473 lines
22 KiB
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473 lines
22 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-49-hearsay}{%
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\chapter{Hearsay}\label{chapter-49-hearsay}}
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\epigraph{``Truth is a lie grown old and beloved.''}{Soninke saying}
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The woman sitting in my tent I had fully expected, but the fragrant pot
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of tea set on the table I had not. Not for the first time I wondered how
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deep the rabbit hole went: how deeply had the Empress infiltrated the
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Fifteenth, that she could see water boiled and a tea set put down in my
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own godsdamned tent? As for Malicia herself, I offered her a nod before
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plopping down in the seat across from hers. The meat-puppet of the woman
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who ruled about a quarter of the continent poured me a cup of pale
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steaming tea, adding two blots of sugar and a silver spoon to the saucer
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before handing it to me. I was long past being surprised at her knowing
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details about me, but that she'd taken the time to learn how I took my
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tea was a nice touch.
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``How was your day, darling?'' Her Dread Majesty Malicia, First of Her
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Name, asked me with a sweet smile.
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I winced, well aware that she was putting forward that very domestic
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image purely to screw with me for her own entertainment. As long as she
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didn't start massaging the back of my neck I'd cope.
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``Well, this afternoon I pretty much scared the Duchess of Daoine into
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telling me a secret older than the Kingdom of Callow,'' I said. ``I put
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it under the seal by your authority too. No one but Masego and I are
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ever going to know the details.''
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I stirred the tea before putting down the spoon on the table -- which
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even with my botched etiquette lessons I knew was quite unmannerly --
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and took a sip. Huh, tasted different than the Ashuran stuff. Closer to
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Aisha's brews, though the taste was clearer. The Empress smiled.
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``Ah, hedging your bets,'' she said. ``You do not want the knowledge in
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the Tower's records, lest it be misused decades from now.''
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Pretty much, yeah, though I refrained from agreeing out loud. I wasn't
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sure I'd trust Black with the knowledge that there was that kind of
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juicy leverage on Daoine up for grabs, much less whatever murderous
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clown might be succeeding the lot of us whenever our work inevitably
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caught up to us. Masego would keep quiet, I knew. He'd been raised to
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respect symbols like the Tower's seal and he wasn't exactly the
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gossiping type to start with. I doubted Kegan would trust the son of the
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Warlock to do anything at all, but she'd just have to deal with it. I'd
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needed Hierophant in the loop to have a chance of this not ending in the
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ruination of Callow. Which, in all fairness, it still might. One on one
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I'd bet on myself against Akua, but she'd had a long while to prepare.
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For a mage, especially one as powerful as her, that made a difference.
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Liesse was going to be the greatest slaughterhouse of my young but
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bloody tenure as the Squire.
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``So,'' I said. ``Not going to ask me what terms Diabolist offered?''
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The Empress sipped at her own cup, taken plain.
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``Shall I guess?'' she said, amused. ``The queenship of Callow,
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naturally. Anyone trying to turn you would begin with this. It would
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have to be paired with a threat that promises to either destroy this
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land or ruin it, lest you dismiss her from the onset.''
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Elegantly, Malicia tapped a finger against the table.
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``She will have been serious in her attempt,'' the Empress assessed. ``A
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personal touch as well, then. A full ritual to unshackle your former
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paramour, perhaps, or healing for your recently wounded legate. Her
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spies should be capable of sending word of that in time for the offer
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being made.''
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I drank deeper from the cup. She'd been right on the nose for all of it,
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not that I'd expected any less. Dread Empress Malicia had been doing
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what Akua was trying to for over forty years, better and against more
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dangerous opponents.
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``She went for Nauk,'' I said. ``I suppose I shouldn't be surprised you
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know all about Kilian.''
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``Did you really think you would be able to wield so much power in my
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name without your weaknesses being thoroughly investigated first, my
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dear?'' the Empress chided. ``If there were means available to remedy
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her state that did not break your principles, I would have seen it done
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already -- if only to remove a way to pressure you.''
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So, confirmation even someone with Malicia's resources and frankly
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ludicrous sorcerous archives couldn't find a way to help Kilian without
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ritual sacrifice. I'd been considering asking a favour there to sidestep
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the issue entirely, and was almost relieved it wouldn't be possible.
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Owing a favour to the likes of the Empress was not something to
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undertake lightly. It left Warlock, maybe, but that wasn't much better.
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\emph{And if I must make bargain with the Sovereign of the Red Skies,
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Nauk comes first.}
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``I did not come to speak of the Diabolist, though I expect we shall,''
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Malicia said. ``I have news from the south.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``Is Black finally done murdering his way to a settlement?'' I asked.
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``The situation in Callow could use his special touch, I'll admit.''
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The Empress paused, and my eyes sharpened. I'd never seen her visibly
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choose her words before, but I was near certain that was happening
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before my eyes. \emph{Shit. What went wrong?}
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``Amadeus was defeated,'' Malicia said. ``Though Procer has not spread
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its influence to the League, that achievement was not his doing. A
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Hierarch was elected even as Nicae fell to the Tyrant of Helike's
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armies.''
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``He \emph{lost} to the White Knight?'' I said. ``Fucking Hells, I
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thought he was green. How did he manage that?''
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``I am given to understand there was betrayal on Helike's part, but that
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the foremost architect was an old acquaintance of yours,'' the Empress
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said. ``The Wandering Bard, under a different name.''
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I frowned.
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``She was a pest,'' I said. ``And dangerous, I won't say otherwise, but
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definitely not in the league you're describing. A second-stringer like
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the Bumbling Conjurer, with a sharp grasp on her powers and
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limitations.''
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``As of Amadeus' last report, `Aoede of Nicae' has made it on the Red
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List,'' the Empress murmured. ``You have not been introduced to it yet,
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I believe. It is a list of names circulated among the Eyes of the
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Empire, of individuals that must be assassinated whatever the cost
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should opportunity be presented. She shares the distinction only with
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Cordelia Hasenbach and Klaus Pappenheim, at the moment.''
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My tea was cooling, so I gulped down a mouthful as I marshalled my
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thoughts. Black had been sent to the Free Cities to make sure nothing
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happening there gave Procer and excuse to start a Crusade, and it looked
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like that had been accomplished even if not by his hands. It was,
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unfortunately, made moot by the fact that Diabolist had a bucket of red
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in hand and was determined to paint a big target all over the Empire's
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face.
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``He's all right, though,'' I stated, almost a question.
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I refused to believe the Empress would have been so casual about this if
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my teacher was dead. I had only a vague grasp on the relationship
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between those two, but there was a great deal of trust and affection
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there. Frankly, I would have believed they were a couple if Malicia
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wasn't strictly interested in tits and Black pretty much indifferent to
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anyone not called Ranger.
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``He was severely beaten, but not wounded,'' the meat-puppet said. ``I
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would not call him `all right', regardless. Captain was killed fighting
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a heroine.''
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I let out a sharp breath. Fuck. I'd always liked Sabah. She'd been the
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most reasonable of the Calamities in a lot of ways, and ever since the
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day I'd met her she'd acted like some sort of giant warrior aunt to me.
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\emph{And I knew her for two years and change. The Calamities were
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together for over four decades.} I'd only rarely seen them together, but
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they'd been a family. They'd be grieving her for years.
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``He must be wretched,'' I said.
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``And coming north as quickly as he can as of a month ago, along with
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Warlock and Scribe,'' Malicia said. ``Be warned, Catherine.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``\emph{Don't you fucking try that},'' I snarled. ``He wouldn't hurt me.
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Not even at his worst.''
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The Empress looked at me, and for a heartbeat I forgot this was a body
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she possessed. The woman I'd seen on the throne that night had come
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again, cold empire made flesh.
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``I love that man,'' Malicia said, and the calm of her voice could be
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called anything but savage, ``in a way I doubt you will ever love
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anyone, Catherine Foundling. He has been part of my soul since we were
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children looking at the stars. Do not ever believe that whatever paltry
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affection you lay at his feet is but a pale shadow of mine.''
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I flinched.
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``I have never seen him like this,'' the Empress said. ``Whatever the
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Wandering Bard did, it wounded what is at the core of him. This goes
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deeper than pride or what he felt for Sabah -- he is as a raw, bare
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nerve.''
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``So he'll go cold,'' I said. ``I've seen him like that before. It's
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terrifying, but not dangerous to either of us.''
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``\emph{Think}, Catherine,'' the Empress coldly said. ``For all that he
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arms himself in logic, underneath still lives the sixteen-year-old boy
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who watched Nefarious flee and felt only disgust. If he'd never been at
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the Fields\ldots{}''
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She shook her head.
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``It doesn't matter,'' she dismissed. ``Every Named is crystallized from
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a single moment and that was his. What you should worry of is that his
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judgement has been impaired. He will serve the sword to anything in
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Callow that he deems to threaten Praesi hegemony.''
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``All that's left is Diabolist,'' I said. ``And he's welcome to wield a
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sword there, if he gets to her first.''
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``Be warned,'' Malicia repeated quietly.
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The tone was solemn, and had me doubting. I actually hated her a little
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bit in that moment, because no matter if this was true or not it
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remained that she had the ability to make me doubt one of the pillars my
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life relied on. That alone was enough to harden distrust, made worse by
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the awareness that I needed her. Her support and her help, so that what
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I meant for Callow was anything but failure.
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``So there's a Hierarch,'' I said, bluntly changing the subject. ``Is
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that going to be a problem?''
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``The man bears it as a Name,'' the Empress said. ``As did his sole
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predecessor. He is a career diplomat for Bellerophon, called Anaxares.''
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``Bellerophon's the easternmost city, right?'' I frowned. ``The one that
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elects its rulers.''
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Democracy, it was called. There was a part of that that appealed to me
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-- letting people choose their own way -- but I'd never really bought
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into the notion. People were dumb, broadly speaking, and mobs even
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dumber. For all that I'd acquired a distaste of nobility, filling a hall
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with drunk tradesmen and asking the lot of them to make laws was no way
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to rule a country. Someone had to hold the reins, or all you got was
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bickering and indecision. Just because I believe that place shouldn't be
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inherited didn't meant is should be carved up and handed off to a
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hundred thousand strangers out in the streets.
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``The Hierarch was prisoner to the Tyrant of Helike since the beginning
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of the war in the south, and the Tyrant seems to have been instrumental
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in arranging his election,'' Malicia said. ``We've yet to acquire a full
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profile on him, since infiltrating Bellerophon has always been\ldots{}
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difficult. What little we've seen of him is puzzling. He seems
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aggressively opposed to taking any action at all in his function as head
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of the League.''
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``He wouldn't participate in a Crusade, then,'' I said.
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``It seems unlikely,'' the Empress said. ``I would not commit to an
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answer without deeper study.''
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``Good,'' I grunted. ``If we don't have to worry about an army sailing
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up the Hwaerte, then I just need to put down Diabolist quickly and lock
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down the Vales hard enough Procer thinks twice about invading.''
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If the First Prince managed to rope in the Thalassocracy it was possible
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they'd try to land armies in Praes, but I actually rather hoped they
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did. That land was death on invaders. Between the Wasteland and the
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Hungering Sands it was more or less impossible for an army to live off
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the land there, and every major Praesi city was filled to the brim with
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nasty surprises for anyone meaning to try their walls. Even at the peak
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of the crusader kingdoms, the authority of the kings had not held
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further than a few miles away from the cities they ruled. And even then
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they'd not conquered the whole of Praes. Wolof had badly broken the army
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trying to take it, and neither the Northern Steppes nor the Grey Eyries
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had ever come under crusader rule. If Cordelia Hasenbach tried to take
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Praes from the coast, she'd find the region a bottomless hole swallowing
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her men and coin. Crusades always ended when they got too costly, half a
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dozen failed runs at the Kingdom of the Dead had taught Calernia as
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much.
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``And so we return to Akua Sahelian,'' the Empress said.
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I grimaced.
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``She got her hands on something called the Still Water project,'' I
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said. ``I'm guessing you know what that is. I'll have a hard time ever
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forgetting.''
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Malicia sighed. It was, for her, an unusually human gesture.
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``I told Wekesa the trials were a liability,'' she said. ``But he was
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adamant. Argued it would revolutionize understanding of rituals.''
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``Did it?'' I asked.
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``In a manner of speaking,'' she conceded. ``After I decreed the matter
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to be under seal, he largely abandoned the avenue of research. What he
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learned before that would allow us a fighting chance against the Dead
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King, should he ever wage war upon us.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``And that's considered likely?''
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``The Empire has been in conflict with the Kingdom of the Dead in past
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centuries,'' the Empress said.
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``I'm pretty sure I'd remember that,'' I said. ``That kind of mess would
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be worth a page in the history books.''
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``You will find almost no record of them,'' Malicia said ruefully. ``An
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attentive historian can find a period of twenty-five years between the
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reigns of Dread Emperor Pernicious and Dread Empress Maleficent the
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Second that is unaccounted four. The three Secret Wars were waged
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through the Hells, a vanity project that was an attempt to seize the
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Dead King's infernal dominion. An invasion through a hellgate in Ater
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was so imminent after the third that the woman who would become
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Maleficent II called on a pair of demons to erase most of a Hell and the
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previous two decades with it.''
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I let out a low whistle. I disapproved of fucking with the fabric of
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Creation on a general basis, even the parts that smelled of brimstone,
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but I had to admit that Maleficent had gone above and beyond in getting
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rid of the mess on her hands.
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``Setting aside a revelation that will be haunting my nightmares in
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months to come,'' I said. ``I have to ask -- how many of those other
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continent-shaking horrors do you have locked up in the Tower? Because,
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without being arrogant, I think I can put the fear of the Gods in the
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Principate. But if the shoes keep dropping, they won't c\emph{are} about
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how many people I've stabbed. They'll be in for a death match.''
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``Four,'' Malicia said. ``None of which are in danger of being revealed,
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as they never made it past the theoretical stage. Two inherited, two of
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Wekesa's making and dependant on him being alive.''
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Well, fuck me. There'd been a lot of nights lately where I had that
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sliver of doubt about whether I'd made the right choice in working
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within the Empire instead of against it. Wondering if by choosing to be
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a villain I'd ensured all the ruin that had come to Callow since. That
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put most of the doubts to rest, because I knew better than to believe
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Black would not have pulled the trigger if he was facing a victorious
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rebellion with foreign backing. My teacher had picked a soft embrace for
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Callow because he'd thought it to be the way to bring it into the Empire
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that would lead to the least resistance. I was not fool enough to delude
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myself into believing he would not turn to harsher means should it fail.
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``I'll admit to some disquiet over that,'' I said. ``It's not that
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Emperors as a rule are murderous pricks that would use those given half
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an excuse, but yes it is in fact exactly that.''
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``The resources involved are significant,'' the Empress said. ``None of
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them are minor projects, and we both know how large developments such as
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these tend to end.''
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I didn't really consider `don't worry about it, a hero would probably
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take care of that if it came down to it' to be a valid response, but I
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wasn't exactly in a position to pursue the subject at the moment. It
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might be worth bringing it with Black later. He had a bone-deep hatred
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of those kinds of weapons that might get my foot in the door as far as
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he was concerned, but that pragmatic streak cut both ways. He might want
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to keep those in the vault for a rainy day.
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``There's going to be massive casualties,'' I told her after a moment.
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``She implied she can pull Still Water on the entirety of the people
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inside Liesse. That's at least a hundred thousand undead, and a battle
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won't clean all of those up. There'll be spill in the countryside.''
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``The Legions of Terror are versed in peacekeeping operations,'' the
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Empress noted. ``And a visible common enemy has uses.''
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The Legions of Terror are versed in peacekeeping operations. Gods, there
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was a sentence to give a farmer the shivers.
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``This is going to end up blamed on Praesi, Malicia,'' I bluntly said.
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``The Legions cleaning up afterwards won't win a lot of love when it
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comes from the massacre of a hundred thousand civilians at the hands of
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the Wasteland's favourite daughter.''
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``Public sentiment is already being prepared,'' the Empress said. ``Your
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visibility of late is not without impact.''
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Ah. They were going to point at me and say here's the good girl, she
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beat the bad girl and would you look at that she's wearing our colours.
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Aren't you all glad the Tower's in charge? Lowered taxes for everyone.
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\emph{I'm not sure that'll be enough, but if Procer comes knocking at
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the gate Callowans might just pick the devil they know. Especially if
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the devil just named one of their own vicequeen, with pretty knights
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riding at her back.} I was getting rather tired of the feeling my
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interlocutor had been three steps ahead of me the whole time, but I
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doubted it would end anytime soon.
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``I have a hypothetical to speak of,'' I said.
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``I am listening,'' Malicia said.
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``Now, let's say there's this girl and she's not all that good at
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scheming,'' I said. ``Hasn't got the knack for it. But she learned to
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read forces in movement, so to speak, and looking at the last year she
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noticed a few things.''
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The Empress studied me openly, and did not speak.
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``The girl's been hacking away at moving targets this whole time and
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until recently never had time to breathe,'' I said. ``But she does now,
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and trying to look at the year from a different seat she saw a few
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oddities.''
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I waved my wrist lazily to elaborate.
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``Like Akua being able to amass the reagents for Still Water without
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calling down Hells on her head,'' I said. ``Or importing so many little
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trinkets through southern Callow unimpeded. Now, this girl's people are
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green. No surprise they missed those things. But there's two people who
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should have been keeping an eye on the situation. One gets a pass, since
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he was away. The other, though? The other's absence of movement is
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\emph{intriguing}.''
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``I am curious,'' Malicia said. ``What do you believe this other would
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have to gain, by allowing the breadbasket of her empire to be
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devastated?''
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``See, that's the part that got the girl at first,'' I said. ``Then she
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thought, you know what's the problem with Callow? It's got all this
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farmland, but it's full of stubborn Callowans. It'd be much easier if a
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chunk of them were gone. You could have Praesi farm there instead.''
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The Empress said nothing.
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``But then the girl thought that was too heavy-handed,'' I mused.
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``Measures like that could have been taken long ago and weren't. So what
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was to be gained, yeah? It occurred to her, then, that she was still
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thinking in the present. The wrong sort of game. Now, looking ahead, you
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know what might be useful for this other? Callow strong enough to fight
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the Principate, but too weak to make waves. And there's this image, too.
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Of the girl putting steel into Akua Sahelian's throat until she chokes
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on her blood, and how that'll make her popular with some people.''
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My eyes hardened.
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``Puzzled her at first, since the other would lose a few feathers from
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the whole affair, but it makes a twisted sort of sense,'' I murmured.
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``If Callow's behind the girl and the girl is behind the Tower, well,
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all sort of troubles go away.''
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``And in this hypothetical, what would the girl say to the other?''
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Malicia asked.
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``That now's not the time to bare knives,'' I said. ``But that if
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anything like that was pulled again there would consequences, and that
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lately she'd gotten quite good at killing.''
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The Empress idly turned her cup.
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``I believe this girl you speak misunderstands a few things of the
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other's methods,'' she said. ``You see, unlike her fellow she does not
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believe a war with Procer is winnable. It is one of the few points on
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which they dissent, and she has gone to great lengths to delay and even
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attempt to prevent such a war from occurring.''
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\emph{I wouldn't enable Diabolist if what she was cooking up brought a
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Crusade on our heads}, I took that to mean. Believable, though months of
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growing doubts weren't going to be quieted by a few offhand sentences
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spoken by one of the most skilful liars in Creation.
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``That's a little worrying,'' I said. ``Considering that war is around
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the corner.''
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``The man you spoke of spent a lifetime preparing for it,'' Malicia
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said. ``It is, in his eyes, the culmination of everything he has ever
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done. To win it would validate all that he has fought for. One might say
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he is unable to envision this war \emph{cannot} be won, for it would
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contrary to who he is.''
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``And she thinks he's been blinded by that,'' I said. ``I'm not sure it
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matters, at this point. The war's coming regardless.''
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``It's an interesting puzzle, isn't it?'' she mused. ``How does one win
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a war that one is fated to lose?''
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``And there's an answer?'' I asked.
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Dread Empress Malicia smiled beautifully.
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``Why, you never fight it at all.''
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