487 lines
21 KiB
TeX
487 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-2-demand}{%
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\section{Chapter 2: Demand}\label{chapter-2-demand}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The closest equivalent I've found to the Imperial court is the
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act of shoving your hand in a bag that could be full of jewels but is,
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most of the time, full of razor blades.''}
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-- Extract from the personal memoirs of Dread Empress Maleficent II
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\end{quote}
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The two-hundredth level of the Tower was surprisingly, well, not
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horrifying.
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Admittedly there were more skull carvings woven into the relief than I
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was strictly comfortable with, but the boudoir where I'd ended up
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cooling my heels until Malicia was ready to see me was pretty
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comfortable. The armchairs had been designed to accommodate people
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wearing plate armour as I currently was, and a servant had helpfully put
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out a carafe of what looked like good Liessen wine. It broke my heart
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that I couldn't pour myself a cup, but the last time I'd stepped foot in
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the Tower all the available refreshments had been poisoned and I wasn't
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going to risk a repeat performance for a drink. I was getting more than
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a little restless, sitting alone in the room and waiting on one of the
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most powerful women in Calernia.
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It wasn't the armour that had me feeling awkward: Hells, it was my
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default getup these days. Besides, Hakram had seen to it that it got
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polished even if the thought had never crossed my mind, because my
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minion was a godsdamned prince among adjutants. I'd even gotten used to
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the cloak, though it had a way of making everything I did seem overly
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theatrical\emph{.} And the sword\ldots{} well, at least it was goblin
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steel. I could have done without the goblinfire-green bells my teacher
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had gotten the pommel sculpted as, but I'd grown familiar with the
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arming sword. Besides, there was no escaping the Black Knight's dubious
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sense of humour.
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That particular thought was a great deal fonder than it would have been
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a few months ago. The problem with Black, I'd found, was that he was a
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\emph{likeable} monster. It was hard to remain as guarded as I should be
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around him when he constantly went out of his way to make things easier
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for me. The memory of that afternoon in Summerholm when I'd seen his
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true face remained fresh, but it battled with the evenings like when the
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two of us had stood out in the rain and he'd been almost\ldots{}
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comforting. As comforting as a man like him could be, anyway.
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He was manipulating me, of course, but that didn't mean his actions
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weren't genuine. He wouldn't be half as good a manipulator if they
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weren't.
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The longer I spent with my teacher the more the way he did things seemed
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reasonable, and that terrified me more than anything else.
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\emph{I can like him and still consider him my enemy}, I told myself
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silently. I paced across the room, following the relief of some ancient
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battle as I did. The Praesi displayed seemed to be on the defensive, for
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once, but I didn't recognize the battlefield. The twin bells of the
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Fairfax dynasty were among the banners of the invaders but there were
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half a dozen other displays of heraldry I was unfamiliar with.
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``The Fourth Crusade,'' a voice came from behind me.
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My hand immediately dropped to my sword as I swivelled, but the woman
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facing me was unarmed. Not a servant -- she wasn't wearing the Tower's
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livery -- but I couldn't recall seeing her the last time I'd been here.
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\emph{Not that that means much.}
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``Excuse me?'' I replied after a heartbeat.
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``It's a depiction of Dread Emperor Terribilis turning back the Fourth
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Crusade,'' the woman repeated.
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Ah. The heraldry I hadn't recognized must have been from the Crusader
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Kingdoms that the second Terribilis had spent his lifetime dismantling.
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I let a moment pass as I took a closer look at the stranger. Dark skin
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and short plaited hair, she had those typical Soninke high cheekbones
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and nearly golden eyes. Her tunic was a deep green and high-collared, a
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fashion I'd noticed before in the streets of Ater. Not that any of this
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helped me figure out who the Hells I was talking to. I cleared my
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throat.
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``Is it time for me to go in, then?'' I asked.
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The woman shook her head lightly, reaching for one of the cups by the
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carafe and pouring herself one.
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``The Liesse Rebellion has complicated tax collection in Callow for the
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year, Malicia will be settling the details for a little while longer,''
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she replied. ``It's not poisoned, by the way, if you were wondering.''
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As if to lend her words credence, she took a small sip from her cup. I
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raised an eyebrow. My first thought had been that I might be dealing
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with a heavily disguised version of Malicia trying to pick my brains
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before we met, but that was becoming more unlikely by the moment. Was
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she some sort of attendant, then? Might as well play along for the
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moment. \emph{There's a reason Black taught me the Name trick to burn
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basic poisons out of my system.} I strode across the room and poured
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myself a cup of my own.
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``And who would you be?'' I asked after taking a sip and allowing the
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sweet, musky taste to fill my mouth.
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The woman smiled, artfully sitting down in one of the armchairs.
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``No one important,'' she replied.
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``Villain, then,'' I grunted. ``Only people who ever get that shifty
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about their job description.''
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And yet I wasn't feeling a Name coming off of her. Oh, that particular
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trick wasn't perfect -- I'd yet to manage to get anything off Scribe,
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and Black could blink out of existence for me if he focused -- but it
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wasn't something just anybody could fool. My level of wariness went up a
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notch.
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``I do not have a Name, so you can stop squinting,'' she replied in a
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drily amused tone.
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I coughed to hide my embarrassment.
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``Are you really going to make a guessing game out of this?'' I asked.
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``I guess that's one way to pass the time.''
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She folded her hands primly over her lap. ``You may consider me
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Malicia's equivalent of what Scribe is to Amadeus,'' she said.
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I frowned. ``Secretary?''
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``Spymistress,'' she corrected. ``Let's not pretend that Scribe doesn't
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run one of the largest information networks on the continent.''
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``I'm not sure whether I'm supposed to admit that out loud,'' I grunted.
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``I don't suppose you have a name? `No one important' is a bit of a
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mouthful.''
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She chuckled. ``You can call me Ime,'' she replied.
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I raised an eyebrow. ``Patience in Mthethwa,'' I noted. ``There's a fake
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name if I ever heard one.''
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``Secrets are my trade,'' she said. ``It would hardly be proper for me
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to reveal my actual name on our first meeting.''
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I hummed and refused to humour that line of conversation any further. If
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my last evening at the Tower had taught me anything, it was that if I
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played courtly games I was going to lose. Badly. Better to stick to
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battlefields where I had a chance of carrying the day.
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``Catherine Foundling,'' I introduced myself, well aware that if she
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really was who she said she was then there was little chance she didn't
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already know that.
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``Interesting,'' Ime murmured.
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``How's that?'' I replied warily.
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``Most individuals with a Role introduce themselves by their Name,'' she
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noted. ``I wonder if that disassociation is related to your origins.''
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``I'm sure I'm not the first Callowan villain,'' I spoke through gritted
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teeth.
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``Hardly,'' Ime acknowledged. ``Yet Callowan villains were usually
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related to a Callowan pattern: overly ambitious uncles, warmongering
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commanders. For a girl born in Laure to become the Squire -- a largely
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Praesi Name -- is unprecedented. In many ways you are setting the
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standard for any who would follow in your path.''
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``I'm sure there's a point to this,'' I replied flatly. ``If you'd
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kindly get to it.''
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Ime shrugged. ``I'm trying to understand why Amadeus chose you to be his
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apprentice. Your marks at the orphanage's education facilities weren't
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particularly remarkable -- I read your essay on the Licerian Wars and it
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was rather sloppy.''
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Oh Gods, I couldn't believe that a piece of homework I'd written
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half-drunk in the backroom of the Rat's Nest had ended up in the hands
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of the fucking \emph{spymistress of the Empire}. I forced my face to
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remain blank.
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``I don't think he picked me because of my academic record,'' I said.
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``Mhm, yes,'' Ime hummed. ``Your ranking in the Pit was more to your
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credit. Also a warning sign, of course. It was one of the reasons your
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file was flagged, along with your antisocial tendencies.''
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``I'm not \emph{antisocial},'' I retorted before I could help myself.
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``I'm just -- never mind, not worth arguing over. What does that even
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mean, my `file was flagged'?''
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I didn't even bother to address the fact that everyone and their mother
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seemed to know I'd been part of an illegal underground fighting ring.
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\emph{Hells, Booker, what kind of a show were you running?}
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``You were considered a potential heroine,'' Ime informed me. ``Your
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stated interest in the War College was a mitigating factor, but agents
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of the Tower kept an eye on you regardless.''
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I wasn't quite sure how to respond to that, but I was spared the effort
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of figuring it out when a small gong rang in the distance and the
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spymistress gracefully rose to her feet.
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``Malicia seems to be done,'' she said. ``If you'll follow me, Lady
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Squire?''
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I bit down on a `do I have a choice?' and fell behind her. The boudoir
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led to a larger antechamber covered in wood panelling, but our pace was
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too brisk for me to stop and take in the scenery. The door at the end of
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the room opened into a larger chamber, this one more classic Praesi
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architecture. Polished black marble everywhere, with the occasional gold
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inlay shining in the candlelight. Large tinted glass windows in the back
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allowed the fading sunlight to filter in, casting shades of red and gold
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on the long rectangular table that took up the middle of the room. At
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the head of the room, sitting in an armchair ostentatious enough to
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qualify as a throne, sat Dread Empress Malicia, First of Her Name. I
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bowed my head.
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``Your Most Dreadful Majesty,'' I greeted her.
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Deference, but no kneeling. The urge was there but I remembered standing
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alone with my teacher, surrounded by our enemies. \emph{We do not
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kneel.} The words still sent a shiver up my spine whenever I thought of
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them. The Empress laughed, the sound as enchanting as I remembered.
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``There's no need for any of that, Catherine,'' she spoke gently. ``This
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is a private audience.''
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``Technically,'' Ime pointed out, ``this is a session of the Imperial
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council. Two members out of five is the necessary quorum.''
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Malicia rolled her eyes at the spymistress. ``I see you've been helping
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yourself to the wine, darling.''
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I allowed the banter to pass me by without commenting, still unsure as
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to what exactly my position was relating to them. Or even why I was here
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in the first place. Would it have killed them to have put a mention of
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that in the summons? I studied the Tyrant in silence, trying to gauge
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her intentions. Pretty much all I got out of it was that the woman was
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gorgeous, which I'd already known. She was not, however, as
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attention-grabbing as she'd been in Court. Part of that must have been
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that she was wearing a much less flamboyant green dress the exact shade
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of Ime's tunic, but that couldn't be all. It wasn't that she was any
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less striking, just that\ldots{} \emph{It's not as difficult to ignore.}
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My fingers tightened imperceptibly. \emph{Name shenanigans, I'd put my
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hand to flame on it.} Ime claimed the chair to the left of Malicia,
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immediately beginning to drum against the armrest.
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``Your Majesty,'' I began.
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The Empress raised an eyebrow. ``Malicia,'' she corrected me. ``You and
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I will be working together for a long time, Catherine. I've found being
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overly formal tends to be a hindrance in those cases.''
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``Malicia,'' I repeated with a grimace. Gods, that felt weird. ``I hope
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I'm not being overly bold, but I have no idea whatsoever as to why I'm
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here.''
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The lovely heart-shaped face remained unreadable for a moment, then she
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cracked a smile. Shaking her head ruefully, she turned to Ime.
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``She might as well be his daughter,'' the Empress said.
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Ime smirked. ``Little off-colour, but the resemblance is there.''
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I quietly choked on my tongue.
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``Excuse me?'' I managed to croak out.
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Malicia waved a hand lazily. ``There's nobility in the Empire that would
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cheerfully murder their firstborn for the opportunity to discuss the
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weather with me, my dear. It seems Amadeus has rubbed off on you more
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than I'd thought.''
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I bit the inside of my cheek. ``My apologies, I meant no-''
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``No one's taking offence, Lady Squire,'' Ime interrupted, the
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intonation she gave the last words almost mocking.
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I glared at her. ``Forgive me for being a little nervous in the presence
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of the godsdamned \emph{Dread Empress of Praes}, Lady Ime.''
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I started wincing before the words even finished leaving my lips.
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\emph{My temper is going to get me killed one of these days. Hells,
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maybe even today.} Malicia chuckled exquisitely.
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``\emph{Lady Patience}? A little on the nose, darling,'' she said.
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Ime looked mildly offended. ``I'm the Imperial spymistress. I have a
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mystique to protect.''
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``Save it for the unwashed masses,'' the Empress replied. ``They might
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actually be impressed. That said, Catherine, it might not be the wisest
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course of action to damn a ruler to her face. We do not call on the Gods
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as casually in Praes as they do in Callow.''
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``I'll, er, remember that,'' I muttered, too relieved my outburst hadn't
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gotten more of a reaction to muster anything more substantial.
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The Empress smiled. ``My summons was not a mere social call, as it
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happens. Our respective duties have kept us both rather busy of late,
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but I wanted us to have a face-to-face meeting before you left for
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Callow.''
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A good thing she'd not called it `the provinces' this time. My game face
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wasn't good enough yet to hide the kind of resentment that would have
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caused.
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``Did you ever wonder why your teacher took you as a pupil?'' Malicia
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asked in a murmur.
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And just like that, she had the entire weight of my attention bearing
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down on her. Oh, I'd wondered all right. More than once that particular
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question had kept me up at night, along with the worry that I was
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playing into whatever greater plan he had in the works.
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``The question has crossed my mind once or twice,'' I replied quietly.
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Her expression was friendly, but her eyes were sharp as daggers. Her
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looks made it so very easy to forget that Dread Empress Malicia was the
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longest-reigning Tyrant in several hundred years. One did not get to
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keep the Tower that long without being very, very good at their job.
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``Amadeus is, without a doubt, the most talented example of his Name to
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grace Praes in a dozen generations,'' she said matter-of-factly.
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``Unfortunately, he has also made so many enemies that within twenty
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years he will be unable to function effectively as my Black Knight.''
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My blood went cold. That was\ldots{} not the conversation I'd expected
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to be having when I received the summons, to put it lightly. What she
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was saying had large implications. Empire-shaking implications.
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``I was aware he had enemies in the nobility,'' I replied cautiously.
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``I'd not been given to understand that the situation was quite that
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bad.''
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``Part of it is our fault,'' Malicia sighed.
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``He's been the hatchet man for this regime since the very beginning,
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and the cost is starting to show,'' Ime contributed mildly.
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I'd almost forgotten she was there.
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``Every time we had to keep the High Lords in line,'' the Empress
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explained, ``Amadeus was the one kicking down the doors, so to speak.
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The only reason he hasn't been rewarded for this by a knife in the back
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is that we've already co-opted all the hired killers worth the name.''
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``That and Assassin's been cleaning house like it's going out of
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style,'' Ime smiled. ``Busy little bee, he's been.''
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``You think he means for me to replace him,'' I forced out, almost
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afraid to say the words.
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``A Squire must, in time, become a Knight,'' Malicia replied softly.
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I clenched my fingers and unclenched them.
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``Then that means Heiress is another possible successor,'' I finally
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said.
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``Sweet Akua's designs are a little grander than that, I'm afraid,'' Ime
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snickered.
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``Ambition is a good thing, in a young girl,'' the Empress chided her.
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``Yet I fear her aspirations will be frustrated. The Age of Wonders is
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over, Catherine. The days where a single madwoman with a flying fortress
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could cow a continent are long gone. Creation is a smaller place now,
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one that rewards base cleverness over glorious enterprise.''
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I didn't see anything glorious in a crazy Tyrant raining down fire on
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their neighbours, but that was the Praesi for you. Over a millennium of
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being run by villains had warped their culture to the bone.
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``That is the reason you were summoned to the Tower before your
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departure and she was not,'' Malicia continued. ``You represent a
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legacy, Catherine, a different way of doing things. And so I will ask
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you the same question I asked Amadeus, before he helped me claim the
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Tower.'' The Dread Empress leaned forward. ``What do you want?''
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I blinked. I'd thought I understood where this conversation was going. A
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few words of warning, a little more putting on the charm, and then I'd
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be sent off with a pat on the head. This was\ldots{} She was taking me
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seriously, and that wasn't something I'd come to expect of the nobles of
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the Wasteland. Hells, what could you even say to the second most
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powerful woman on a continent asking you what you wanted? \emph{I want
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Callow to be free, in fact if not in name. I want your nobles to stop
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plundering the land of my birth like it's their Gods-given right. I want
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peace, even if it's under the aegis of the Tower. And the next time one
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of your dogs steps out of line, I want the power to put their head on a
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pike.} All of those I could have told her, but they revealed too much to
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this woman I still knew little about and trusted even less.
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``That's a complicated question,'' I replied instead, face blank.
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``Most worth asking are,'' Ime commented.
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``Don't be obnoxious, sweetling,'' Malicia sighed. ``I understand this
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is unexpected, Catherine, and I will not press you for an answer today.
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All I ask is that you think on it.''
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The Dread Empress leaned back in her seat, every inch of her turning
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regal as she eyed me inscrutably.
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``This is Praes, Catherine Foundling,'' she said. ``Our ways are harsh,
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but they are not without graces. Power earned is yours to do with as you
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wish. Remember that, when putting down the rebellion you set into
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motion. Sacrifices are meaningless if they do not lead to an outcome.''
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For the second time since I'd stepped into the room, my blood ran cold.
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She knew. She \emph{knew}. How could- no it didn't matter. If she'd
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wanted me dead for this she wouldn't have needed proof, and not even
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Black would have tried to stop her. I let out a shaky breath and bowed
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my head in acknowledgement of the implied dismissal. Ime pushed back her
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chair and rose to her feet, casually making her way to me and clapping
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my shoulder. I resisted the urge to push off her hand.
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``I'll see you out, Lady Squire,'' the spymistress said. ``The Tower can
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be rather dangerous, to those who are strangers to it.''
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``No argument there,'' I muttered, allowing her to steer me out of the
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chamber.
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Her steps slowed as we passed through the antechamber, the door closing
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soundlessly behind us.
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``Your legion will pass through Summerholm,'' Ime suddenly said.
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I eyed her cautiously. ``It's the only land route, yes.''
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``Warlock will be there,'' she informed me. ``So will his son.''
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I blinked in surprise. ``His \emph{son}? I thought he\ldots{}''
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``Married an incubus?'' she smiled. ``Yes, the rumours are true. Very
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well-behaved creature, for a personification of lust. They adopted.''
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``Huh,'' I grunted. ``Interesting. Why are you telling me this?''
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``The boy recently came into the Name of Apprentice,'' she replied.
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``Their presence in the city is not a coincidence.''
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Ah. \emph{Power calls to power}, my teacher always said. My fingers
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tightened. A mage with that kind of firepower at his disposal would be
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quite the trump card, but I'd been in Praes long enough to know that
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assumptions paved the path to disappointment. Or an early grave.
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``I'll keep that in mind,'' I replied.
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``You'll have seen all the Calamities save Ranger after that,'' Ime
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mused. ``Not many people can claim the same.''
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I frowned. ``I've never met Assassin either,'' I pointed out.
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She shot me a pitying look. ``It would be a mistake to think that means
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Assassin has never met \emph{you},'' she replied.
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I grimaced. ``And to think I was starting to run out of nightmare
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material.''
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Ime hesitated, then allowed me to pass through the doorway to the
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boudoir first.
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``A word of advice, Foundling,'' she murmured, leaning close. ``When
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people pick out the most dangerous among Amadeus' entourage, they think
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of Ranger or Warlock. They are wrong.''
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I kept my face blank and met her eyes.
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``Be very careful around Scribe,'' she spoke in a whisper. ``Do not ever
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let her believe you are a threat to him. If she does, she won't call
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|
down Hellfire or come swinging a sword. One night, you will
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simply\ldots{} disappear, and no body will ever be found.''
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I swallowed.
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``You're being very helpful,'' I replied.
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I let the following \emph{and why is that?} unspoken. The spymistress'
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hand came to rest on her throat and her eyes went distant.
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``I owe your teacher a debt,'' she said. ``He chose mercy once, when he
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|
had every right to do otherwise. I've made a habit of settling that
|
|
score whenever I can.''
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We made our way out of the Tower in silence after that, each lost in our
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own thoughts.
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