508 lines
27 KiB
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508 lines
27 KiB
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\hypertarget{warden-ii}{%
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\section{Warden II}\label{warden-ii}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``There's only a thousand of them, I don't care if they're on a
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hill. This will be over by midday, Black Knight, mark my words.''}
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-- Dread Empress Sulphurous, the Technically Correct
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\end{quote}
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As midnight neared, two women on opposite sides of the same continent
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found themselves looking up at the sky at the same time by Fate or
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coincidence.
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Dread Empress Malicia, First of Her Name, tugged her modest cotton
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nightgown closer together and watched the crescent moon from her rooms
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above the clouds, near the summit of the Tower. Soninke called it
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Sorcerous' Grin, for the eldritch rituals the Emperor had concocted in
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its light had not been seen since the days of the Miezans. Some said a
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sliver of the man was still up there, scheming his escape from death.
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Cordelia Hasenbach, claimant to the throne of Procer, had been looking
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through one of the few windows in Rhenia's main hall for hours. She'd
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seen the moon rise, and thought it fitting. Lycaonese soldiers called it
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the Ratbane: the crescent in the sky heralded the beginning of the fight
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to crush the ratling warbands that crossed the northern rivers every
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month. There would be blood, soon. The fate of Procer demanded it.
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Neither of them would find sleep that night. Malicia quietly poured
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herself a cup of truly terrible wine, the taste of it bittersweet.
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Cordelia stirred the embers in the fireplace with an iron poker and eyed
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the dancing red motes, her mind faraway.
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In Aisne, the game began.
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---
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This would haunt her until the day she died, Therese knew. The foulness
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of what she had to do would be a lash on her back for the rest of her
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life. But what choice did she have? They had her wife. They had her
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\emph{children}. The Lycaonese woman crept softly to Klaus Papenheim's
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tent, where a single candle still burned. Twenty years, she'd fought for
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the prince. She'd followed him unflinchingly when he'd charged two
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hundred cataphracts into the meat of a ratling army of thousands,
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backwhen the Longtooth Lord had tried to breach the walls of Hannoven.
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She'd pulled him out of the mouth of an Ancient One when the tower-sized
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monstrous rat had been about to bite clean through his plate, the year
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after. She'd gone through a hundred battles and skirmishes at his side,
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fighting for a duty no one south of Neustria would ever understand.
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And now she was going to murder him her prince in cold blood. The tent's
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flap parted silently under her hand and she reached for her knife with a
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knot in her throat, the knowledge of what she was about to do like ashes
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in her mouth. There was a single lit candle at the table, Therese saw
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with a blink of surprise, but no sign of Prince Klaus himself. Not at
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the table, and not in his bed. The first stroke of the sword took her in
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the back of the knee and she fell with a grunt of pain. Looking up she
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saw two old comrades, soldiers she'd bled with, looking down at her with
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grief. One kicked the knife out of her hands and she did not attempt to
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get up.
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``I'm sorry, Therese,'' one said.
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``So am I,'' she said, and closed her eyes.
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She had failed. Would they kill her family anyway? Maybe not, if she
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died for this. She heard the blade come down, and she almost smiled. The
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Enemy had worked through her but found House Hasenbach ready for them.
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There was satisfaction in that.
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``And Yet We Stand,'' she whispered, a heartbeat before the sword took
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her life.
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---
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He would not be remembered as a hero, Louis knew. By taking one life
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tonight he would save tens of thousands tomorrow, but he would win no
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praise for it. His name would be a byword for treachery for decades, the
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servant who had turned on his mistress at the behest of her enemy. He
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knew this, but still he carried the dagger under his clothes. He had no
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wife, no children, but he did have a sister. Barely more than a child,
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the sweetest little girl. And he'd known, when the First Prince's man
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had come to him, what kind of Procer he wanted her to grow up in. Not
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one where anyone old enough to bear a weapon was handed a pike and sent
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to the grinder. Not one where armies roamed the land, burning everything
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as they passed while their rulers spent lives they should be guarding
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like coppers. He could make a better world, and he would. Not matter the
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cost.
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Princess Constance of Aisne would be deep in slumber: the wine she'd
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indulged in would make sure she did not stir. Louis slipped in through
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the servant entrance and stepped quietly into his ruler's chambers. The
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tall glass doors leading to the balcony were open, pale drapes
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fluttering in the wind as the moon's light coated everything in a soft
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glow. The princess' body was wrapped in her covers, her lover of the
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month pressed close. Both still asleep. Taking out the knife, Louis let
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out a soft breath. He could do this. He had to. He was already nervous
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and froze when he glimpsed two silhouettes from the corner of his eye,
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though he relaxed when they did not move. They were\ldots{} two other
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servants. Dead, their throats slit and blood dripping onto their
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clothes. One corpse's hands had been angled to cover his eyes, the
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other's her eyes. \emph{What?}
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The last thing Louis ever felt was a blade opening his throat in perfect
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silence.
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---
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Jacques was set for life, after this. A single night's work and he would
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live like a prince for the rest of his days. He supposed what he'd been
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told to do was treason, but what the fuck did \emph{he} care? Treason
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was for crowned heads to debate. Fantassins like him were just meant to
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die obediently while the owners of Procer traded a few acres of land
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still covered in blood, keeping it for maybe a decade. Then the call
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came again, sons dying for the exact same godsdamned acres their fathers
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had: no one won at this game save for the princes, and he was fucking
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sick of it. He'd been offered a way out, a real future, and he was going
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to take it. They weren't asking anything he wasn't glad to do, anyway.
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The Prince of Brus might be suckling at the Hasenbach tit, nowadays, but
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some of Jacques' friends had died keeping the savages out of their land.
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He had not forgotten that, unlike their cockless wonder of a prince.
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A few free drinks had been enough for him to learn when the patrols
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would go by, and any idiot could get his hands on a torch. The Lycaonese
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restricted use of fire on campaign, but their writ ran no further than
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their own camps. The presumptuous bastards were outnumbered by Alamans
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already, and after tomorrow the gap would widen further. Good riddance.
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Let them crawl back to their barren wasteland of a home and resume
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mating with ratlings. The torch in his hand was dripping oil, so it had
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been a good notion to wrap his hand with a cloth first. The fantassin
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didn't bother to try to break padlock on the granary, instead taking a
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step back and pressing his torch against the wooden wall until it caught
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fire. He did the same on the three others before tossing away his torch
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and making his exit. Screams of alarm spread eventually, but far too
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late. The grain would burn. Let the fucking Lycaonese dine on the ashes.
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Jacques whistled as he returned to his tent, already thinking of the
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nice little shop he was going to open in Brus when all this mess settled
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down.
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---
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Annette's hands were shaking. She hated doing this, she really did. The
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horses hadn't done anything to anyone. They were innocent, and no matter
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what the House of Light said she wasn't convinced they didn't have
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souls. They were such wonderful creatures, so gentle and affectionate if
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you had a way with them. Annette did, as her father before her, though
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unlike him she'd not become the stablemaster for the Princess of
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Aequitan. The others respected her know how, though. She was the one
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they went to, when one of the horses got sick and no one knew why. Even
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mages listened when she spoke. They'd be waking her up before dawn, she
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thought, to ask her to treat the very wrong she was about to commit. If
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only there was another way! But there wasn't, and she must. For
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\emph{love}.
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She still couldn't believe a man like Antoine had fallen for her. He was
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a servant too, of course, but part of the household of the Prince of
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Cantal. Not a muckabout like her. You could see it just by the way he
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talked, the way he dressed so cleanly and wore his elegantly styled
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beard. They'd been together for two months now, and after the war they
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would get married. He'd promised, and he wouldn't have gotten her those
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white roses if he didn't mean it. But now some wicked person was
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threatening his life unless he did an equally wicked thing, and doing it
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so \emph{unreasonably}. There was no way Antoine could have gotten to
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the Princess of Aequitan's horses, her guards beat anyone who even got
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close. But Annette could.
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Her shaking hands poured the exact number of drops she was supposed to
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into the trough before moving on to the next one, the translucent liquid
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disappearing without a trace in the water.
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``I'm sorry,'' she whispered to the horses. ``But they'll kill him if I
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don't.''
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---
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Lucien Hauteville, chief cook for the army of the Princess of Segovia,
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was not in fact called this at all. He'd been born Jacob of Satus,
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though he'd left both the name and the faint Praesi accent behind when
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he'd joined the Eyes of the Empire. He wasn't technically one of those
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anymore, having long ago graduated from skulking in taverns with a
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compromising tattoo on his arm while the real agents did the work.
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Having survived his infiltration of a resistance group in Denier, he'd
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been raised from the ranks at the order of Webweaver herself and sent to
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Procer. That had been decades ago, when the Conquest was still fresh.
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He'd dug deep roots in Segovia since, married and become a respectable
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member of the Princess' household. And never had he ceased sliding a
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monthly detailed report between two loose stones outside the palace for
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another agent to pick up.
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One did not cross the likes of the Lady Scribe, no matter how
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comfortable abroad one became. Unlike the Carrion Lord, the Webweaver
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would not crucify you: you'd just suddenly\ldots{} disappear, along with
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everyone you ever cared about. Besides, if he was careful he could
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maintain his cover and return to Segovia after this. It'd been a while
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since he'd carved up anyone, though he'd once had a talent for it, so it
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was for the best that the task he'd been given was slightly more
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indirect. Princess Luisa's highest-ranked commanders had a habit of
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unofficially gathering for drinks and wakeleaf on pleasant evenings, and
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had not broken the pattern even on this campaign. That was the kind of
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target of opportunity an Eye would never outgrow sinking their teeth
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into.
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Jacob silently barred the door of peasant house the officers had
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commandeered, smiling at the sound of raucous laughter coming from
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inside. He splashed oil over the wood, then selected another five places
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around the house to help the fire get started. Humming under his breath,
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he struck a pinewood match and set the first point ablaze. They didn't
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notice until he was getting started on the fourth -- too drunk, he
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thought -- and by then they were as good as dead. Ignoring the panicked
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screaming and the desperate attempts to hack through the door, Jacob
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finished his work and melted into the darkness. The smell of cooking
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flesh on the wind brought fond memories, but also ideas. Pork for supper
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tomorrow, perhaps? He'd recently learned to make Levantine sauce, with
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the little peppers. He'd ask Princess Luisa.
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---
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When dawn came, two women on opposite sides of the same continent broke
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their fast with parchment laid out in front of them. Reports, one set
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received through messenger pigeons and the other through an elaborate
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scrying relay.
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Dread Empress Malicia allowed herself a smile, as she was alone in the
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dining room. Princess Constance of Aisne was still alive and the
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coalition held. A victory, mitigated only by the horses of the Princess
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of Aequitan's entire cataphract contingent being poisoned. Assassinating
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Klaus Papenheim would have been a coup, but she had never thought the
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attempt likely to succeed. And with a third of their supplies gone,
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Hasenbach's armies would be forced to give battle soon. With one of
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their flanks shaky, as the senior staff of the Princess of Segovia had
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quite literally gone up in smoke.
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Prince Cordelia Hasenbach frowned at the letters in front of her,
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delicately eating a spoonful of broth as her attendants stood silent.
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Aequitan had been significantly weakened, but aside from that she'd
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failed to make an effect. Her most important victories had been
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defensive in nature, protecting her forces instead of weakening her
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enemy's. The loss of the granaries was not a major setback, she decided,
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as Uncle Klaus had intended on giving battle soon, but it meant retreat
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was no longer a feasible option even if necessary. This round, she
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silently conceded, went to the Empress.
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In Aisne, the game continued.
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---
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By Klaus' reckoning, the Battle of Aisne begun when the enemy caught
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sight of his outriders on the plains to the northwest of the city. His
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boys had immediately retreated when the coalition had sent out a larger
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cavalry force after them, but by then the horns had been sounded. The
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massive armies of the two reluctantly allied princesses begun their
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lumbering march to the battlefield, even as the Prince of Hannoven's own
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soldiers spread into formation. It was nearing noon when the enemy
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arrived, and by then Klaus had arranged his forces in a broad forward
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triangle. To the surprise of the coalition, the centre of his formation
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was not made out of Lycaonese infantry but of the armies of Lyonis and
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Segovia, themselves bordered by Brus and Lange while his northerners
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formed the wings on both sides. From atop his horse, the Prince of
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Hannoven watched mockery erupt among the staff of the Princess of Aisne.
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They probably thought that he'd positioned the troops that way because
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he believed that Lyonis and Segovia would run at the first opportunity
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if not flanked by more loyal armies. He would have believed the same, in
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their place. Messengers immediately began going back and forth between
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the armies of the princesses of Aisne and Aequitan, and he knew exactly
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what they'd be talking about. Instead of a thick battering ram, the
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commanders in both armies would be arguing in favour of spreading out
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coalition lines so that they could envelop Klaus' smaller army. It was
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the best way to make their superior numbers count. \emph{Now we see if
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you were right, Cordelia.} Another hour passed and then the coalition
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army began moving forward as they'd been, to the grey-haired man's dark
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amusement. His niece had read the opposition like a book.
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Neither princess, in the end, was willing to allow the other one's
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armies too far from her sight. There was always the risk that the other
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ruler would delay the attack on their flank just long enough that the
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other racked up the most casualties, only striking after Klau's
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formation was already broken. They already thought victory was in the
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bag, he realized, so they were planning for the aftermath. There was a
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devent chance that a second pitched battle would erupt the moment his
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army was scattered, between the two `allied' princesses. An old Alamans
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proverb that came to mind: \emph{victors should not offer their back to
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the door.} Just after your enemy had won was the best time to slide in
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the knife. Even if spreading out would have been better tactics,
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politics were making them stupid. And the wretches wondered why there
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was a need for a Lycaonese on the throne.
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The Prince of Hannoven watched the enemy infantry advance for some time,
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then glanced north. Both Klaus and the coalition had massed their
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cavalry into a single force and sent it to the side, as had been the
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norm in Proceran warfare since the days of Isabella the Mad. The
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coalition cavalry, trusting in their larger numbers -- though that
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advantage had shrunk somewhat with Aequitan's horses being poisoned,
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something that still had the old soldier grinning -- moved forward
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first. The two masses met in furious charge to the side the main armies,
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and for the first time that day the difference between Lycaonese and
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southern warfare was made clear. In Alamans and Arlesites wars,
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cataphracts either fought other cataphracts or ran down infantry out of
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formation. Mobility was key, and so light armour was favoured. Lycaonese
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cataphracts, on the other hand, fought against ratlings. The barbed
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arrows and spears used by the Chain of Hunger, which were often poisoned
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as well, meant that plate armour had become the standard.
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When the cavalries impacted it was a massacre. His Lycaonese horsemen
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tore straight through the tip of the enemy wedge before beginning to
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slow, and in close quarters the gap between plate and chain mail took
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its toll. The melee lasted for the better part of an hour until the
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coalition cavalry broke and fled, having lost perhaps a third of their
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number. Klaus doubted they would be seen again for the rest of the
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engagement, though he'd keep eyes on them just in case.
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The sight must have been a shock to the princesses of Aisne and
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Aequitan, he decided, but now it would not be enough to give them pause.
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The two princesses were smelling a victory right now. When the ranks of
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infantry had met the sound of shield walls colliding was like thunder,
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but after an initial valiant effort by the centre of Klaus' formation
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the sheer mass of the coalition army began to push the soldiers of
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Lyonis and Segovia back. That impact reverberated until it turned into
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an actual retreat, the arranged triangle of his formation slowly caving
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inwards. All that, he had planned for. He kept a close on on the centre
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since they were the most important part of his strategy. The Segovians,
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he noted, were fighting like devils. They were making the coalition
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bleed for every inch as they retreated.
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He owed Princess Luisa an apology, it seemed. The old fox was keeping
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her part of the bargain and more. Slowly his outwards triangle was
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turning into an arc of the opposite curvature, the Lycaonese he'd placed
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at the two back wings of the triangle now turning into the tips of the
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arc as the coalition pushed deeper and deeper. Then the soldiers under
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the Prince of Lyonis turned their slow retreat into something more like
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a rout, leaving a hole in the formation, and Klaus cursed loudly.
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``Fabien, you weaselling fuck,'' he said through gritted teeth. ``I hope
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they spit roast you in the Furthest Hell for that.''
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---
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Prince Fabien of Lyonis pressed his horse forward, his troops keeping
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pace as well as they could. No doubt the old brute from Hannoven was
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pissing his pants about now. Without Lyonis holding the centre with the
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Segovians, there was a gaping hole in the centre of Papenheim's
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formation. Now the coalition would flow into the room, splitting their
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enemies into two smaller forces and overwhelming them individually. The
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decision to turn his cloak had been quite easy, as it happened. While
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his cousins in Cleves and Hainaut were no longer willing or able to
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support his bid for the throne, his correspondence in Arans had begun
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yielding results of late. The moment Hasenbach retreated to the
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mountains with her tail between her legs he could seize Brus and
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strongarm the boy in Lange into backing him, putting Fabien back at the
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head of an alliance to rival any of the others.
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Both Constance of Aisne and Aenor of Aequitan had offered to pay him for
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the privilege of becoming their rival, amusingly enough, and securing
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another loan from the Pravus Bank had been child's play. Whether it was
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the Praesi furnishing that gold or not ultimately mattered little to
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him: after he became First Prince he could default on the debt and what
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would \emph{they} be able to do about it? Invade the Principate to
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collect? Laughable. It could be argued by that emptying the Empire's
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coffers he was doing the work of the Heavens, he'd decided. Besides, if
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he didn't take the coin his enemies would. That kind of an advantage
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could be enough to bury him even if he was careful. All that was left,
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he thought, was to decide was whether or not the army of Lyonis would
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strike the soldiers of Lange on its way out of the killing field. He was
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inclined to do so. If he could grab the boy prince, that entire
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principality was as good as his.
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``Brother,'' he heard from the side.
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Ah, Sophie. Still playing the soldier, he saw, with her plate armour and
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pretty white horse. The youngest of his sisters always did have a fancy
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for the military life.
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``An auspicious day, Sophie,'' he smiled. ``We've just won the Battle of
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Aisne.''
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``So I see,'' the dark-haired girl replied. ``Are you sure turning on
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Hasenbach is wise?''
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As their horses pulled side by side, Fabien snorted contemptuously.
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``She's a decent hand at the Ebb and Flow, for a Lycaonese,'' he
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conceded. ``But she's a long way from home. The girl must learn her
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place.''
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``I happen to have a notion of where that is,'' Lady Sophie agreed.
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Before he could blink her sword was out of her scabbard and buried in
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his throat.
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``On the throne,'' his sister said calmly. ``The First Prince sends her
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regards, brother.''
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Sagging on his horse, the last thing the Prince of Lyonis ever heard was
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his sister taking command of the army and ordering it back into
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formation.
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---
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Prince Etienne of Brabant watched the army of Lyonis fall back into
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line, and in that moment made his decision. He still believed that
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Princess Constance would make for a good First Princess, and not just
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because she'd promised to wed her son to his eldest daughter. She had
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the connections, the experience and the vision to bring the Principate
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into a golden age. But he'd been ruminating Hasenbach's letter for
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months now, and come to the conclusion that the girl was right. It was
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no longer important \emph{who} took the throne: Procer could not afford
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to go without a supreme leader anymore. The divides were beginning to
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run too deep. If he kept supporting the Princess of Aisne, the end of
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the civil war was nowhere in sight. Aenor of Aequitan had comparable
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backing and would never bow to a woman she despised so much -- but she
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had no personal enmity with Hasenbach. None of them did.
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That was, he supposed, the best reason he could think of for putting the
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Lycaonese girl on the throne. She would not be an effective First
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Prince, he thought: she didn't haven enough allies among the Alamans and
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the Arlesites to keep the Highest Assembly in line. But she had just
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|
enough backers to be crowned, and with her as a figurehead the healing
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|
could begin. Hasenbach was unmarried and had shown no interest in
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remedying that, so her dynasty need not last longer than a generation.
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An Alamans could reclaim the throne in a few decades and Procer could
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move on from these ruinous days. All Etienne had to do for this to come
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true was betray an ally. \emph{Ah, well}, he thought. \emph{The waters
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ebb and flow, but the tide is eternal.} There was no changing the nature
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of this game, harsh as it could be at times. He gestured for his page to
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sound the clarion.
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Coming late to Princess Constance's cause had meant she'd sweetened his
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alignment with quite a few perks, including the forces of Brabant being
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|
positioned to the back of the coalition army. No doubt she'd come to
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regret that decision now. His army paused, realigned at the exhortations
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|
of the serjeants and then charged into the back of the coalition forces.
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It was only then that he noticed it: in the distance, the Princess of
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Orne was doing the very same thing. In the span of a few heartbeats, the
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situation of the two princesses leading the coalition had turned from
|
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the eve of victory to the better part of an encirclement. Just enough of
|
|
a way out was left that the coalition soldiers would have a path to flee
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|
instead of fight to the death, he noted. The Prince of Hannoven's
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|
experience at work.
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|
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Slowly, Papenheim's cataphracts wheeled behind the coalition and formed
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|
a wedge, preparing for a charge into the exposed back. \emph{Weeping
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|
Heavens}, he thought, all the pieces coming together. \emph{This is
|
|
going to be a massacre.} Perhaps Hasenbach did have it in her to be more
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|
than a figurehead, if she could be this ruthless.
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|
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|
---
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|
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|
Klaus Papenheim had more than a few battles under his belt. The campaign
|
|
into Lange had seen precious few pitched engagements -- ambushes and
|
|
raids had been the way he'd picked, making use of the Augur's powers to
|
|
find vulnerable moments -- but he'd fought ratlings by the shores of
|
|
Lake Netzach many a time to prevent them from putting enough warbands
|
|
together to threaten Hannoven. This, though? This was something else.
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|
The ranks of the coalition began shrinking until the entire
|
|
force\ldots{} crumpled. After sending his cataphracts charging into
|
|
their backs twice he had to hold the riders back or risk them being
|
|
swept away by the human torrent of fleeing soldiers. They had orders to
|
|
make sure neither the princesses of Aisne or Aequitan managed to flee
|
|
the field, and the veteran knew that before nightfall he'd have both
|
|
women as prisoners in his camp. The Augur's foretelling of where they'd
|
|
go had made sure of that.
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|
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|
He might have just ended the Proceran civil war today.
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|
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|
Some principalities would refuse to bend their knees still, but there
|
|
would be enough rulers backing Cordelia that she could be elected First
|
|
Prince legally. He'd never really doubted that his niece could do it,
|
|
could lead them to victory, but there'd always been a sense that the
|
|
victory was a distant thing. Years ahead, after long and hard struggles.
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|
Instead he'd campaigned for a little over a year and the entire south of
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|
Procer had burst open like an overripe fruit. The grey-haired man almost
|
|
shivered. He knew that the Lycaonese armies were not, in the end,
|
|
overwhelmingly stronger than those of the Alamans and Arlesites. They
|
|
had advantages, but so did the southerners. For the first time he truly
|
|
realized what Cordelia meant, when she'd said that the Empress was in
|
|
the process of destroying Procer. \emph{She was making us brittle,
|
|
beyond repair, and no one had even noticed.}
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|
|
|
Prince Klaus Papenheim found his gaze turning to the east, where in the
|
|
distance the shape of the tall mountains separating the Principate from
|
|
Callow could almost be glimpsed. This wasn't over. Not even close to it.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
When nightfall came, two women on opposite sides of the continent found
|
|
themselves looking down at hastily-brought reports.
|
|
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|
Cordelia Hasenbach, now First Prince of Procer in all but name, put the
|
|
sheaf of parchment down and allowed herself to savour the feeling for a
|
|
moment. She'd won. By the skin of her teeth, but she had won. She'd
|
|
proved that a mere mortal could take on the all-seeing monster in the
|
|
Tower and come out ahead. The Principate was not dead and Calernia would
|
|
not sink into anarchy. Then the moment passed, and the Prince of Rhenia
|
|
composed herself. There was work to do. There would always be work to
|
|
do, and more now than ever before.
|
|
|
|
Dread Empress Malicia's face remained serene even as she put aside the
|
|
letter and rose to her feet. Contingencies would have to be implemented.
|
|
The throne could not be denied to Hasenbach, but it could be weakened.
|
|
The dark-skinned woman came to stand by an old shatranj board, her Name
|
|
glimpsing the shivering souls that Dread Emperor Sorcerous had bound to
|
|
the pieces.
|
|
|
|
``This one goes to you, darling,'' she murmured. ``Shall we play
|
|
another?''
|
|
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|
Without waiting for a reply, she nudged forward a pawn.
|