395 lines
17 KiB
TeX
395 lines
17 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{villainous-interlude-thunder}{%
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\section{Villainous Interlude:
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Thunder}\label{villainous-interlude-thunder}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``We have grown to mock Tyrants for they are mad but that is a
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very dangerous thing. A madman thinks the world other than what it is,
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and in a mortal that is a harmless thing. Not so in one who moulds
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Creation to their will, as all Named do.''}
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-- King Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand
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\end{quote}
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Anaxares had been named a general, at the Tyrant's orders. Sixty-seven,
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the diplomat mused. He was now technically committing treason under
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sixty-seven different articles of Bellerophan law, and starting to
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wonder if he would reach a hundred before he died. His remains would be
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on trial for at least a decade, and he did not envy the Defender Against
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The People who drew the wrong lot and was made to defend his rotting
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corpse. It seemed to few, to have grown from middling fifty counts of
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treason to over sixty when made to serve in a foreign army. The law
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codes were in need of revising. It should have landed him roughly in the
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eighties. The mere fact that no difference was made between officer
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grades was a glaring oversight, and if allowed a few moments to make a
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statement before the \emph{kanenas} summarily executed him he would jot
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down a few notes on the matter.
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``Pay attention, Bellerophan,'' General Basilia barked. ``This is
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important.''
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Kairos' foremost commander was currently attempting to teach him the
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basics of war, as he would apparently be given command of five thousand
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men during the assault on the walls of Nicae. When Anaxares had asked
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the boy why, morbidly curious, he'd been answered only by off-putting
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giggles. Troubling.
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``I will not. I am a diplomat in the service of the Republic,'' he said.
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``Anyone but the officers drawn by lot learning military tactics is
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illegal.''
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The woman glared at him, sceptical.
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``Are you telling me your shithole of a city doesn't have career
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officers?'' she asked.
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\emph{War Is Of The People, Served By The People And Ordered Only By The
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People.}
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``That would be setting apart individuals from the rest,'' he said,
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somewhat offended on behalf of Bellerophon. ``This learning can and
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should only be temporary, removed after it had seen lawful use.''
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``Gods, no wonder you fucks have never won a war,'' the general said,
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aghast.
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Anaxares narrowed his eyes at the wicked foreign oligarch. It had been
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determined by the Will Of The People that enough draws counted as a
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victory, and therefore proof of the superiority of the Republic in all
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things. That this was factually incorrect by the standards of wider
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Calernia was irrelevant to the purposes of this conversation.
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``Who do you even learn from?'' Basilia asked.
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``Bellerophon has secured the finest military manual in existence to
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train its officers,'' he replied.
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``\emph{Manners of War} by Tyrant Theodosius?'' the general asked. ``I
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suppose the \emph{Ars Tactica} by the first Terribilis would be close
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enough.''
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``\emph{A Hundred Victorious Strategies},'' Anaxares said.
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Ah, that made sixty-eight. Leaking of military information to The
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Deceived Servant Of A Grasping Despot. General Basilia's lips twitched
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as if she was trying very hard not to weep or laugh.
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``Isabella the Mad's book?'' she asked, voice rough.
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``She was the only one to ever defeat Theodosius on the field,'' the
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diplomat said.
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``That's, uh, a very generous assessment of the Maddened Fields,''
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General Basilia said, and tried to pass her convulsive laughter for a
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cough.
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He sighed. Mockery, he thought, was the last refuge of those afraid of
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the First And Mightiest Of The Free Cities, May She Reign Forever.
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``Well, at least you haven't learned any bad habits,'' she said. ``You
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won't be on the first wave over the walls, anyway, if you listen to your
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commanders you should be fine.''
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``I will not,'' Anaxares said.
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The woman frowned.
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``I will actively attempt to hinder your victory, should I remain in a
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position of authority,'' he informed her serenely.
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``I'll remove you from command,'' she threatened.
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``Do so,'' he said. ``Please.''
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Was there a lawful difference between having temporarily served in a
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foreign army and remaining in service? Ah, yes, the third amendment.
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Unfortunately it only applied after death, with the assumption being
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that any Bellerophan committing such treason would immediately be killed
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before trial could take place. Another area in need of clarification to
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be pointed out to the Republic.
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``The Tyrant has his reasons,'' Basilia finally said. ``He sees further
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than anyone else.''
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``He is drunk with power,'' Anaxares told her gently. ``And quite
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possibly mad.''
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``They're all mad, diplomat,'' the woman said, smiling. ``That's why
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they win. Theodosius took on the entire Principate at its peak and
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walked away the winner. That takes something stranger than courage. Oh,
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we have the finest army on Calernia don't get me wrong. We can handle
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thrice our number in what everyone else has to field. But it's with a
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Tyrant on the throne that we shine, and it was the fortune of my life to
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be born under one.''
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Anaxares was not unaware of the blinders the Republic had set around his
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eyes, though he'd never seen the need to attempt to take them off. It
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was his first time, however, seeing the same thing on the face of
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someone not from Bellerophon. How strange, that they too could have
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faith in something greater. It took the diplomat tipping over a carafe
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of wine over three maps and wilfully misremembering the names of his
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commanders before the Helikean gave up in schooling him. Kairos sent for
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him, but when he entered the tent there was no sign of the Tyrant. Seven
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people stood stiffly under the silk panes, eyeing the embroidery with
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cold mistrust. And good reason. It was gold thread, a blatant misuse of
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wealth that should be in the hands of the people.
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``Diplomat Anaxares,'' a woman said, tonelessly.
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\emph{Kanenas}. She was not even trying to hide it. The others all had
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that muted look on their faces that would have betrayed their function
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as well, had the Bellerophan been traitorous enough to attempt to find
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such a thing out. Anaxares did not bow, for that was a foreign flourish
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judiciously disposed of by the Republic. All men were equal, even with
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those who could kill him with a thought.
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``I have committed treason on sixty-eight counts,'' he said, and calmly
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listed them.
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The longer he spoke, the more the tension left his shoulders. It was not
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that Anaxares had ever expected to live through any of this, or even
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dedicated a great deal of thought to the matter. It was, after all, out
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of his hands. But it was a relief, that this strange affair finally be
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closed. That his fate had been left dangling had been a burr in his
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boots, an irritant. His existence and the contradiction it represented
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to the truth of Bellerophon should not have been left so long
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unanswered.
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``If the Republic is willing to provide ink and parchment, I have
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comments to submit to the eyes of the people for after my execution,''
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he said.
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He'd never considered using Helikean tools. No proper Bellerophan would
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have read anything written with them. The seven \emph{kanenas} studied
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him.
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``Your pending execution has been suspended by vote,'' a man said.
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``Your services to the people have made you a Person of Value.''
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The diplomat watched the seven other people in the tent. They stared
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back, unblinking. Something rose inside of him as the silence continued,
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something he had not felt in a very long time. He'd thought the years
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had scoured it out of him, but perhaps that had been vanity. It was not
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hope, of course. He had no use for that. It was \emph{anger}. Harsh,
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unforgiving fury. How dare they? How dare they turn on what they should
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be, on everything they should stand for?
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``No,'' he hissed. ``This is \emph{unacceptable}.''
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``This committee has been empowered to record and respond to your
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words,'' the woman who'd spoken earlier replied flatly.
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``There is no such thing as Person of Value,'' Anaxares snarled. ``If
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the people have decreed this, the people are \emph{wrong} and in need of
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purging. We are a Republic of \emph{laws}. I have broken these laws. I
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must be executed according to them.''
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``To go against the Will of the People is treason,'' another woman said.
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``Then execute me, by all the Gods,'' he shouted. ``The people have
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committed treason against the Republic through this vote. This is how he
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\emph{wins}, you fools. By bending what we are. It only needs to happen
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once and everything we've built is stained.''
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Eyes hard, he stared them down.
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``We are the Republic of Bellerophon,'' he said through gritted teeth.
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``We do not compromise. We do not make \emph{exceptions}. I will slit my
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own throat before allowing this.''
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``Correct,'' the man said.
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``Correct,'' another man said, and a woman with him.
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``Treason,'' the woman from earlier replied.
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The air in the tent grew thick with sorcery as all seven \emph{kanenas}
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went still. Something broke with a sickening crunch behind the face of
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the three who'd agreed with him. Anaxares did not look as the bodies
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droppedd. Citizens did not get involved in the debates of the
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\emph{kanenas}, or the grisly ends they inevitably came to.
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``You are forbidden to commit suicide by law,'' the woman said. ``And to
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wilfully take actions that will result in your death as well.''
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``You can't do this,'' Anaxares said.
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He was genuinely afraid for the first time since boyhood. This\ldots{}
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Gods, what was this? It was wrong, all wrong, something had broken and
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he needed to \textbf{Mend} it.
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``We do nothing, diplomat,'' a man said. ``The People Have Spoken.''
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They left him there, shivering in his own sweat. His hands shook and he
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had to sit for his legs would not longer bear the weight of him.
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Nightfall was coming, and with it the assault on Nicaw. The armies were
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gathered, but he cared nothing for it. Yet he would have to lead the
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soldiers, for if he did not the Tyrant might decide to kill him and he
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was forbidden by law to chance this. The boy. The boy was behind this,
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one way or another. Kairos was waiting for him on a throne that
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overlooked the walls, all grey stone with a dozen gargoyles fanning him
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and feeding him grapes. He had a cup in hand, though not of wine. Juice
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of some sort.
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``What did you do,'' Anaxares demanded. ``\emph{What did you do?}''
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The Tyrant of Helike laughed, laughed with his red eye shining and his
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weak arm clutching at his robes like claws.
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``Oh yes,'' Kairos Theodosian murmured. ``You'll do nicely.''
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``You've tainted us,'' the diplomat said.
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``I gave them what they wanted most, deep down,'' the Tyrant said.
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``Under all the laws and the lies.''
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A gargoyle waddled up to him, stone wings folded over its back, and
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offered a wineskin. The Bellerophan saw it too well. His eyesight should
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not be this good, all these minute fractures in the bespelled rock
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should never have been noticeable. That realization brought exhaustion
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with it that had him half-toppling on the platform the throne was set
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on. He took the skin and drank deep, drowning and drowned.
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``Would you like to hear a story, Anaxares?'' the Tyrant asked. ``It's a
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thing of beauty, this one.''
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``This must be unmade,'' the diplomat begged.
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``Oh, it's too late for that,'' Kairos smiled. ``Much, much too late.
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This story, my dearest friend, is about three people.''
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Anaxares' hands were no longer shaking, his body numb at the horror of
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what was hapening.
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``The first is a monster,'' Kairos said. ``She's not like the others
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monsters, though. She has no face and as many lives as there are stars,
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and behind those veils only one single burning desire. It's a thing I
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can see, you know. What people \textbf{Wish}. And when I look at her,
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what I see is \emph{glorious}.''
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``The Wandering Bard,'' Anaxares croaked.
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``Now, this monster she has plans and plans and plans,'' the Tyrant
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sighed admiringly. ``So many irons and so many fires. She doesn't care
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about any of us, when it comes down to it. All she looks at is the line
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in the sand that's just a bit above the reach of high tide, and we can't
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have that now can we? She's not real picky about what she'll use to wipe
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it away, practical creature that she is.''
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Kairos leaned closer, grinning widely.
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``Let me tell you a secret, my friend,'' he whispered. ``She's already
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won. The opposition was watching the wrong fire the whole time, and the
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intricacy of the trap is \emph{exquisite}. She made the kill without
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them ever seeing her.''
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``She's losing,'' Anaxares said. ``The Calamities killed one of her
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heroes with your own sorcery.''
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``No no no,'' the Tyrant said. ``You're looking at it all wrong. Even if
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my pretty little mages had been untroubled, the Beast would have
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survived. The Healer should have too, life split in half with her
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sister. A touching story of sisterly love, if you care for that sort of
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thing. She didn't because she was a \emph{sacrifice}. Her weight was
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stolen, because there was another use for it. With nothing you can only
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trade for nothing.''
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``Then you are a pawn as well,'' the diplomat said. ``In the Bard's
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game.''
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``Funny thing, control,'' the boy mused. ``Everybody thinks they have
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it. Because they follow Fate or fight it, because they see the lines or
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make them. No one is in control, Anaxares. Not even the Gods, otherwise
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what would be the point of Creation? We're not the answer, we're the
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question. The book even says so.''
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The cripple hacked out a laugh, patting himself.
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``She thinks I made you to kill me,'' Kairos said. ``She's wrong, my
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dearest bosom companion. I'm not some Praesi of the old breed, oh no. I
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have more unusual ambitions. But here I am, getting ahead of myself. We
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have a story, yes? The second person is not a person at all. He is a
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\emph{thing}.''
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The hate and contempt in the boy's voice had an almost physical weight
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to it.
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``He thinks he's a person and that's the most disgusting part,'' the
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Tyrant smiled. ``Cogs and wheels and he started out thinking it was
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about being right, about being fair, but it hasn't been like that in a
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long time. He just wants to win, but it's a kind of victory that means
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nothing at all. That poor, blind pile of cogs.''
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Kairos tittered.
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``He thinks what runs him is reason but that is a conceit,'' the Tyrant
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said gleefully. ``That will sting, when the lie is stripped away. He
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thinks he's above pride, you see, but that's about all that's left of
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him because he thinks everyone lives by his rules, Anaxares. Even if the
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ends aren't the same, he thinks the \emph{means} are.''
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The boy's good hand rose, fingers walking the arm of the throne like
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some small nimble creature. The odd-eyed villain snapped his fist shut
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instead of walking it off.
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``Just like that,'' he said. ``Plot and plan and seize a crown at the
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end, even if this one isn't really a crown. More like an agreement, and
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you know I have a weakness for those. The old Emperors, they got it.
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That the Empire was the tool, not the aim. But in his little head Praes
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is the centre of the world, and as long as he thinks like that Aoede is
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going to whip him again and again, if you'll forgive my language.''
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``She's going to kill him,'' the diplomat said.
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``Of course not, my beauteous blooming flower,'' the Tyrant tutted.
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``Nothing so crass. She's going to \emph{hurt} him. And when the cold
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thing turns into a wounded animal, well, that's when he starts making
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mistakes.''
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``And the third person is you,'' Anaxares said. ``Pulling all the
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strings.''
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Kairos turned to him then, and the smile on his face was one of pure and
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childlike joy. The Bellerophan had never seen anything half so
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terrifying.
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``Gotcha,'' he said, like a child pulling a prank.
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The cripple shivered under the setting sun, his face almost feverish.
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``I heard a story about one of the first kings of Helike, once,'' he
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said. ``His father had gathered a great menagerie of animals, it goes.
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Peacocks and great lizards, gazelles and aurochs from all over Calernia
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and beyond. And one lion as well, brought in as a cub. It lived in a
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cage all its life, fed choice cuts of meat meant behind bars. So the
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first thing that king did, when he took the throne, was open all the
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doors.''
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The Tyrant hummed.
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``I heard a lot of reasons why he might have done that,'' the odd-eyed
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boy said. ``Revenge on a father who cared more for animals than him,
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getting rid of expensive frivolity and even because he believed caging
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animals was wrong. I think, though, that I understand him. Just a
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little.''
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Kairos leaned forward.
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``I think what he wanted was to see if a lion was still a lion, having
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lived in a cage all its life,'' he confided. ``I think he just\ldots{}
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wanted to see what would happen.''
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``What did?'' Anaxares asked, tone rough.
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``The lion slaughtered them all,'' the Tyrant of Helike grinned, and the
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red in his eye was an endless sea of blood. ``Nature tells, my friend.
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Nature always tells.
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The boy's grinned widened, long and sharp and pearly white.
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``I wonder what \emph{your} nature is, Hierarch.''
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It was a title and a curse, the ruling seat of the League that had only
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once been filled since the founding.
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It was all these things, but most of all it was a Name.
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