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\hypertarget{epilogue}{%
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\section{Epilogue}\label{epilogue}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``You who pass this gate, know yourself beyond hope.''}
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-- Written above the gates of Keter, earthly seat of the Dead King
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\end{quote}
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He would not speak to her until he was no longer in a vulnerable
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position. Alaya had known this because she knew the man, how his mind
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functioned. Amadeus did not treat from position of weakness. Her Black
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Knight arrived a few days earlier than anticipated at the Red Flower
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Vales, taking refuge with the \emph{loyal} legions that garrisoned it in
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the face of Procer. The empress had found a degree of dark amusement in
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the way that Catherine Foundling's armies now lay between the armed
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forces most loyal to the two most powerful villains of Praes. Almost
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like a matron breaking up a childish squabble between her wards. As
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always, the girl thought the worst of them. A civil war would not have
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been an acceptable outcome even if had a crusade not been in the making.
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The coming struggle would be steep enough without wasting soldiers in
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settling a matter best addressed privately. The current assessment of
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the younger villain's loyalties was growing clearer with every movement
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she made in the absence of instructions from the Tower, and the picture
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painted was not promising.
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The remains of two legions had been suborned to the insolently named
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Army of Callow, followed by the announcement of large-scale recruitment
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across the kingdom. The girl's return to Laure had been followed by an
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energetic centralization of power around the yet-unbestowed crown,
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though it seemed she had learned from her previous blunder. A
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bureaucracy was forcefully being assembled by drafting any remotely
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competent Callowan and withdrawing talents from the Fifteenth. Given the
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girl's propensity for charging at the first battlefield in sight, the
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power would effectively be wielded by Baroness Anne Kendal over the next
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few years. A former rebel with close ties to the House of Light and the
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last remnants of Callowan aristocracy. In the optic of consolidation of
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power within the kingdom, it was not a blunder. From the greater
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understanding of Callow within the Empire, it was a warning sign. A
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cohesive power bloc capable of ruling was being formed in Laure, one
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with bone-deep enmity towards the East.
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That the Duchy of Daoine seemed to have turned into one of the crown's
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backers was also worth a second look. It was a well-positioned source of
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manpower with hard borders and a history of resisting Praesi rule. The
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girl would need to squeeze the northern baronies for coin, however, or
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risk leaving the upset south in the lurch. An angle to use, if
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necessary. If it came to rebellion, further partition of Callow was now
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a feasible solution. When the south had been bound together by noble
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rule and marriage alliances it would have been a misstep, the seed of a
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rebellious Kingdom of Liesse being sown, but now that the city was
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wrecked and the aristocracy decapitated matters had changed. A southern
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vassal state dependent on Tower subsidies to recover would remain
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largely tranquil. It was what had once been the calm centre of Callow
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that was now trouble, the cities built by the shores of the Silver Lake.
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Large urban populations, strategic trade location and now a fledgling
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bureaucracy indebted to the crown made them the beating heart of
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Catherine's power within Callow. Alaya had stayed her hand, for the
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moment. Killing the girl would ignite country-wide rebellion and besides
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she had yet to overstep the tentative terms reached in Liesse. Pressure
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could be applied through the promised reparations and the precarious
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western border.
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Which was not in the empress's hand at the moment, strictly speaking,
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but in those of her Black Knight. One of several matters in need of
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settling. Alaya thought of the raised hand, the word spoken that had
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unmade over a decade of careful planning, and grew cold. Dread Empress
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Malicia set the unnecessary emotional spasm aside. A mistake had been
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made, in placing blind trust. The extent that leaning should ever be
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indulged was in trusting individuals to act according to their nature.
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Anything more than that was asinine sentiment, a weakness on her part.
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When the mirror flickered with life, she was awaiting it. Dressed blood
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red, a sprawling dress with long sleeves and a neckline that was more
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suggestive than revealing. The golden circlet on her brow was almost an
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unnecessary touch -- the dress alone would be enough for Amadeus to
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understand that it was the Dread Empress of Praes that had given
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audience, not Alaya. The silver mirror revealed the sight of a man
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unarmoured. A loose white shirt did not quite cover the sight of
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bandages covering his abdomen, but the pale green eyes were as sharp as
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she had ever seen them. Alaya felt a surge of fury. It was the Empress
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that had given audience, but it was Amadeus that had come.
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``You are wounded,'' she said, smoothing away the emotion.
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``So I am,'' the man agreed, tone almost amused. ``It has been a year of
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sharp lessons, and this one sharper than most.''
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``The girl,'' Malicia said, and it was not a question.
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Even now, after it all, the fury returned. Not directed at him but at
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the arrogant child who dared believe she had even the shadow of a claim
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on her Black Knight's life. In this, she had \emph{overstepped}.
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Catherine Foundling had never been properly taught the precarity of her
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position.
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``A point,'' Black said, ``on the nature of trust. How that blade cuts
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both ways.''
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``She has earned no trust,'' Malicia coldly said. ``The ability to kill
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is the grace of a killer, not a qualification to rule. Whatever measures
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she now takes are no erasure of past failures.''
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``Yet I wonder,'' the man mused. ``Regardless, she is not the reason for
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this audience. The matter is best set aside for now.''
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``Is it?'' the Empress said, voice smooth as silk. ``Your wayward
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apprentice raises armies and appoints officials loyal to only her. The
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matter is not to be dismissed as a mere detail. It is a pressing
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reality, and a liability in the making.''
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``I had hoped,'' Black said, ``to avoid the losing game that is the
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attribution of fault. That line of conversation would ensure
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otherwise.''
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The unspoken read thus: \emph{her loyalties were shaken by the
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Diabolist's massacre, and it was your inaction that allowed this to
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unfold}.
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``I have always known fault to be as much a matter of nature as
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opportunity,'' Malicia replied.
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The unspoken read thus: \emph{you gifted great power to a nobody and
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never bothered to instil loyalty more than skin deep, this was
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inevitable.}
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Black sighed.
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``Do you not find it tiresome?'' he said. ``To leave so much within the
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margins?''
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Malicia's face was a frozen mask of disdain.
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``You have lost the right to make that request,'' Alaya said.
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``Shall we speak of trust, then, my Empress?'' Black softly replied. ``I
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am not without words to offer on that subject.''
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Guilt never came. She would not apologize for taking measures preventing
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him from throwing away his life in a hopeless war, however slighted he
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felt by the truth that he had become a foe to his own survival. That was
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on his own head. Not even love would make her neck if she was in the
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right.
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``Warlock agrees that the weapon should have been kept untouched,''
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Malicia said, and there was a part of her that enjoyed the flicker of
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dismay on Black's face.
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``Wekesa would \emph{eat} every child in Callow if it allowed him to
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research without interruptions,'' he replied. ``That endorsement rings
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empty.''
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It was also first blood. He was not, she knew, plotting to seize the
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Tower from her. But the knowledge that if he had the Warlock would not
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have stood at his side was a crack in the certainty that lay at the
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heart of him. What she need break to salvage even shards of what they
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had once been.
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``And who whispers agreement in your ear, Black?'' the Empress asked.
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``\emph{Scribe}? If you slit her own throat she would assume you had
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reason. She has made a virtue of being a tool.''
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It was not a mistake to have spoken that, though Alaya regretted the
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sharpness of the words. But Malicia knew that the cruelty was necessary
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to lower the worth of the unconditional support in his eyes. The Duni's
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face grew cold, the first stirrings of anger.
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``You speak of matters you understand precious little,'' he said.
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``There is no part of you that does not come with \emph{condition}.''
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Malicia met his eyes with equanimity. Alaya flinched at the old whisper
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spoken aloud. Black tiredly passed a hand through his air.
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``I should not have said that,'' he said, the threshold of an apology.
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``You rarely speak without meaning,'' the Empress said, refusing the
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crossing.
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Something passed in the man's eyes she could not put a word to, and that
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was a rare thing.
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``We were better than this, once,'' Amadeus said.
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``Were we?'' Malicia wondered. ``Forty years, and never once did we
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cease dancing around that single truth.''
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Her eyes went hooded.
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``There is only one throne in this empire,'' the Empress said. ``You are
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not sitting on it. There is a \emph{reason} for that.''
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``Empresses who thought crown meant right have often reigned, in
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Praes,'' the Black Knight said. ``Rarely, I remember, for long. A mould
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unbroken ever only makes one thing.''
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``Don't you speak to me of making,'' Alaya hissed. ``Twenty years you
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made Callow your playground, only ever returning to take lives and let
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me clean up the messes while you gallivanted back. You only ever
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remember the necessities of rule when they get in the way of your games.
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You make plans without ever bothering with the actual people, writing
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them off as liabilities to dispose of if they do not immediately obey.
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Praes is not an \emph{essay}. You cannot unmake everything of it because
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it strikes you as inconvenient.''
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``It is worse than inconvenient,'' Black said. ``It is flawed. The
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Wasteland has made a religion out of mutilating itself. \emph{We speak
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of it with pride.} Gods, iron sharpens iron? We have grown so enamoured
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with bleeding our own we have sayings about it. Centuries ago, field
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sacrifices were a way to fend off starvation. Now they are a staple of
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our way of life, so deeply ingrained we cling to them given alternative.
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Alaya, we consistently blunder so badly we need to rely on demons to
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stay off destruction. We would rather \emph{irreparably damage the
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fabric of Creation} than admit we can be wrong. There is nothing holy
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about our culture, it needs to be ripped out root and stem as matter of
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\emph{bare survival}. Forty years I have been trying to prove success
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can be achieved without utter raving madness, and what comes at the
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end?''
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His tone grew harsh.
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``The only person I ever thought actually \emph{understood} this put her
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seal to the destruction of two decades of gruelling work to acquire a
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fucking magic fortress,'' he hissed. ``Some godsdamned throwback from
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the Age of Wonders that will go down in flames and take the Empire with
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it.''
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``Your way,'' Malicia coldly said, ``is \emph{insufficient}.''
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Now that he'd opened his wound, she could bare her own.
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``The Legions will fail,'' she said. ``The Calamities will fail. Your
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ramshackle effort at successors will fail. Did you think that just
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because you were clever, just because it was hard, it would be enough?
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We took Callow, Black. We put chalk to the slate. The Heavens will throw
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crusade after crusade at us until the mark made is erased, because
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\emph{we are not allowed to win that fight}. The only way to survive is
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not to fight at all, and for that I needed a tool.''
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Malicia stood ramrod straight.
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``A hundred thousand dead?'' she said. ``I would bleed thrice that
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number without batting an eye, because without the tool we \emph{lose}.
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We break, we end, we come at an end. I warned you off Akua Sahelian
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because she provided what I needed: a strong enough deterrent to keep
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the wolves at bay. And I did this behind your back, because if I did not
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you would have gotten in my way. Because you have fallen in love with
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your own legend. The Black Knight, undefeated. How far is that from
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invincible, Amadeus? Shall we talk \emph{history} on that subject?''
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``This makes us a leech,'' Black replied coldly. ``And that is exactly
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how we lose. If we are a net drain, we are removed. That is a
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\emph{fact}. There is no keeping Callow if by the sheer act of keeping
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it we foster constant rebellion. And if we lose Callow, it all comes
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down on our heads.''
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``We have already lost Callow,'' Malicia replied harshly, ``and three
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legions with it, all thrown into the lap of some fucking orphan girl
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because you thought you could be cleverer than Fate. Do you truly not
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realize that the terms of the occupation both failed to pacify Callowans
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and fostered unrest in the Wasteland? One does not conquer an entire
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kingdom to grant it effective independence twenty years down the line,
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Black. We were meant to profit from it.''
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``They were meant to profit from it, were they?'' he said. ``After
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fighting tooth and nail against every measure that made is possible,
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they still deserve spoils because -- what, they were born to that
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privilege? That they were even spared was a concession. But they were
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allowed to grow fat off a conquest they \emph{actively hindered}. I held
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my tongue because you used their rapaciousness for your own purposes,
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but oh what a mistake that was. The point isn't to make Callow a pack of
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plundered provinces, it has never been that. It's to ensure we never
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again destroy ourselves invading that country. Are we so enamoured with
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that kingdom's crown we cannot allow anyone else to wear it? We win by
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slipping the noose, not moving the border. By breaking the pattern that
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has whipped us ever since Maleficent made an empire out of Praes.
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\emph{It is irrelevant who actually rules Callow so long as we no longer
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need to invade to avoid starving}. From that moment on, we start to
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grow. To change. To be anything but a snake cursed to eat its own tail
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and choke. Anything less than that is defeat. Anything more than that is
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expendable.''
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He was panting, after. A sac of venom decades in the swelling finally
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emptied.
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``There have been bad nights, since I took the throne,'' Alaya said.
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``Nights where I wondered if it would not have been better had you
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become Emperor and I your Chancellor. You have laid those fear to rest.
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This\emph{,} this is why you cannot rule. Because you're not interested
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in ruling Praes, only in securing a war camp for your pissing match with
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the Heavens. You cannot \emph{butcher} your way into having a different
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homeland, Black. It's a pretty plan you laid out. But you are not the
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only living man in Praes, and so it \emph{fails}. Because the Empire is
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not an instrument, it is a nation and that nation wants things. It will
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not docilely wait until your point is made.''
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``Enough,'' Black said. ``Gods, enough. There comes a time where the
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wound is no lanced, just bled.''
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``Agreed,'' Malicia said. ``There will be no further argument. You have
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made a mess, and as always I will clean it up. You remain in command as
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my Black Knight. You will hold the border as best you can, and rein in
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your apprentice as necessary. As for me, I will take the measures
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necessary for survival. You will not approve of them. I no longer
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care.''
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The Empress would have ended it there, but Alaya could not.
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``We will survive,'' she said. ``And when the danger has passed, as much
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as it ever can, you will come home. I will not throw you away, Maddie.
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We are not beyond mending.''
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He smiled, ruefully.
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``Can you feel it, Allie?'' he asked.
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The Empress frowned.
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``It's quiet,'' he said. ``Subtle. I suppose it always starts out that
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way, when one loses control.''
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``The Tower will not fall,'' Malicia said.
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``It may not,'' he said. ``I genuinely don't know. For the first time in
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decades, Alaya, \emph{I don't know}.''
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He laughed.
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``It's strangely invigorating,'' he said. ``To have every plan you ever
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made ripped apart. Do you remember what it was like, when we were young?
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When we still felt wonder?''
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``Black, you are worrying me,'' she said.
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``Your terms are accepted,'' Amadeus said. ``Not that there was any
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doubt. I will come home, in the end.'''
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He looked away, and strangely smiled.
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``I wonder what it would look like,'' he murmured. ``A better world.''
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The mirror darkened. Alaya went still, something like grief but deeper
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than the word could ever mean taking hold of her. Dread Empress Malicia
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rose to her feet.
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There was no rest, the old saying went, for the wicked.
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---
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Brandon Talbot had only stood in the throne room once before as a child,
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when King Robert still ruled and his aunt had introduced him to the
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royal court. He'd been so young he barely remembered any of it, and in
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those days he had been of precious little import. Aunt Elizabeth was to
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be engaged to the Shining Prince, so he'd warranted an official
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introduction but nothing else. In those days there had been no talk of
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him ever becoming Count of Marchford. The union of Elizabeth Talbot and
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King Robert's eldest son had been expected to be fruitful, leaving him
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only the head of a cadet branch meant for knighthood and little else.
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How strangely the world spun, that he now stood at the side of the Queen
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of Callow instead of kneeling with the guests. Those he had to share
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that distinction with were, admittedly, something of a mixed bag. None
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could deny that Baroness Anne Kendall was a patriot and a woman of great
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wisdom, and though her surrender in the wake of the Liesse Rebellion had
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lowered her esteem in the eyes of some he did not share those
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misgivings. The Governess-General, he knew, was nearly as influential as
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the queen in some parts. If not more. \emph{Chancellor in all but Name},
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men whispered. Queen Catherine's open fondness for the baroness had been
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taken by many a sign she was not determined to wage war to he bitter end
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on the aristocracy.
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At the baroness' side stood the argument for the opposite belief, the
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newly-appointed Marshal of Callow. The title left him a strange taste in
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the mouth. There had never been any man or woman titled such in the
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history of the kingdom, as supreme command of the hosts was always held
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by the royal family or the paladins of the White Hand. It was a Praesi
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title and not even an old one, created during the Reforms. That a
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greenskin not even twenty-five was now second only to the queen in the
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command of Callow's armies had been oft commented upon, and openly
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mocked in the north. Popular sentiment, though, had not been incensed.
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The `Hellhound' had no small place in the legends already being peddled
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of the Arcadian War and Akua's Folly. The orc was seen as the second
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coming of the still-feared Grem One-Eye, and one that had proved it
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would protect the innocent even in the face of the hordes of Hell.
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Brandon was no fool, and so had never tried to speak against the
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appointment. The heart of the Army of Callow was still the Fifteeenth,
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and it would be months before any of his countrymen rose to true
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positions of influence in those massively expanded ranks.
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To the queen's right was the same man as always, that tower of burnt
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steel and fangs that was Hakram Deadhand. The Adjutant. Even when the
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old crowd spoke of the unseemly predominance of orcs in Queen
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Catherine's court over cups of brandy, there were few who dared slight
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this one. The skeletal hand of the Named was said to snatch the life out
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of fae and mortals alike, the steel of his axe gone stark red for all
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the blood he'd spilled with it. Grandmaster Talbot had spoken with him
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occasionally while on campaign and more often now that precarious peace
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was restored, and found him both personable and polite. More
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dangerously, he was also \emph{very} attentive to details the queen was
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known to have little patience for -- though in truth Brandon had judged
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her not nearly as disinterested as the rumours implied. The Deadhand had
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taken to building the kingdom's court with the same savage enthusiasm
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his forebears had displayed raiding Callowan farmland: the new offices
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overseeing the nation's granaries and treasury had been highly unpopular
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with the aristocracy at first, but their undeniable efficiency in
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mending the south had done much to quiet the grumbling. The Grandmaster
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was one of the few of his people high enough in rank to understand what
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was being built, though. A war machine unlike any he had ever seen.
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Callow was being put on war footing long before the first blade left the
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sheath.
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There was a reason the Order of the Broken Bell had been charged with
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recruiting every youth in the kingdom that could swing a blade and ride
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a horse.
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The last man to share the queen's side was the only he could muster true
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dislike for. Hasan Qara, who for some godforsaken reason insisted on
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being called \emph{Ratface,} had been named Lord Treasurer of Callow
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after resigning his commission from the Fifteenth Legion. The Taghreb
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was said to be some Wasteland lordling's bastard, though bastardy was
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considered a lesser taint in the East. He was also, as far as
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Grandmaster Talbot was concerned, a crook and a criminal. His lordly
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title remained a pure courtesy one, at least, without any lands
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attached. It was still a bloody disgrace that a Peer of the Realm would
|
|
meet with the likes of smugglers and hedges mages in broad daylight. The
|
|
Bastard Lord, as some already called him, had begun what he termed a
|
|
`much-needed reform of the hellish nightmare that is Callowan tax
|
|
collection'. That governors no longer paid taxes directly to the Tower
|
|
or even the short-lived Ruling Council had thrown the old system into
|
|
disarray, every governor and noble trying to short-change the crown
|
|
whenever they could. Lord Qara's taxmen and their Legion escorts were
|
|
already a dreaded sight, and the complicated maze of exemptions and
|
|
tariffs he'd had the queen put her seal to always seemed to have her
|
|
allies come out wealthier and her enemies poorer. He was clever, Brandon
|
|
disdainfully thought, but in the way Taghreb usurers so often were.
|
|
|
|
As the admittedly tedious ceremony chugged on towards the moment of
|
|
proper coronation, Brandon turned his eyes to the crowd that stood
|
|
witness. Baron Darlington of Hedges and Baroness Morley of Harrow were
|
|
of the highest rank among those, surrounded by kin and lickspittles.
|
|
Both, he'd been told, had declined the queen's invitation to her
|
|
coronation by telling her envoys their health would not allow them the
|
|
journey. The second envoys she had sent came with a minstrel, and as the
|
|
tune of of the \emph{Lord's Lament} played in their halls the nobles had
|
|
reconsidered their refusal. The pointed reminder that Queen Catherine
|
|
was not above having even royalty shot when it suited her had struck
|
|
true. The last landed nobles of Callow had faces to solemn to be truly
|
|
pleased of being in attendance, but rumours of the crown's young reforms
|
|
had seen them hurry south so they would not be made to feel the sting of
|
|
disobedience through their coffers. As far as nobility went, the only
|
|
others worth the note were the envoys of Duchess Kegan of Daoine.
|
|
|
|
That the ruler of the last duchy in Callow had sent her own eldest son
|
|
and high-ranking officer of the Watch to attend had rightly been seen by
|
|
many as endorsement of the queen's reign by the Deoraithe. Ties had been
|
|
made there, Grandmaster Talbot thought, that he knew little about.
|
|
Inquiries were in order. The queen had yet to appoint a Chamberlain for
|
|
her household or a Keeper of the Seals to have her decrees upheld and
|
|
her courts of law put to order, after all. It was no certainty that
|
|
Queen Catherine the First would keep all the seats of the old King's
|
|
Council, but if she did Brandon intended on seeing the remaining seats
|
|
filled with proper Callowans, not Daoine interlopers. Neither did it
|
|
escape his notice that Kegan's son was a handsome lad, not much older
|
|
than the still-unmarried queen. Another matter to ensure never came to
|
|
fruition, though he could hardly blame her for trying. He had himself
|
|
ensured that his representatives at court were well-bred young men and
|
|
women of comely appearance, merely to have that avenue\ldots{} open,
|
|
should it take the queen's fancy.
|
|
|
|
The rest of the guests in attendance were the representatives of
|
|
governors and guilds, as well as every elderman in Laure. Brandon had
|
|
expected trouble when their ancient prerogatives inside the city began
|
|
being taken over by the crown, but the Deadhand was a clever sort.
|
|
They'd been offered appointments in the new offices, and with enough
|
|
accepting their influence came to benefit the reforms instead of being
|
|
plied against them. The stood there with awe befitting commoners being
|
|
allowed to witness the birth of a dynasty, however fragile its line of
|
|
succession. As the sister sent by the House of Light finally ended her
|
|
droning and recitation of old phrases, Queen Catherine bent her head to
|
|
accept her crown -- though, in all honesty, given her height she had not
|
|
strictly speaking needed to do so. Eyes flicking to the crown, Brandon
|
|
grimly smiled. No gold or jewels in this one. It was a jagged circlet of
|
|
iron that sat heavy on her brow. A warlike crown for a warlike queen.
|
|
The old regalia of House Fairfax would not see use again, the cloak of
|
|
black and patchwork that Queen Catherine wore a dark replacement for the
|
|
old ermine-bordered mantle of the Fairfaxes. Rumours had spread that
|
|
Akua Sahelian's own soul had been added to the banners of the defeated,
|
|
that the Wastelander witch could be heard screaming in torment if one
|
|
listened closely enough.
|
|
|
|
A saying was born of it that had Grandmaster Talbot shivering every time
|
|
he heard the words: \emph{crowned by dread and cloaked by woe.}
|
|
|
|
``Before you stands the ordained Queen of Callow,'' the sister said.
|
|
``Kneel.''
|
|
|
|
One after another, they did. Only standing by the throne like him were
|
|
spared that, as Catherine Foundling slowly sat the ancient throne of the
|
|
kingdom. Brandon was not the first to notice -- he first saw when he
|
|
followed the queen's gaze, the raised eyebrow on her cold face. It was
|
|
difficult to tell how many there were. A few dozens? Less than a
|
|
hundred, surely. Brandon had fought their like before, but their
|
|
garments were no longer the same. On unearthly steeds of every shade the
|
|
fae rode through the hall, the Fair Folk as terrible and beautiful as
|
|
they'd always been. Brandon found he could not look away from the fae at
|
|
their head. Riding a horse of ebony, the man was soberly dressed for his
|
|
kind. A simple tunic, though the buttons seemed made of shade, and over
|
|
a pale and narrow face a black silken blindfold covered an eye. There
|
|
was a sword at his hip, without a sheath, and even looking at it hurt
|
|
the knight's eyes. It was that one the queen addresses.
|
|
|
|
``The Prince of Nightfall,'' she drawled. ``An unexpected\ldots{} well,
|
|
\emph{pleasure}'s a strong word.''
|
|
|
|
The procession of fae ended when the prince reined in his mount before
|
|
the queen, inclining his head in respectful greeting.
|
|
|
|
``Prince no longer,'' the fae smiled. ``I have abdicated my title, as
|
|
have all with me. The Hunt claims no lord amongst its hunters.''
|
|
|
|
Brandon's breath hitched. The Hunt. Was he speaking of the \emph{Wild
|
|
Hunt}? The rapacious fairies that made sport of mortals fools enough to
|
|
wander into the Waning Woods, or walk ancient mounds under pale
|
|
moonlight.
|
|
|
|
``Should I call you Larat, then?'' the Queen mused, and her voice echoed
|
|
with something eldritch when she spoke the name. ``Why do you darken my
|
|
hall, Nightfall?''
|
|
|
|
``Do we not stand before a queen, forged of Winter?'' the fae asked.
|
|
|
|
``I paid the price for that, thrice over,'' Catherine Foundling said.
|
|
``If you think the mantle can be taken back, we're about to have a
|
|
conversation on the subject of fatal mistakes.''
|
|
|
|
The fae laughed, and it was like the tinkle of silver bells.
|
|
|
|
``You mistake me,'' he said, and his sword rose.
|
|
|
|
It clattered against the stone, laid at the feet of the queen. One after
|
|
another the fae passed and threw their own blade, a pile of death
|
|
rising. Brandon Talbot was living a fever dream, witness to a scene
|
|
ripped straight from legend. It was all too vivid to be real.
|
|
|
|
``We swear to your service, Queen of the Hunt,'' the fae said. ``Queen
|
|
of Air and Darkness, Sovereign of Moonless Nights. We swear `til the day
|
|
of last ruin, `til all debts are paid. We would ride beneath your
|
|
banner, in this world and every other.''
|
|
|
|
The Queen of Callow rose to her feet, as bright and terrible as any of
|
|
them, and softly laughed.
|
|
|
|
``What clever foxes you are,'' she said. ``Your oaths I accept, in the
|
|
spirit they were given.''
|
|
|
|
Her sword hissed as it left the sheath, and she stood before the fae.
|
|
|
|
``Kneel, and rise in my service.''
|
|
|
|
The Hunt knelt, the Hunt rose, and Brandon Talbot knew he would never
|
|
forget the sight of this so long as he lived.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
A crusade, Cordelia Hasenbach thought, should be decided in a manner
|
|
grander than this. There would be speeches in the coming months, every
|
|
herald in Procer and beyond speaking the writ of the Mandate of Heaven
|
|
handed down to the children of the Gods. Spreading the call to the Tenth
|
|
Crusade wherever there were ears to hear it. The First Prince herself
|
|
would address the Highest Assembly on the morrow's eve, giving an
|
|
oration she had first prepared years ago. The motion would not warrant a
|
|
vote from the Assembly, though she knew it would pass should it
|
|
presented. By tradition only the highest office in the Principate could
|
|
call for a crusade, though it would be an empty thing if no other nation
|
|
joined their voice to it. Procer had fought crusades alone before, but
|
|
every one a disaster. She would not repeat that mistake. The young woman
|
|
had dedicated the span of her life to ensuring it would never be made
|
|
again. For all the pageantry that was to come, the Tenth Crusade was
|
|
born in one of the lesser halls of the palace in Salia, with barely a
|
|
dozen people seated at the table.
|
|
|
|
For Procer, only she and Uncle Klaus were present. The Prince of
|
|
Hannoven had not been granted seat as a prince but as the future
|
|
commander of Procer's armies in the campaign to come. The grizzled old
|
|
soldiers had spent more time drinking mead than speaking, so far, save
|
|
when matters military were raised. Assurances had been needed that the
|
|
Principate's armies were readied for war, no matter how righteous the
|
|
cause or urgent the need. The Thalassocracy of Ashur had sent three
|
|
representatives only, members in good standing of their foremost War
|
|
Committee. Citizens of the Fourth tier one and all, most of which would
|
|
take command of Ashur's fleets when the hostilities began. Their very
|
|
presence had been leverage for Cordelia to use, a gift from Magon
|
|
Hadast. The only citizen of the Second tier in all of Ashur had not sent
|
|
diplomats but soldiers, the agreement to join the crusade implicit to
|
|
that decision. The envoys, after all, would not have leave to negotiate
|
|
diplomatic matters. Only those pertaining to war.
|
|
|
|
The Dominion of Levant had sent the most envoys, in her judgement a
|
|
consequence of its ever-fractious people. The current Seljun, the
|
|
figurehead ruler of the Dominion, had officially deferred the decision
|
|
of whether or not to join the Tenth Crusade to the Majilis. Though
|
|
literature often drew comparison between the Highest Assembly and the
|
|
Majilis, for they were both councils composed of the highest nobility in
|
|
their respective nations, Cordelia had never found much similarity
|
|
beyond the surface trappings. The Levantine council was a toothless and
|
|
ineffectual beast, with every lord and lady among it having right of
|
|
veto and every interest in ensuring power was never centralized within
|
|
the Dominion lest their own privileges be curbed. Princess Eliza of
|
|
Salamans had fought two wars and died an attainted traitor to ensure the
|
|
Highest Assembly would never be such a plague on Procer, or the First
|
|
Prince relegated to being little more than a first among equals. As it
|
|
was, the entire Majilis had come to Salia to treat with her. The five
|
|
lords and ladies of Levant, all descended from heroes. Cordelia's agents
|
|
suspected every one of them had applied veto if a smaller delegation did
|
|
not involve them personally, and she was inclined to believe it.
|
|
|
|
They only ever ceased their squabbles when they perceived her to be
|
|
high-handed, the old and well-deserved hatred of her people the true
|
|
mortar that kept their nation together. They had been the most difficult
|
|
to speak with, ever looking for slight or arrogance in every sentence of
|
|
hers. It was for the best Uncle Klaus had spoken little, given his mild
|
|
contempt for a nation he liked to say existed only because the
|
|
Thalassocracy willed it so. This was, to an extent, true. Some of
|
|
Cordelia's predecessors would have waged war upon war to claim the
|
|
lands, had Ashuran fleets not made seaborne invasion of Procer's old
|
|
principalities a fool's errand to attempt. It was still less than
|
|
courteous to say as much, and the Levantines had easily ruffled feathers
|
|
when the hands involved were Proceran. Invitations had been sent to the
|
|
Titanomachy through the Dominion, as the Gigantes killed on sight even
|
|
diplomats of Procer, but the giants had declined to send even an
|
|
observer. Their borders would remain closed, it seemed, no matter how
|
|
dire the threats to the east. Cordelia had ruled for too long to be
|
|
disappointed by the confirmation of her fatalism. That bridge had been
|
|
burned too thoroughly to be rebuilt, even several centuries after the
|
|
betrayal known as the Humbling of Titans.
|
|
|
|
The Gigantes had long memories.
|
|
|
|
The elves of the Golden Bloom greeted visitors with arrows if they were
|
|
not heroes, and were said to have removed their domain from Creation
|
|
besides. Even were it otherwise, Cordelia would not have sought them
|
|
out. They had never joined their number to any of the crusades, and
|
|
their inclusion in the Tenth would have had stark diplomatic
|
|
consequences when it came to dealing with the Duchy of Daoine.
|
|
Entrenching opposition in Callow would be needlessly costly for what the
|
|
Hasenbach desired to be a war fought mostly in Praes itself. Popular
|
|
sentiment in Callow was rather difficult to read, these days, but they
|
|
were a people of long grudges who had never quite forgiven their
|
|
occupation by the Principate. Should foreign soldiers fight over their
|
|
fields for too long, there was no telling if the Callowans would turn on
|
|
the crusaders.
|
|
|
|
Still, it was the League of Free Cities that troubled Cordelia. She'd
|
|
come so very close to securing a truce and south-eastern border with it,
|
|
until the Tyrant of Helike began his war. Even that had been an
|
|
acceptable outcome, if she was to be honest. After the initial victory
|
|
of Helikean forces over Atalante and the brutally effective Praesi
|
|
intervention that took Penthes out of the war, heroes had created a
|
|
deadlock over the siege of Delos without easy resolution. Though the
|
|
loss of life involved was regrettable, it had given Cordelia opportunity
|
|
to exhaust the strength of a dangerous element outside her borders by
|
|
funding and arming Nicae. She'd even lightened the burden of restless
|
|
soldiery within her realm by sending a few thousand into the war. She
|
|
had believed Helike triumphant and ruling the League to be the worst
|
|
possible outcome, and so when the forces of the Tyrant and the
|
|
Magisterium moved against Nicae she had considered direct intervention.
|
|
That a Hierarch would be elected in the wake of the city's fall had been
|
|
beyond her predictions, and more worryingly the Augur's as well. Now no
|
|
ruler in the region would treat with her, even privately, as usurping
|
|
the Hierarch's prerogative might see the rest of the League turn on
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
Attempts to begin diplomatic correspondence with the man himself had
|
|
been utterly ineffective. That her agents reported Anaxares of
|
|
Bellerophon to be a long-serving diplomat, even if one in the service of
|
|
an Evil polity, had been a promising beginning. Yet the man had put
|
|
every missive she sent to the flame, and had reportedly been personally
|
|
offended when her envoys tried to speak with him in person. Whether or
|
|
not the Hierarch was the puppet of the ruler of Helike had yet to be
|
|
determined, but the head of the League seemed disinclined to rein his
|
|
member-states. Or even speak of the matter. Perhaps the only redemption
|
|
of the situation there was to be had was that the Hierarch had not
|
|
spoken in the favour of war, and his absence of a grip on the cities
|
|
meant it was unlikely a unified League would march against her. It was
|
|
still a liability. Her uncle had made it plain that at least twenty
|
|
thousand men would have to be left south to discourage incursions from
|
|
the Free Cities while the crusade was being fought. A loss, she would
|
|
admit, but not a crippling one. Ashur and Levant would both contribute
|
|
much larger hosts to the war when they gathered their strength.
|
|
|
|
``Late spring at the earliest,'' Lady Itima of Vaccei announced. ``But
|
|
we will march, First Prince. All of us. There can be no other choice.''
|
|
|
|
Set on the table before all the representatives were two reports form
|
|
her agents in Callow, speaking of the same city. Liesse, though it had
|
|
been ripped from its ancient grounds and dragged across the kingdom. The
|
|
first report detailed what sparse information she had been able to
|
|
gather about these strange undead the Diabolist had been able to make.
|
|
\emph{Wights}, the Praesi called them. One had even been obtained and
|
|
smuggled across the border, and examinations by wizards had established
|
|
the alchemical nature of the transition into undeath. The Empire had
|
|
unveiled two weapons through their civil war, and though this was the
|
|
subtlest of the two it was perhaps also the most terrifying. If all the
|
|
Empire needed to sow undeath was access to a city's cisterns, none of
|
|
them were safe. The Empress' reputation for having a large and extremely
|
|
effective web of spies had cost her dearly in this. A less demonstrably
|
|
far-reaching ruler would not have seemed so immediate a threat. The
|
|
other report held mostly technical notes, but it was the sheet of
|
|
parchment with the drawing that had truly stuck a blow. The sight of the
|
|
city of Liesse with a mass of dead above it, and the Greater Breach the
|
|
weapon had opened on a Callowan field.
|
|
|
|
A Hellgate, and not a passing one. Gods, Cordelia had known there was
|
|
great madness waiting in the east but even she had underestimated the
|
|
depth. No crusade had ever managed to land even a glancing blow on the
|
|
Hellgate that lay within the depths of Keter. It alone had been enough
|
|
to maintain the terrible grip of the Dead King for untold centuries even
|
|
with entire battalions of heroes failing to end him. The thought of the
|
|
Tower with the ability to create Hellgates at will was enough to put a
|
|
shiver up anyone's spine. She'd been open about the weapon being either
|
|
damaged or destroyed during the civil war, the truth of that was still
|
|
uncertain, but she'd not even had to raise the notion of it being
|
|
possible to repair herself. The Levantines had done so without
|
|
prompting, and pressed for a dismantling of the Empire to ensure it
|
|
would never be capable of making the likes of it again.
|
|
|
|
``As for the charter you proposed, we are in agreement as well,'' the
|
|
lord of Tartessos said. ``It will require the signature of the Seljun to
|
|
be binding, but the Majilis can provisionally ratify it. Your\ldots{}
|
|
appreciation of our concerns has been noted, and does you honour.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia was very careful not to let the triumph show in her eyes. This
|
|
was the true victory she had won today, the founding of her Grand
|
|
Alliance. Though it had been presented as a council of nations
|
|
participating in the Tenth Crusade that could adjudicate internal
|
|
disputes, there was no clause forcing the alliance to end after Praes
|
|
was laid low. Years of diplomacy had finally borne fruit. The treaties
|
|
would prevent Procer from attempting to expand into the Dominion again
|
|
long after she died, and with this foundation she could forge ever
|
|
closer ties over the length of her reign. With the three great powers of
|
|
the west so aligned, the Principate's attention could be turned to the
|
|
true enemies. The Chain of Hunger. The Kingdom of the Dead. The
|
|
Everdark. The treaties were not even a pale shadow of those that bound
|
|
together the League of Free Cities, but they could be built on. They
|
|
\emph{would} be.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia knew she would not see the continent know true peace in her
|
|
lifetime, but she could lay the foundations for those that would come
|
|
after her.
|
|
|
|
The envoys were entertained for refreshments after the negotiations
|
|
closed, yet the First Prince did not linger overlong. She had spoken to
|
|
the Augur, last night, and been given prophecy. \emph{Fortune comes to
|
|
you unnanounced}, her cousin had whispered. \emph{You may yet grasp it.}
|
|
Some of the White Knight's band had survived the struggle against the
|
|
Calamities in the Free Cities, and were said to be heading for Salia
|
|
with the man himself. Crusades, Cordelia knew, were a call few heroes
|
|
let pass them by. Though no formal declaration had yet been made, the
|
|
ways of Named were not easily understood. The Heavens may have whispered
|
|
secrets in their ears, as they did the Augur. The flaxen-haired prince
|
|
dismissed her attendants after retiring to her rooms, unweaving her
|
|
braid herself. She was not unaware that it softened her features when
|
|
unbound, and though she knew she was no great beauty she could sometimes
|
|
pass as one with the right ministrations. She did not hear the window
|
|
open, and was frowning at letter from the Princess of Tenerife when
|
|
someone cleared their throat.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia froze. It was a woman. Short of hair, pale of skin with
|
|
blue-grey eyes. Her leathers were loose over a slender frame.
|
|
\emph{Callowan}, the First Prince thought\emph{. She has the look.}
|
|
|
|
``Would you like a drink?'' Cordelia Hasenbach asked.
|
|
|
|
The woman snorted.
|
|
|
|
``I wish,'' she said. ``But getting into this place was hard enough
|
|
sober. Have you ever tripped into a moat? It's honestly the
|
|
\emph{worst}.''
|
|
|
|
The First Prince smiled pleasantly.
|
|
|
|
``I will take your word on it,'' she said. ``I would be remiss if I did
|
|
not ask who you are, of course.''
|
|
|
|
The stranger plopped down onto a seat across from her.
|
|
|
|
``I am a halfway decent thief,'' the woman said. ``A patriot, when I can
|
|
afford to be. But, most importantly-``
|
|
|
|
She sharply smiled.
|
|
|
|
``- I am an envoy from the Queen of Callow.''
|
|
|
|
``Are you now?'' Cordelia said. ``I believe I will be having that drink,
|
|
myself. We have much to talk about.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Hierarch saw many things, close and faraway. Deals being struck
|
|
behind closed doors in this very city, armies mustered and betrayals
|
|
paid for. In a cold room of black stone, he watched the most beautiful
|
|
woman he'd ever glimpsed wipe away a tear and clench her teeth. By the
|
|
crackling hearth of an inn he saw a knight and a champion clasp arms
|
|
with older heroes, whispering of Heaven's Mandate. He saw a young girl
|
|
on an ill-fitting throne, lost but unwilling to retreat. He saw the
|
|
fields of a Hell tilled and strewn with villages, its people never
|
|
having known a blue sky. He saw knives bared beneath the earth, north
|
|
and south, skins of black and green ghosting through tunnels. He saw a
|
|
green-eyed man grinning in the face of havoc, alone with well-worn maps.
|
|
He saw\ldots{} a silent young girl, her skin pale as porcelain. Her blue
|
|
dress was light and her hair cut in a short bob. Her eyes met his,
|
|
impossibly.
|
|
|
|
``Curious,'' the Augur said. ``You were not within the sparrows.''
|
|
|
|
``The People have decreed omens to be ignorant superstition,'' Anaxares
|
|
told her.
|
|
|
|
``Ah,'' Agnes Hasenbach murmured ``You too. No star left uncharted.''
|
|
|
|
Hierarch woke in a dirty alley, huddled under a threadbare blanket. It
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had been the clink of coppers being dropped in his begging bowl that
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woke him. Anaxares was not alone. At his side, leaning back against the
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husk of a wall, a woman sat with her knees gathered to her chest. She
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smelled of liquor and sweat, though the black curls he could see framing
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her face were pristine. The stranger drank loudly from a silver flask
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before turning to him, and when he saw her face he recognized her. Aoede
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of Nicae. The Wandering Bard. The heroine offered him the flask,
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wiggling it in a farce of temptation.
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``It's the good stuff, for once,'' the Bard grinned. ``Don't skip,
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doesn't happen often.''
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The Hierarch of the League of Free Cities, anointed temporal ruler of a
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hundreds of thousands of souls, tightened his blanket around his frame.
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He looked aside and pretended the woman did not exist. He had gained
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much practice in this skill of late, with envoys from the Free Cities
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and beyond.
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``You know, when the second wave of Baalite settles came to Ashur they
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brought animals from home with them,'' the woman said. ``One of them was
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a large flightless bird, called an ostrich. Odd creatures. Liked to bury
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their heads in the ground, a feeling I can empathize with. When the
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first famine came, though, the big fat ostriches were slaughtered like
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poultry. Even though their heads were in the sand.''
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Anaxares stared ahead, silent.
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``Tough crowd, huh,'' the Bard mused. ``It's too late to stay out of it,
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Hierarch. You're Named, now. Means you're fair game.''
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``I did not choose this,'' Anaxares said.
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``So I've heard,'' the Bard said. ``Kairos has that thing villains often
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do, where they confuse symmetry with humour. Probably got a giggle out
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of waving an old mistake in my face.''
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The diplomat eyed the woman, who was drinking again. After so long not
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being able to afford wine, the sight of the liquor being guzzled had his
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body feeling pangs.
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``None of this was meant for you,'' he finally said.
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``Oh, that touch was probably just a drop of arsenic in the wine,''
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Aoede shrugged. ``But I \emph{made} your Name, sweetcakes. Back in the
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days before I knew better.''
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``Prokopia Lakene was rightfully elected,'' the Hierarch frowned.
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``Right's a pretty broad word, when it comes down to it,'' the Bard
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said. ``She was silvertongued like you wouldn't believe, true, but
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that's where I went wrong. The moment the tongue was gone, so was the
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Name.''
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``The League survived her,'' he said.
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``The League's skin deep,'' the Bard said. ``None of the forces behind
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moved any differently after it was formed.''
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The heroine offered the flask again, and this time Anaxares took it. The
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liquor within was sweet and tangy, tasting of apples. Much stronger than
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wine, or anything he'd ever drank before.
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``Or it was, anyway,'' Aoede said. ``But now here you are. And you've
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got a lot of -- well, \emph{people} is a bit of stretch but you get my
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drift -- puzzled. Both upstairs and down. So here I am too, welcoming
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you to the neighbourhood. Instead of fresh bread and a bottle of wine,
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you get overly personal questions and maybe a dollop of sinister
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threats. Depending on how it all pans out. Have another pull, diplomat.
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It's the sweetest thing either of us will taste for a while.''
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Anaxares did, before handing it back.
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``I abstain,'' he said.
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The woman sighed.
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``That's not how it works,'' she told him, as if he were a witless
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child. ``Right now you're sucking at the teat but you're not swallowing.
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There's always a side picked, Anaxares. Always.''
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The Bard waved her flask enthusiastically.
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``See, that's where you're raising questions,'' she said. ``'cause
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Kairos forged you, and Kairos is in deep with the folks Below. But you
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let the White Knight and the Champion go, sparing me a deal that would
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have been\ldots{} \emph{costly}. Your people like a bit of sulphur on
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the altar, it's true, but their idea of worship does little more than
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keep those in a fresh coat of red. And I'm sorry to say, but you're what
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we call a mumbler. You speak the words when the right stars are out but
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there's no real \emph{meat} to the faith, you get me?''
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The Bard leaned closer.
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``It's fine if you want to fuck around like a raft on the tide for a
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while, Hierarch, but keep in mind sooner or later you're going to hit
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shore,'' she said.
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\emph{That}, Anaxares thought, \emph{or drown}.
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``What,'' he asked patiently, ``do you want from me?''
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``I want you to stop taking a nap in the middle of the board,'' the
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Wandering Bard said. ``Stepping around you is already getting tedious,
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and Kairos is better at it. I don't mind having a few layabouts around,
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sweetcakes, but only when I \emph{put} them there. You're no work of
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mine.''
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Anaxares studied the woman for a long moment then shook his head.
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``I do not answer to your Gods,'' he said. ``They drew no lots and hold
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no appointment.''
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Something like surprise flickered across the woman's face.
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``You're Named,'' she reminded him.
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``I am citizen of the Republic of Bellerophon,'' he replied.
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``You were created with purpose,'' the Bard said flatly. ``Fulfil it.''
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``This purpose was not voted upon by the People,'' Anaxares said. ``I do
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not recognize it. Forcing it upon me is unlawful.''
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``Look, the puppet show in your backwater dump is good for the
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occasional laugh,'' Aoede patiently said. ``But you've been sent up a
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rung, Hierarch. That's not the game you're playing anymore.''
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The Hierarch smiled.
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``I know you,'' he said.
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``We've met before,'' the Wandering Bard agreed warily. ``Had tea and
|
|
everything.''
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``No,'' Anaxares said. ``I \emph{know} you, old thing. You are the sound
|
|
of the lash, the deal in the dark. You are the servant of stillness. I
|
|
deny all you peddle.''
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``You are mad,'' the Bard said. ``And putting a knife to your own
|
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throat. They will \emph{take you apart}.''
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``If the Heavens seek to impose their will, they will be made to stand
|
|
before a tribunal of the People,'' the Hierarch serenely said.
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``Your own fucking Gods will bleed you like a pig,'' the Wandering Bard
|
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hissed.
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``Then they, too, will be hanged,'' Anaxares noted. ``As honorary
|
|
citizens of the Republic, they are subject to its laws.''
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``You-``
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``Aoede of Nicae, I charge you with treason,'' he said, rising to his
|
|
feet. ``Collaboration with foreign oligarchs and agitation in the name
|
|
of wretched tyrants.''
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``You can't be \emph{serious},'' the Bard said.
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``Should you fail to be present at your trial,'' the Hierarch continued
|
|
calmly, inexorably, ``you will be tried and convicted in absentia. As
|
|
per League law, you may petition the Basileus of Nicae to request
|
|
amnesty on your behalf.''
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|
He looked down at the woman.
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``It will be denied,'' he told her. ``But to petition is your right.''
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|
Eyes wide, the Wandering Bard opened her mouth to reply but between two
|
|
heartbeats' span she\ldots{} disappeared. As if she had never been there
|
|
at all.
|
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|
``This,'' the Hierarch of the Free Cities said, ``will be added to the
|
|
record as an indication of guilt.''
|
|
|
|
He left the alley, the quarter, the city until he found the boy awaiting
|
|
him. Kairos Theodosian took one look at him and laughed, his red eye
|
|
burning.
|
|
|
|
``Now there,'' the Tyrant grinned, ``is the madman I was waiting for. We
|
|
are going to have such \emph{fun}, you and I.''
|
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|
|
---
|
|
|
|
In the depths of a Hell that had long lost its name and number, a
|
|
monster opened his eyes. In Keter, a stone that was an old and treasured
|
|
gift shone red. It had not done this since the days of Dread Empress
|
|
Triumphant. The Dead King laughed.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Finally}.''
|