hundred years back, though a Proceran mosaic artist had displayed those
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mighty angels as chubby naked sexless flying sprites. Like all Proceran
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fancies that one had spread across the continent, to the mild amusement
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of many a priest. No one reacted to my joke, so I grimaced and kept
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quiet. Likely the only one with enough schooling in the Book of All
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Things to get it was Masego, and we had different takes on humour. Since
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I'd put explosives in his hair, I was willing to cut Apprentice a little
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slack on that front.
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``If it were a cherub we were dealing with, we'd be in a great deal more
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trouble,'' Heiress said.
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``She's right,'' Masego said. ``I don't know exactly what we're dealing
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with, but it's not that high up in the Choirs.''
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``You both speak,'' Juniper said slowly, ``as if we'd personally have to
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deal with this angel.''
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Masego eyed Heiress, who smiled charmingly at him. He ignored it. I was,
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I reflected, rather lucky that Apprentice was a great deal more
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interested in dissections than women. Or men, for that matter. Warlock's
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son seemed to regard all of those matters with a certain intellectual
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disdain, as if he couldn't possibly fathom why anyone would do anything
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so unhygienic.
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``I thought it was obvious to everyone,'' Apprentice said. ``Someone is
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trying to bring an angel into Creation.''
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``Seventh Choir,'' Heiress added. ``The Hashmallim, appointed rulers of
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the Choir of Contrition.''
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Masego seemed surprise. ``You're certain?''
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``I have tools you don't,'' she replied flatly.
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``Seventh Choir,'' Apprentice repeated. ``So that's how long we have.''
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Juniper leaned forward. ``You can give me an estimate?''
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``Seven times seven hours,'' Heiress said. ``And then an Angel of
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Contrition will grace Liesse with its presence.''
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Oh, I didn't like the sound of that at all.
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``Practically speaking, what does that mean?'' I asked.
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``It won't be there for long,'' Masego said. ``But anyone within
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forty-nine miles will be made\ldots{} contrite.''
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``What he means,'' Heiress said, ``is that anyone without a Name in that
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range will be confronted will all their `sins' until they're broken to
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the will of the Heavens. The last time a Hashmallim touched the world,
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three hundred thousand people picked up a sword and fought until they
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reached the capital of the Kingdom of the Dead.''
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``If that angel comes into Creation,'' Apprentice said quietly, ``every
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soul in Liesse, and the Fifteenth with them, will form the tip of the
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spear for the Tenth Crusade.''
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