543 lines
26 KiB
TeX
543 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-71-reprise}{%
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\chapter{Reprise}\label{chapter-71-reprise}}
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\epigraph{``It is easiest to win a game when no one else knows you're
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playing.''}{Dread Empress Maleficent II}
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I was no longer capable of staying in a fully warded tent for more than
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a few moments before I got this \emph{itch}. It always began on my
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palms, small pricks that I would have thought were drying sweat if I
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still sweated. Then it was the bottom of my feet, and from there it was
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only a matter of time before I felt like scratching out my own skin. I
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had, the first time, and hadn't realized what I was doing until there
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were long gouges in my arm scored by my own nails. They'd bled, and when
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Masego had seen to the wound his face had creased in surprise. It was
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not inexact, he'd said, to call what ran through my veins blood. But it
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was more than just that, now. It was as useful a reagent as fae blood,
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he mused, and perhaps more in some ways. That it was no longer warm was
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something of a hint in that regard, but his current theory was that the
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liquid in my body was Winter. I dimly remembered my veins freezing
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solid, when I'd ripped apart his work. That had not been a metaphor, or
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a passing thing. He'd insisted on a full study of my body after that,
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not that I'd protested much. Even naked I no longer felt the cold, save
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as some sort of strange perception -- warmth and frost were like\ldots{}
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colours, more than anything else. That my skin could feel colours should
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have worried me, but the worry never really came.
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It had been dimmed. This entire fucking world felt dim, and I had to
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force myself to work up anger at that.
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The results of his exploratory spells had been illuminating in all the
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worst of ways. My bones were no longer bone. They had shattered, he told
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me, then been made anew in ivory. I'd been under the impression that
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ivory \emph{was} a sort of bone, but I'd take Masego's word on the
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contrary. He'd muttered something about pores and marrow before telling
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me he'd need several months of invasive regular procedures to get a
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clear idea of how my body now functioned. He'd then absent-mindedly
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added that my while my heart still beat that seemed to have nothing to
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do with moving around blood, which was just the latest horrific episode
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in the shit I'd been putting my body through since becoming the Squire.
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I'd naturally told him that his proposed studies weren't really
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feasible, and we'd settled on him having a look whenever the both us had
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the time to spare -- which was, admittedly, pretty rare. The two
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three-hour sessions we'd done since had seen him grow more and more
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interested, which usually when a boy was looking at my naked body had
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different connotations.
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Two facts I would have almost preferred not to know came out. First, he
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told me my body should no longer actually be considered a body. It was,
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objectively speaking, a `construct'. I'd pretended I knew what that
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meant and gone through the usual dance of inviting him to elaborate to I
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could figure it out from context. \emph{There is nothing natural about a
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construct}, was the part that struck me hardest\emph{. It is made, not
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born, and so does not function as truly living thing would.} He'd
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refused to outright state it, since he was still lacking proof, but I'd
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gotten out of him that the `flesh `and `blood' I now wore had precious
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little to do with what had been those same things before Liesse. I had
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been born anew, in a way. Not a pleasant one. It was also why my limp
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was back even though the Hashmallim had healed it. Beyond what he told
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me, I glimpsed something that managed to bring back the taste of fear to
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my mouth even if only faintly. Fae were known for illusions most of all.
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Was I just wearing a trick of light, a deception of Creation? Could I be
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\emph{dismissed}, the way fairies and devils could be? That wards were
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now anathema to me might be a hint in that direction.
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The second fact had been shrouded in inscrutable magetalk babble when he
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started expounding about it, as he told me about something called
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`Principle Alienation'. One of the limits of sorcery, apparently, and
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also the reason diabolism was such a popular branch of it. I got him to
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talk in actual Lower Miezan after a while, and the basics of it were
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this: any mortal individual trying to use power was shackled by the
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limited mortal understanding of Creation and its many layers. A mage
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could not use the powers of a demon, at least in part, because they
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could not perceive the fabric of the world the way a demon did. Hence
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why Praesi were so fond of binding otherworldy creatures into their
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service, gaining access to powers they themselves would not be able to
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use. I was no summoner, and told him as much, but his reply ran along
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different lines than expected. I was wielding powers a mortal could not,
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so it followed that whenever I used them I became \emph{less} mortal.
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I'd not felt all that different, after coming back from Liesse, and some
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part of me had kept to the wild hope that the consequences would not be
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as dire as I had foreseen. His verdict finally disabused me of the
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notion. The moment I began calling on Winter my mind would move along
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similar lines as a fae's. My thoughts, my perceptions, my desires:
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everything I considered to be \emph{me} would become a pale mirror of
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themselves. I'd not cheated my way out of the ramifications of being
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fae, I'd just made myself a\ldots{} different breed of the species. The
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deeper I drew on Winter the more I would become some creature wearing my
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own face, and though that creature would keep all that I was it would
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not truly believe in them. My beliefs would just become duties enshrined
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in ice, as binding and unmoving as those that had doomed the Queen of
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Summer. I could be fluid and powerless, or unbending and powerful. I
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spent the rest of that night in my tent getting as drunk as I could and
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negelecting a dozen urgent duties, wishing my hands could still shake at
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the terror I felt. I'd always treated my body as a tool, a vessel to get
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me where I needed to be. Now that it had become exactly that I was
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realizing the deep divide between saying something and living it.
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Yet I had no time to spare for my own troubles, not with the
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catastrophes laying just beyond the horizon. And so after I sobered up,
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the following morning I sent for Duchess Kegan of House Ismail.
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Hierophant as well, and him before the other. He had an axe to grin I
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wanted settled before going into the other conversation. I poured myself
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a cup of wine as Masego sat himself at my left, whetting my lips on the
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Vale summer wine and finding the taste of it almost sour. Some part of
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me wondered if it was a consequence of the changes I'd gone though or
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just another cost for the mantle I had claimed in full. Winter took
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everything. Maybe even the smallest of pleasures. I offered the blind
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mage a cup but he shook his head.
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``Its barely past Morning Bell,'' he said. ``Did you even break your
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fast?''
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I had not. Eating, while still pleasurable in some ways, did not seem to
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be something I needed any longer. The hungers I still felt had nothing
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to do with food.
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``Ranker,'' I said, deciding to change the line of inquiry.
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``Ah,'' Masego said, glass eyes shifting under his cloth to look at me.
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``Is it finally time for sanctions? I would have thought she would be in
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the tent for this.''
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``I've had Hakram look into your complaint,'' I said.
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His brow rose.
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``Three mage lines attempted to stick me inside a ward in broad daylight
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before the better part of a hundred thousand soldiers,'' he said. ``How
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much investigation can possibly have been needed?''
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If the situation in the camps wasn't such a mess, the fact that he'd
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actually lodged a formal complain with the Legions would have carried a
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lot of weight. Especially given who his father was. But the lines of
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command were shaky at the moment. Ranker was both the senior commander
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here and the subject of the complaint, and while I outranked her as both
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Named and Vicequeen of Callow that authority was half a fiction. Her
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legion would stick with her whatever happened, and likely General
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Sacker's as well. I couldn't just bury this, of course. Not only did I
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owe Masego better than that, she had turned on an ally in the middle of
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a fucking battle. The problem was that she'd had reasons for that, and
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not bad ones.
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``As I understand it, the ward wasn't actually meant to harm you,'' I
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said.
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He scoffed.
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``It would have left me bereft of sorcery in the midst of men attempting
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to kill me, had it succeeded,'' he said. ``Murder with a borrowed
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knife.''
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I didn't disagree, but the old Matron had been careful to cover her back
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before acting. She had, before witnesses, scried Duchess Kegan to order
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that Hierophant not be harmed. Which practically speaking would have
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done nothing -- entire parts of Kegan's host had just seen dozens of
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their own incinerated without warning, they would have attacked whatever
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she said -- but it \emph{did} give Ranker plausible deniability.
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Combined with officially stated worries about Hierophant being corrupted
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by demons, she'd not technically done anything I could punishher for.
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And pushing the matter regardless when the situation was so volatile was
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a recipe for a fight breaking out.
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``I can't actually punish a marshal, Masego,'' I admitted. ``With the
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Empress being silent and Black unconscious in theory I'm the supreme
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authority here, but I don't have the support in the Legions to force the
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matter. What I can offer is a compromise.''
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``An attempt was made on my life, Catherine,'' Hierophant said, cocking
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his head to the side. ``Support is irrelevant. Give me two lines of
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mages and I will turn her camp into a crater with a bare half day of
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preparation.''
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``That's exactly what I'm trying to avoid,'' I said. ``You're right to
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be angry. Furious, even. But you can't wipe out a few thousand people
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for one woman's decision.''
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``I can,'' Masego disagreed, ``if they shield her from retribution.''
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``I'm not asking you to just let this go,'' I said. ``Hakram's been in
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talks. The mage lines involved will be punished.''
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It was a good thing Adjutant needed so little sleep, because since my
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return I had been running him ragged. This was arguably the most
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delicate negotiation I'd sent him on yet, given what could come of a
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failure. I felt Hierophant's stare on me though neither his eyes nor his
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body moved, the subtle weight if his attention.
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``Executed?'' he asked, and his voice was hard to read.
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``Demoted back to the ranks,'' I said. ``All pending transfer to another
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legion, pay docked for a year's worth.''
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``A slap on the wrist,'' he said. ``This is not even symbolic. No,
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rather it is symbolic of them \emph{getting away with it}.''
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I'd thought he would say that. I'd not blamed Adjutant when he'd come
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back with those terms, though I'd been less than pleased. Marshal Ranker
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was not the kind of goblin easily talked into bending the neck, much
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less when she believed herself to be in the right. The days where I had
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considered the Legions my teacher's domain and therefore sacrosanct were
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over, though. And the Praesi were not the only ones with hired killers
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at their disposal.
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``I had Adjutant push for the Legions they transfer to being posted in
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the Wasteland,'' I said.
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``Out of sight is not evening of the scale,'' Masego said.
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``No,'' I agreed. ``But Ratface's staff now has a representative from
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the Guild of Assassins attached. Those mages will be heading back to
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Praes through cities I control.''
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Masego frowned for a moment, then his expression brightened.
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``Ah,'' he said, beaming. ``You're implying you'll have them killed
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before they reach the Wasteland.''
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I could have done without it being stated that bluntly but yes, that was
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exactly what I was implying. It was a waste of no doubt competent mages,
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but Ranker should have fucking thought twice before taking a swing at
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one of mine.
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``You need me to be `satisfied justice had been done' in front of
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everyone else,'' Masego continued, sounding pleased even as tried to
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wink before remembering halfway through he no longer had eyelids.
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The sight of that was a little distressing, but I'd cope.
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``Pretty much, yeah,'' I said. ``No need to rub elbows with the goblin
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that tried to take you out, but try no longer to be publicly out for
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blood.''
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``I never get to scheme,'' Hierophant mused, appearing rather chuffed.
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``It's rather pleasant to be involved in your plots.''
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``I'll take that as a yes,'' I said.
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He nodded.
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``Good,'' I grimly said. ``Because you're not going to enjoy our talk
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with Kegan nearly this much.''
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His expression soured, but before he could begin to speak I raised my
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own voice and ordered the legionaries outside to let in the Duchess. I'd
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hear her arrive a little while back, but this needed to be wrapped up
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before she got involved. Masego would be easier to talk into things
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after being mollified. Some part of me wondered what kind of person it
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made me to be manipulating one of my closest friends without hesitation,
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but the voice wasn't as loud as it used to be. Or nearly as persuasive.
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The Duchess of Daoine parted the flaps of the tent with her hand and
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sketched half a bow in my direction. The stare she gave Hierophant was
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distinctly less than friendly.
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``Your Grace,'' she greeted me. ``I am pleased your \emph{strenuous
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duties} have finally allowed time for audience.''
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Yeah, I'd kind of deserved that. Even at the kingdom's peak there been
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nobody but the royal family higher in rank than the head of the House of
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Ismail -- she likely wasn't used to being given a brush-off, much less
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one as blatant as one I'd repeatedly given her.
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``Take a seat, Duchess,'' I said. ``I'm told you have grievances to
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bring forward.''
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``An understatement if there ever was one,'' Kegan sneered, and
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pointedly sat herself across the table from the both of us. ``My men
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were murdered, and the very murderer sits at your side. Not an
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auspicious beginning.''
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Hierophant opened his mouth, but I raised my hand.
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``Let her lay it out first,'' I said. ``You can give answer afterwards.
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Duchess, the floor is yours.''
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``Seventy-three dead, without even ashes to bury,'' Kegan said.
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``Thirty-nine wounded permanently. Do I need to call witnesses forward?
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This entire host saw the killings.''
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``Your men attempted to kill Hierophant as well,'' I said, and her face
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turned dark with fury.
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``Is the defences of one's life now a crime in the eyes of the Empire?''
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she barked.
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``The Empress isn't here,'' I said calmly. ``I am. And I am not
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condemning their actions, only establishing the full facts. Do you have
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anything to add?''
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``Murder of Deoraithe is a breach of our treaty with the Tower,'' Kegan
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coldly said. ``And I believe that under the regulations of your own
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legions, the wanton killing of allied soldiers qualifies as
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\emph{treason}.''
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``So it does,'' I agreed, and was more than a little glad I sat down
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with Aisha before this. ``'Wanton killing' being defined as `killing
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without just pretext' under the same regulations.''
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``Are you implying there was anything just about this?'' the Deoraithe
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said, and her tone could have frozen oil.
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``I think this was a tragedy,'' I said. ``But also a largely accidental
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one. Masego, if you would explain yourself?''
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His glass eyes were fixing the duchess with a stare as unfriendly as her
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own.
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``I was not aware I needed to explain my actions to
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\emph{aristocrats},'' Hierophant said, the disdain he put into the word
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ironically reminding me of the same highborn he was looking down on.
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``I'm asking you to clarify why you did what you did,'' I said. ``Lest
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your actions be interpreted inaccurately.''
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That, more than anything else, jolted him into talking. Throwing around
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rank here would have been completely useless.
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``Upon returning from the dimensional fold in which I battled the three
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demons,'' Masego said, ``My sudden juxtaposition to Creation brought
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back with it a large quantity of demonic essence. That essence having
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corrupted soldiers, I purged the location before it could further
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contaminate. Any further killing was made in my own defence.''
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``The killing of corrupted individuals regardless of Praesi citizenship
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is legal under purge protocols,'' I clarified for Kegan. ``Which the
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Black Knight declared the moment the rebels called forward their demons.
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Hierophant hasn't broken Tower law by doing this, and killing men that
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were attacking him is similarly legal.''
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``I could have killed twice as many,'' Hierophant flatly said. ``You
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should be thanking me for my restraint.''
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I almost winced. I really, really wished he hadn't said that. Reading a
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room had never been one of Masego's talent, but even by his standards
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this was a blunder. Predictably, Kegan's face a was a mask of bitter and
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poisonous fury.
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``You feed my people to demons, murder them and then those trying to
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protect them,'' she hissed. ``And you require \emph{thanks} for it?''
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``The Lord Hierophant misspoke in an attempt to hide his deep regret at
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the tragic necessity of his actions,'' I lied. ``Please forgive his lack
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of manners.''
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``I am the Duchess of Daoine,'' Kegan of House Ismail softly replied.
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``I do not forget. I do not \emph{forgive}.''
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It was rather sad this wasn't even the worst I'd anticipated this
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conversation could go. Masego looked about to speak again but the look I
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sent him smothered that in the crib.
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``\emph{Deep regret},'' I stressed.
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``I did not mean to harm them,'' Hierophant sighed, sounding his age for
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once.
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It was rare for him to have to face consequences for the collateral
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damage that followed in our wake. Most the time, it was our foes that
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got the worst of it. That sentence was probably as good as I could hope
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for, though Kegan understandably seemed less than appeased.
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``Before you speak again,'' I interrupted. ``He could not know your men
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would be where he reappeared.''
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I didn't know if that was true and frankly didn't care what the truth
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was. She would be in no position to gainsay me anyway: the mages could
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understand what Hierophant had pulled on the field in the whole of
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Calernia could probably be counted on one hand.
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``And he was not the one who ordered your soldiers forward,'' I
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continued. ``That would be Marshal Ranker.''
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It was unfair of me to throw her under the chariot here, to be honest.
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It was Masego who hadn't kept anyone in the loop when he'd done\ldots{}
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whatever it was he'd actually done. I knew how he got when he had a
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puzzle in front of him, everything else fell by the wayside. It was
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something I would have to change in him, the going off without a word.
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Trying to fix the moral compass of a man raised by a monster and also an
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incubus was far beyond my ability, but I could at least fashion a
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facsimile of one through practicality. As long as he understood
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discussions like this would keep happening if he didn't change his ways,
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he should be willing to adjust in order to avoid the tediousness. That
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aside, Ranker had given orders according to what she believed to be the
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lay of the battlefield and her mistake had ultimately been
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understandable. By my reading of the reports she'd believed the entire
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army would collapse if the centre wasn't reinforced, so she'd merely
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taken what she saw as the lesser risk. But Kegan hated Ranker deeply,
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had for decades. And the marshal wasn't one of mine, quite the opposite.
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If doing her disservice was what kept the peace, she could go hang.
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``Regardless of orders, there is fault,'' the Deoraithe said, but
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there'd been a noticeable thaw in the poison. ``My men were killed at
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the Lord Hierophant's hand.''
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\emph{Ah, Black. Even now your lessons are useful}. People always
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preferred blaming an old enemy if you gave them the chance.
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``And for that there will be redress,'' I said. ``Though there was no
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ill-intent, the deaths cannot be ignored. To start, Hierophant will help
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your mages reform the gestalt in Liesse.''
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Masego turned to me, displeasure visible on his face, but that was the
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least of the concessions I could and would make. Kegan set aside her
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anger for a moment, more interested in the prize I'd put on the table:
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confirmation that no one would contest the souls of her people. Keeping
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her wizards at bay had, in an unexpected way, made what must have once
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seem as a given feel like it was now a concession. I'd count my
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blessings in that.
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``Full access to the city will be granted?'' she pressed.
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``Under supervision,'' I said, and before she could argue I raised a
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hand. ``Not out of distrust, Duchess. That city is a nightmare made
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stone and my people are the ones who've been keeping an eye on it. I do
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this to avoid you losing a few of your practitioners in the bargain.''
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``It would not be necessary if access had been granted since the
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beginning,'' Kegan said, but did not disagree any further.
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``Hierophant,'' I continued, ``will also put his considerable prowess in
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sorcery at your disposal in order to help your practitioners ensure the
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gestalt cannot be stolen like this again. After which he will never
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speak a word of those measures to anyone, by royal decree.''
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``Catherine-`` he began.
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``We fuck up, we pay up,'' I bluntly told him. ``This isn't Praes,
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Masego. We don't get a pass because we're Named or powerful. If the laws
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protect you, they protect them too.''
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He turned sullen at that, and that was the very reason I'd not warned
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him of this in advance. \emph{Look at me, Kegan}, I thought. \emph{I'm
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going against one of my closest and most powerful supporters to set
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things right with you. Keep that in mind before deciding I'm an enemy.}
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I knew the blind man's irritation would pass after he dug into the thick
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of the sorcery that was involved in what had been promised. There was a
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reason I'd chosen that out of all the possible avenues of making
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reparations. The Duchess would see one of the foremost Named in the
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Empire put to the service of her people, while Hierophant would forget
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this was a punishment at all after the first month. And if this required
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going to Daoine for a while, it just so happened that would keep Masego
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out of the reach of the Empress and the Calamities for while. That also
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had its uses. But I'd have to give more, for what I wanted out of
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Daoine. Masego had no part of that, though, and it would be better if he
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wasn't there at all.
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``Hierophant's actions took place while he was under my command,'' I
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told Kegan. ``Therefore the responsibility is mine in part. In my
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function as Vicequeen of Callow I'll offer further reparations, but I
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believe my comrade's part in this is done.''
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Masego mostly looked pleased he wouldn't have to keep being involved in
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this, but it wasn't him I was watching out for. It was the Duchess. In
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her eyes I could see the struggle: make a play for further punishment
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and risk whatever other indemnities I would offer, or show goodwill she
|
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didn't think he deserved and bank on that adding to the honeypot? Greed
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won, as I thought it would. The Duchess was about to have some lean
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years, if my suspicions about the costs of replacing the Watch's
|
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casualties were true. She'd want to hit me up for coin more than try and
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likely fail to have Hierophant further punished.
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``That part of the grievance is considered settled,'' she conceded.
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Good. Masego didn't bother with courtesies when he left the tent as
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|
quickly as he could, but the two of us had cats to skin of greater
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import.
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``A moment,'' I said, and my heartbeat stilled.
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|
The air in the tent cooled. Once that would have seen every surface in
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sight frost over, but I'd gained more than just power when I'd claimed
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my full mantle. Winter hung thickly in the air, a barely visible pale
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mist. No one would be able to scry through that, and my perceptions were
|
|
extended far enough no one would be able to come and listen in without
|
|
my knowing it. I felt the legionaries outside shuffle at the sudden
|
|
drop, the two as visible to me as if I was standing before them, and I
|
|
raised my voice to send the pair away. When I turned my eyes back to
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Kegan she had gone pale. Fear, I noted. It wafted off her like a scent.
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I breathed it in and smiled. It would be easy to get what I wanted from
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her. All that was needed was to weave myself into mind like a quiet
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whisper, slithering into her brains until terror ruled her and my words
|
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were her only relief. She would \emph{beg} me to serve. If I twisted her
|
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just right, set a sliver of darkness and ice deep inside, I could have
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her plagued with nightmares that would keep her on my leash forever. My
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|
fingers clenched. \emph{Callowan}, I told myself. \emph{She is
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|
Callowan.} The urge lessened. It still lurked, but the power was no
|
|
longer waiting to lash out.
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|
``Gods,'' the Duchess said. ``Your eyes, they\ldots{} It is true, then.
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|
You are no longer human.''
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|
My eyes? I raised an eyebrow and a light tap of the finger on the table
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|
had it frost. I looked upon my reflection and found nothing amiss,
|
|
fixing the Deoraithe with a quizzical look.
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|
``Like frozen ponds,'' she whispered.
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|
Useful, I thought, if they were truly this disquieting. The part of me
|
|
that should be finching was utterly silent.
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|
``We will not be overheard,'' I said. ``Would you be entirely opposed to
|
|
some honesty between us, Duchess? It should limit the tediousness.''
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|
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|
She shivered at my voice, or perhaps the cold.
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|
``I am not disagreeable,'' she managed with laudable composure.
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|
|
|
``There is a war coming,'' I said. ``I would like the know where Daoine
|
|
will stand, and before it reaches our doorstep.''
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|
|
|
``The terms of our treaty with the Tower require a host of no less than
|
|
ten thousand soldiers be provided in case of foreign invasion,'' she
|
|
said cautiously.
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|
|
``If I was here on behalf of the Empress, this tent would be warmer,'' I
|
|
said.
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|
She stared at me for a long time.
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|
|
|
``You speak of rebellion,'' she said.
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|
|
``Nothing quite so\ldots{} turbulent,'' I replied.
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|
``Then what, exactly?'' she pressed.
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|
|
|
I smiled, broad and sharp.
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|
|
``Do you play shatranj, Duchess?'' I asked, voice echoing strangely.
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|
This I time I knew why she shivered.
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|
``I do,'' she said.
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|
|
|
``To have a game , you see, you need an unspoken assumption,'' I
|
|
murmured. ``That all the pieces will \emph{obey}.''
|
|
|
|
She stayed. She listened.
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|
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|
And after, she made a deal.
|