558 lines
24 KiB
TeX
558 lines
24 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-21-example}{%
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\section{Chapter 21: Example}\label{chapter-21-example}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``To conquer until all of Creation is desert or province: that is
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the ideal of Praes. Mock their failures if you must but do not ever
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forget their victories.''}
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-- King Albert Fairfax of Callow, the Thrice-Invaded
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\end{quote}
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\emph{The sword tore through flesh and bone with a meaty sound, sending
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the guard's head rolling on the ground. A waste -- Black would not have
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pursued him, had he fled. Shaking the blood off his blade with a flick
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of the wrist, the green-eyed Knight stepped deeper into the Pirate
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Queen's sanctum, feet burdened with grim purpose.}
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\emph{``Amateurs,'' Ranger said from his side. ``They didn't even have a
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proper watch.''}
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\emph{``They thought they were safe,'' Black replied.}
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\emph{``They won't after tonight,'' Warlock added. ``If any of them
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survive, anyway.''}
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\emph{The chatter was unnecessary, but he'd long become used to
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Warlock's cheerfully morbid comments enough that it barely registered.
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Still, he traded a half-amused, half-exasperated glance with Ranger.
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They met another corsair on their way to the throne room but this one
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did not even get to open her mouth before Wekesa turned her upper body
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into ash: dealing with the pirates was child's play after a year of back
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alley dogfights with his rivals and the Order of the White Hand, not to
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mention the civil war that followed. Not a reason to get sloppy, but
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overestimating an enemy was just as dangerous as overestimating them. By
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the time they reached the doors to the Pirate Queen's own throne room
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the sounds of the mess outside had started to drift up to their ears.
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Curses and screams of terrors tore through the night's quiet, the same
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reaction Captain always elicited whens she dared to cut loose. Black
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pushed open the driftwood doors in front of him without breaking stride,
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ready to finally put an end to the night's slaughter.}
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\emph{``They sent the Black Knight and his death squad for little `ole
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me? Guess I should be flattered,'' the Queen laughed as she rose from
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her throne and unsheathed her cutlass. ``So which of you feels like
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dancing with death, children?''}
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\emph{Ranger sighed and shot the Queen in the leg, arrow knocked and
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flying faster than you could take a breath.}
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\emph{``Is it me or does that never get old?'' Warlock mused. ``They
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always get the funniest look on their faces when we won't play along.''}
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\emph{The Pirate Queen dropped to the floor with a hoarse cry of pain,
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clutching her leg. Black wasted no time closing the distance and kicked
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her cutlass out of her hands.}
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\emph{``You are correct,'' he said. ``I am the Black Knight.''}
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\emph{``Do you have no honour --''she started.}
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\emph{``No,'' Black replied, crouching to be of a height with her.}
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\emph{``Drop the knife, Pirate,'' Ranger called out. ``Otherwise the
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next one goes through the eye.''}
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\emph{There was the clatter of metal on the ground and the Queen let go
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of the blade she'd pulled from under her tunic, grimacing.}
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\emph{``Fine, you lot are big and bad,'' she snarled. ``You made your
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point. Why am I still alive?''}
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\emph{``Because you set half of Thalassina on fire a few months back,''
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Black said.}
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\emph{``You going to parade me around Ater `cause I've been a bad
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girl?'' the pirate asked with an ugly smile. ``And to think I'd heard
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you were dropping the old way bullshit.''}
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\emph{``You misunderstand me,'' the Black Knight replied. ``It takes
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talent, to execute an operation of that breadth.''}
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\emph{``You should work on your recruitment pitch, love,'' Queen
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sneered. ``I'm feeling a mite uncooperative at the moment.''}
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\emph{Black's eyes hardened.}
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\emph{``Your prize ship has been sunk. Most your lieutenants are dead.
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You are kneeling on the floor of your very seat of power,'' he murmured.
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``Bringing you to this took me four people and a rowboat, Pirate. You
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asked me what my point was? This is it\emph{. }Do not make me repeat
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myself.''}
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\emph{``Fuck it, and fuck you,'' the Pirate Queen smiled. ``I'm not
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flying an Imperial flag, and I'm sure as Hells not gonna take orders
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from the Tower. Do your worst, boy -- I've laughed in the face of harder
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men than you.''}
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\emph{Warlock's eyes became wreathed in fire and the dark-skinned man
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stepped forward, but Black help up a hand to stop him.}
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\emph{``You call yourself the Pirate Queen, but I've noticed your crews
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sometimes refer to themselves as corsairs,'' the Black Knight said.}
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\emph{``You trying to bore me to death, Knight? I'll give you points for
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originality,''}
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\emph{``Unlike pirates, corsairs are known to sometimes operate under
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official sanction,'' Black said. ``Not as part of a nation's navy, but
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as\ldots{} auxiliaries of a sort.''}
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\emph{The Pirate Queen eyed him dubitatively.}
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\emph{``If we're not raiding Praes then who?''}
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\emph{``By the end of the week word will spread to the Free Cities that
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the pirate threat has been dealt with,'' Black smiled coldly. ``I expect
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merchant shipping to Thalassina to resume soon after.''}
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\emph{``Well look at the balls on you,'' the Queen whistled. ``Won't
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they just bail again when I start boarding their boats?''}
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\emph{``Not if you confine yourself to a handful of them per month,''
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Black said. ``A risky business, certainly, but there will be enough who
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think the payoff worth it. The Dread Empire would, of course, collect a
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cut in exchange for the right to operate in its waters.''}
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\emph{``So you want my ships on a leash, is that it?'' the pirate
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sneered. ``What if I say no?''}
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\emph{The green-eyed man laid the flat of his blade on his knees.}
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\emph{``That is your prerogative.''}
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\emph{There was a long moment of silence as the Queen mulled over the
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offer. Sighing, she finally spat in the palm of her hand and offered it
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to the man in front of her. Black spat into his own without batting an
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eye, ignoring her puerile attempt to crush his fingers when they shook
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on it. He rose.}
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\emph{``A woman named Scribe will come tomorrow to work out the details
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of the arrangement. A pleasant evening to you, then,'' the Knight said
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as he sheathed his sword. He made for the door, but before he could pass
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the threshold the Queen called out to him.}
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\emph{``Knight,'' she asked. ``If I'd said no, what would you have
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done?''}
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\emph{``Used your head a prop when making the same offer to your
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second-in-command,'' Black replied, not even bothering to turn as he
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strode out of the Pirate Queen's throne room.}
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There was no slow transition between sleep and wakefulness. I was one,
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then I the other. I rolled out of my sheets still tired and padded
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across the room to the window. Dawn had come a gone hours ago, by the
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looks of the sun. Grabbing a blanket from a seat, I wrapped myself in it
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but found it did nothing to hinder the cold. It wasn't coming from
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outside, I supposed. Breathing out quietly, I stared at the gardens
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sprawling below and considered the Name dream I'd just woken up from.
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It'd been a while, since I'd last had one of those. I'd known for years
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that Black had handled the pirates based in the Tidelesse Isles after
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the Empress ascended to the throne, but that there'd been a Named
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involved was not common knowledge. Considering that the pirates had
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first come from a Praesi fleet smashed by the Thalassocracy one at port,
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that they'd eventually be forced back into Imperial service was darkly
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amusing. The history lesson wasn't why I'd gotten the dream, of course.
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I had decisions ahead of me.
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Robber, by now, would have prisoners from the Dark Guilds. If there were
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any from the Thieves I'd have to release them, but that still left the
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Smugglers and the Assassins. Months ago, I'd thought to dismantle the
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Guild of Assassins. Even before Ratface had laid out the logistical
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difficulties of that, I'd had a little chat with the Empress on the
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subject. Pointless, she'd called the entire enterprise. I still
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disagreed with her. There was a difference between a handful of men and
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woman who killed for coin spread all over Callow and an organized guild
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of them. The part she might have been correct about was that the amount
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of time and resources I'd have to sink into this far outweighed the
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gains to be made -- namely, the absence of a godsdamned gang of killers
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for hire in my homeland. The situation had changed since she and I had
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talked: back then, all I'd had to worry about was Heiress plotting in
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the south. Now I had other cats to skin than a guild that probably
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killed fewer people in my territory every year than roadside accidents.
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My Name was urging me to make vassals of them. Pretty bluntly, too. I
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clenched my fingers and unclenched them. It wasn't a decision I was
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willing to make before looking one of them in the eyes. I turned away
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from the window. Breakfast, first, and then a show. Hakram should have
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organized everything by now.
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---
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``It's not a Praesi invention, you know,'' Adjutant said.
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``Huh,'' I said. ``That's surprising. They're the ones famous for it.''
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The sun had melted any traces of frost our passage had made in Fairfax
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Place. Not that anyone would be able to see them anyway: the plaza was
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packed to the brim with the people of Laure. Hakram had to place criers
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at street corners to arrange as much, since just nailing parchments
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announcing the mandatory presence would have been largely pointless. The
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overwhelming majority of people in the capital couldn't read, and it was
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still one of the most educated places in Callow -- some of the Fairfaxes
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had encouraged scholarship, though never to the extent of funding
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academies like they did in some of the Proceran principalities. I
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imagined that kind of expense would have been hard to justify when the
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Legions could be marching on Summerholm at any time. It was impossible
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for a crowd this size -- there must have been twenty thousand people in
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the plaza alone -- to be silent, but it was \emph{quiet}. The appearance
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of my legionaries had been so sudden no one knew quite what to make of
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it.
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``Miezans brought it with them over the sea,'' Hakram told me. ``It was
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the punishment for rowdy slaves.''
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The tall orc was standing besides me, so I could see the displeasure on
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his face as he spoke. Considering orcs had made for very popular slaves
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in the Miezan Empire, I could take a guess as to why.
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``So when Triumphant was using it, it had\ldots{} implications,'' I
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murmured.
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Adjutant refrained from adding `may she never return' though his hand
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twitched when he supressed the reflex of bringing his knuckles to his
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forehead.
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``I'm telling you this because the High Lords will think it's part of
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the message you're sending,'' the orc said.
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I nodded. The both of us watched Nauk's men drag the usurpers to the
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tall wooden crosses we'd had placed in the middle of the plaza. Satang
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looked numb, but Murad was struggling against the pair of Callowan
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legionaries forcing him to move. One of them lost patience and cracked a
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gauntleted hand across his mouth, drawing blood. The two Praesi were
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hoisted up the cross, and then an orc brought out the iron spikes and
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the hammer. Satang's hoarse scream filled the plaza as the legionary
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nailed her first wrist down.
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``You are rowdy slaves to me,'' I muttered. ``Well, that ought to get
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their attention.''
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``They'll be pushing to censure you through the Imperial court,'' Hakram
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said.
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``The Court I have to worry about isn't in Ater,'' I replied.
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Another gut-wrenching scream echoed as the work on Murad began.
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``Breaking entirely with the Tower would have consequences,'' Adjutant
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said. ``Ones we are ill-equipped to handle.''
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``I'll be calling myself a vicequeen, no a queen,'' I said. ``There's an
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implication there I still answer to Her Dread Majesty.''
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``You're claiming a territory as large as Praes as under your direct
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command,'' Hakram pointed out. ``You'd be more an ally than a vassal.''
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``She'll get tribute and soldiers,'' I said. ``She struck the same deal
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with Daoine.''
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``You're not this thick,'' the orc gravelled. ``Don't pretend.''
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Callow wasn't Daoine, of course. Its fields fed the Wasteland and its
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population was near the size of Praes'. There was a difference in the
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balance of power -- Malicia could not allow me to just declare the de
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facto independence for a territory this large. It would be a major loss
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of face, influence and wealth for her. She would likely have to deal
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with internal rebellions if she was somehow convinced of the notion.
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``I'm done letting High Lords having a say here, Hakram,'' I said.
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``\emph{Please},'' Murad screamed, but the legionaries forced his legs
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together and drove a spike through the flesh and bone.
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``Then find concessions to make,'' Adjutant replied. ``We'll have around
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twice our number in legionaries on the field by the end of this.
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Fighting them would not end well, and the Empress \emph{will} give the
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order if you leave her no other choice.''
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I conceded the point with a sullen grunt. Kilian hadn't been wrong on
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one thing: I had tired of compromise. The last spike tore through Satang
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Motherless' ankles and the legionaries wiped the blood off their armour
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with calm professionalism before moving away. The two Wastelanders hung
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from their crosses limply. Time for my part, then.
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``The Ruling Council is officially dissolved,'' I spoke, weaving a
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thread of power into my voice so it would carry for blocks. ``As of this
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moment, I take command of Callow until martial law is lifted. A
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Governor-General will be appointed shortly to oversee Laure.''
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I paused to let that sink in.
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``You may disperse,'' I finished.
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I allowed my eyes to scan the crowd. This was, in essence, the pivot of
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my presence in the capital. If a riot ensued everything was gonna go to
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shit -- I'd need to leave behind a garrison and it was all down here
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from there. The scene with the two usurpers had been as much to sate
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them with blood as to offer a reminder: rebels died ugly deaths.
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Silence, the kind you only got in a church, reigned supreme. Then the
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first man knelt. From there it was like an avalanche. Within heartbeats,
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there was not a man woman or child standing in Fairfax Place. I breathed
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out slowly, then composed myself.
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``Take me where Robber keeps them,'' I ordered Hakram, and we left
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without a word.
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---
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Going back Dockside was oddly nostalgic. I'd earned coin for blood here,
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back in the day. Would that the trades I made were still so innocent.
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The warehouse belonged to the fishermen's guild, though they were more a
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loose association than one of the true powers claiming that same name.
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It smelled of salt and dry fish, the reason why becoming obvious when
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the two of us entered: rows of bluegills and widemouth basses were
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hanging from the ceiling. I vaguely knew the salting was done different
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in other parts of Callow, but Laure was known for its particular take on
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the process. Southpooleans insisted their way of doing it was better,
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but they were just as wrong about that as they were about everything
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else. That was the lightest thought I allowed myself before painting
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blankness over my face. Weakness had no place here. There'd been
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legionaries standing guard around the warehouse and what looked like at
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least half Robber's cohort was spread inside.
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Crossbows out, they kept an eye on the two dozen Callowans who'd been
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dragged out of their beds last night and brought here without an
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explanation any more elaborate than a kick in the back if they weren't
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moving fast enough. None of them were tied, I saw, save for a single
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pair. A man and woman who looked -- and smelled liked tanners -- but had
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an entire tenth of goblins keeping an eye on them at all times. Robber
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strutted up to me, a bit of blood on his lower lip, and massacred yet
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another salute.
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``I've got a treat for you, Boss,'' the Special Tribune announced.
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``It better not be a corpse,'' I said.
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It was always a godsdamned corpse with him. He was like the world's most
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murderous cat, only it was worse because he was supposed to have a
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conscience. Or whatever the goblin equivalent of that was.
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\emph{Probably more knives.}
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``I would never,'' the yellow-eyed wretch said, deeply offended. ``I'm a
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tender, gentle soul. I'm just misunderstood.''
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``I saw you eat a man's finger once,'' I said.
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``Well, he was dead,'' Robber shrugged. ``Wasn't like \emph{he} was
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going to be using it.''
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He made sure to pitch his voice high enough to our guests would be able
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to hear him. I used to wonder whether he did things like for
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entertainment or for interrogation tactics before I'd realized there was
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no real difference between the two for him.
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``So what have you got for me,'' I asked.
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Engaging him would only keep sending this conversation spiralling
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further into madness and mind games.
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``Smugglers' Guild,'' he said. ``All except my present. Those two
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`tanners' with enough steel and poison on them to kill a small
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village.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``How'd you find them?'' I asked.
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``Ratface had them marked as potential members in his briefings,'' the
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goblin said. ``We only had to kick the door and run in screaming to
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check if they actually were.''
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I resisted the urge to rub the bridge of my nose\emph{. Results,
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Catherine}, I reminded myself. \emph{He still got results.}
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``Anybody high ranked?'' I said.
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``Top two Smugglers in the city,'' he said cheerfully. ``Was going to
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torture that out of them, but they kept telling me. They seemed to think
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it would make us release them.''
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``Black tolerated their activities,'' I said. ``They're not used to
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Legion attention.''
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To my teacher it had been more valuable to keep an eye on what was being
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brought into Callow illegally than to curtail their activities. Knowing
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him, he'd probably considered their dodging fees and tariffs like a
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payment of sorts.
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``The were sloppy,'' Robber grinned viciously. ``If that's the best
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criminals your people have to offer, it's no wonder you turned to Praes
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to get things done.''
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``We've a hole in the budget,'' I warned him. ``Don't think I won't sell
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your hide in Mercantis for a few coppers.''
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``Please,'' he cackled. ``I'm the official footrest of the queen of
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Callow. I'm worth at least a couple silvers.''
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I managed not to grimace at that, but it was a close thing. Not the
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footrest thing, that was an old joke between us, but this `queen'
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business. That was a warning from him, that the rank and file of the
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Fifteenth expected for me to have a crown by the time we'd cleaned up
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the mess. Balancing the next few months was going to be like walking a
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tightrope. I allowed him to waddle away like he'd won. Little
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`victories' like that usually kept him happy for a day or two, and when
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he was in a good mood he got into much less trouble.
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``The assassins are watching you,'' Hakram said quietly.
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I knew better than to look.
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``Let's talk to our guests, then,'' I grunted.
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I gestured for the goblin cohort to get the prisoners moving, seating
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them on a row of wooden crated. A few of them recognized me, apparently,
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because the moment I got closer they spoke up.
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``Lady Foundling,'' a man in his fifties called out. ``I must really
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protest. This is entirely unnecessary! We could have met at our
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offices-``
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I glanced at the lieutenant standing behind him. She grinned, then
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smashed the copper bottom of her crossbow into the back of his head.
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``Let's make one thing perfectly clear,'' I said. ``This is not a
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courtesy visit. If you want to walk out of this room alive, I would
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discard the notion that you are in any way \emph{protected} by the deal
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you made with Black.''
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I turned cold eyes on the crowd, saw a few shiver.
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``I am not him,'' I said. ``I have different expectations of you.''
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Sharp laughter came from further down the line. It was a woman, in her
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twenties with a missing eye. Looked like she'd been in a few scraps.
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``Posturing,'' she said. ``You don't have the balls to go against the
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Carrion Lord. We all know who you answer to.''
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I studied her for a moment.
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``\textbf{Choke on your tongue},'' I Spoke.
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Her eye went wide. She tried to breathe but couldn't hand desperately
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clawing at her throat. You could have heard a pin drop in the warehouse,
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by the time she fell blue-faced to the ground.
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``I trust,'' I said, ``that there will be no more of that.''
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Several of the Smugglers had pissed themselves. I wrinkled my nose in
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distaste. Robber was right, they'd gotten \emph{soft} under Imperial
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protection.
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``Callow is at war,'' I said. ``You have been called upon to serve.''
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The man from earlier -- he must have been the local head -- nodded in
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abject submission. His hands were shaking.
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``Anything you need, Lady Foundling,'' he babbled.
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``You'll be sending representatives to the Fifteenth,'' I said. ``They
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are to put themselves at Supply Tribune Ratface's disposal and obey his
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|
every order. And while you do that, gather rations for an army on the
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|
march. You'll be keeping my army supplied through the Wasaliti on its
|
|
way south. I've no patience for parasites while the country is under
|
|
siege.''
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|
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|
That should allow Juniper to manoeuvre the way she needed to. Marchford
|
|
just didn't have the supplies for an extended campaign, and with both
|
|
the war in Wolof and General Istrid gathering legions near Vale there
|
|
would be no time to requisition what we needed. I turned to the two
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|
assassins, who'd been watching all of this in silence. They were not
|
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scared, I saw. They weren't from a breed as easily unnerved as the
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smugglers.
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|
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|
``Neither of us has the authority to grant any demands you could make,''
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|
the man among them said.
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|
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|
``Not even the head of our Guild in Laure would,'' the woman added, then
|
|
shrugged. ``Kill us, if you must. It makes no difference.''
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|
``You can carry a message,'' I said. ``That will do.''
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|
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|
``And you think the Guildmaster will listen?'' the man said, cocking his
|
|
head to the side.
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|
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|
``We have watched your men try to find us,'' the woman told me. ``Prune
|
|
branches if you can. The tree will survive.''
|
|
|
|
I'd asked Ratface, a few months ago, to find me the Assassins. So I'd be
|
|
able to wipe them out in one go. The anger that had driven me back then
|
|
-- the righteous indignation at the concept of a band of killers being
|
|
allowed to run amok Callow without consequence -- was not as sharp at it
|
|
used to be. I had no spite left to spare for mortals, not when I was set
|
|
against forces who thought of ripping out my heart as a mere warning.
|
|
|
|
``I won't kill you,'' I replied softly. ``Oh no. I'll drag you back to
|
|
Marchford, and then I'll let Apprentice rip out the information I need
|
|
from your minds.''
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|
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|
The woman's body stiffened ever so slightly.
|
|
|
|
``You'll most likely survive that,'' I casually continued. ``Though not
|
|
unscathed. What's left of you, I will trade to the Winter Court for a
|
|
favour. They do enjoy their little games, the fae.''
|
|
|
|
I felt the room cool around me.
|
|
|
|
``I doubt \emph{you} will, though,'' I said. ``Winter tends to play
|
|
rough.''
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|
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|
``Striking at us would take men you need elsewhere,'' the woman said.
|
|
|
|
The male assassin's eyes flicked towards her, then he sighed.
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|
|
|
``A message can be carried,'' he conceded.
|
|
|
|
``Tell your Guildmaster that he's on notice,'' I said coldly. ``His
|
|
actions over the next few months are what will determine whether I go
|
|
through your ranks with fire and sword and all the things that are
|
|
\emph{worse} I've refrained from using.''
|
|
|
|
The woman nodded slowly.
|
|
|
|
``And the terms?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``You take a contract in Callow, it goes by my desk,'' I said. ``There's
|
|
so much as a shoemaker that dies without my approval and I rip you out
|
|
root and stem. You don't need to worry about running out of work,
|
|
though.''
|
|
|
|
I smiled thinly.
|
|
|
|
``I have a list,'' I said. ``It will grow longer, before all is said and
|
|
done.''
|
|
|
|
The man considered this for a moment.
|
|
|
|
``And should the Guildmaster acceded to your request, will you handle
|
|
the matters directly?''
|
|
|
|
``I'll be the one handling you,'' Adjutant said from my side. ``Won't be
|
|
hard to find. There's not a lot of orcs with one of those.''
|
|
|
|
He brought up his bone hand, displaying the fingers. It made the
|
|
assassins visibly uncomfortable, hardened as they were. They were, after
|
|
all, still Callowan. Necromancy was the Enemy's tool, and one of its
|
|
most unpleasant ones.
|
|
|
|
``You're dismissed,'' I said, gesturing for the goblins to untie the
|
|
assassins.
|
|
|
|
It wasn't enough to worry about this war. I had to worry about the one
|
|
after that, and when the High Lords knocked at one gate and Procer snuck
|
|
through the other? There would be a need for ill-gained goods and dead
|
|
men. All it cost me to get them was a principle.
|
|
|
|
I was fast running out of those.
|