380 lines
20 KiB
TeX
380 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-5-interests}{%
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\chapter{Interests}\label{chapter-5-interests}}
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\epigraph{``Ruling is not unlike gardening, if all the weeds were heavily
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armed and plotting your demise.''}{Dread Empress Prudence the First, the `Frequently Vanquished'}
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After Thief was gone, I lingered in my solar and waited for the scrying
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I knew would come. Over the silent hours that followed, I found only my
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thoughts for company and the downwards spiral they so often took of
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late.
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The thing with bad habits was that you rarely realized you had them
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until they came back to bite you in the ass. I'd had months since Second
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Liesse to try to map out where and why I'd failed, and as far as I could
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tell a lot of failures ran from the same source: I tended to react more
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than prevent. I could even see where that fracture line had been born,
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the moment I'd effectively been first among equals in Callow yet still
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went at everything thinking like the Squire. Looking back at that entire
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year, the picture wasn't pretty. I'd recognized Diabolist as a threat,
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but taken only half-measures against her and \emph{badly} underestimated
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the kind of damage she could cause if left alive. The moment I'd
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realized she was preparing a ritual, I should have taken the Fifteenth
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down south in full strength and crushed her without mercy. I hadn't seen
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the fae coming at all, but neither had anyone else so on that particular
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mark I'd withhold the blame. When it had become clear I was dealing with
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an Arcadian invasion, though, I'd botched the affair again. I'd pulled
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it off, in the end, but only with Malicia's help and after leaving the
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south in the hands of Summer for months.
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I'd gone after armies, the visible threats, but I hadn't aimed at the
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roots of the debacle tree until much too late in the campaign. There was
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an old saying in Callow about failure being the most apt of teachers.
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Considering how monumental my failures had been, I should have learned
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quite a bit.
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Some conclusions had been evident. The coup by the Praesi elements of
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the Ruling Council still felt like a footnote in a much larger affair,
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but it'd brought one truth to the light of day: if I ruled, if I put on
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a crown, I gained ties I couldn't neglect. The situation in Laure had
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only come to a head because I wasn't there to scare them into line, but
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that was the problem wasn't it? That I had to \emph{scare} them into
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line. The Empire worked like that, but the Empire tore itself to pieces
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with depressing regularity and had antagonized the rest of Calernia
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badly enough that they'd had four crusades sent their way. Worse, the
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climbing of the Tower encouraged a sort of pervasive ugly thinking that
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bloodletting was healthy. A way of thought that Black and Malicia were
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wrestling with to this day. The thing was, the whole \emph{iron sharpens
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iron} philosophy did not actually deliver on what it promised: that the
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most competent, dangerous and ambitious person would end up claiming the
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Tower. Praesi history made that much blatantly clear. A lot of the Dread
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Emperors and Empresses who were now remembered as little more than
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punchlines had actually been very good at a single thing: killing their
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rivals frequently and brutally enough that no one overthrew them. For a
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while, anyway.
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It was a skill set, I had to concede that much. But it wasn't one that
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necessarily translated to competent rule, even before you factored in
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the kind of infernal pacts those same Tyrants often made to come out on
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top and their later consequences. No, the more I read the more I was
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coming to the conclusion that there were two reasons Praes hadn't
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collapsed onto itself: the High Lords and the other villains. The same
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families who'd formed the Truebloods under Malicia and caused so much
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trouble were the same that regularly overthrew Emperors, but they were
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also families who poured a lot of wealth and influence into keeping
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Praes together. None of them wanted to rule only \emph{part} of the
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Empire, the next time one of their kinsmen claimed the crown. That their
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way to keep it all together usually involved copious amounts of killing,
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an assault on Callow or general tightening of the screws on greenskins
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was horrid from where I stood, but in their closed little circle made
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perfect sense. It wasn't like anyone in Praes who wasn't highborn
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\emph{mattered}, in their eyes. And then there were the villains.
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Chancellor, Black Knight, Warlock. Those were the most frequent, but
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every century seemed to bring its own batch of ancillary Named like
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Captain, Assassin and Scribe. None of them had been, if the histories
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were to be believed, particularly pleasant people. But as long as
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black-tempered demigods -- for the old breed of villains had been that,
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for all their many flaws -- were watching the Empire, anyone trying to
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splinter Praes was running the risk of taking their attention from their
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own petty feuds and turning it to the nail currently standing out. That
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tended to end poorly for the nail in question.
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Callow had none of these structures. The House of Fairfax and the the
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aristocrats had been the backbone of the kingdom's rule before the
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Conquest, and they were now either thoroughly exterminated or gutted by
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a series of brutal wars and the purges that followed. At the moment the
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Kingdom of Callow had one thing keeping it together: me. And that was a
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\emph{really bad idea}, as the Laure coup had made clear. Because if it
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was all on my shoulders, the moment I went out on campaign or was taken
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out of the field by a Named scrap for a while, it all began to crumble.
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I'd spent long nights with Hakram putting together a way to rule this
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country that would weather my absence without outright turning every
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office over to the Regals or the Queen's Men. We'd done better than I
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could reasonably expect. Folding the old Praesi-built bureaucracy into
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the royal court had centralized power, yes, but more around Laure than
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myself. Most of it could function without me there to oversee it. And
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Ratface, Gods bless his cantankerous soul, had worked miracles where he
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could.
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The Royal Mint in Marchford had put enough coin out there that the Tower
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no longer essentially decided the amount of currency we had to spare.
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Ratface was alarmed about he fact that the Empress still sat over
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massive reserves of precious metals accrued over two decades of peace
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and looting Callow, and that if she ever cut them loose the overflow of
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gold and silver would break the south and damage the rest of the
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kingdom. I couldn't dismiss that worry out of hand, but Malicia
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\emph{was} at war. I knew better than most the Empress wasn't above
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putting an arrow in her foot if she thought it would lead to a long-term
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gain, but as long as she needed Callow functional enough to get in the
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crusade's way I couldn't see her pulling the trigger. It was still an
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awkward position: I could not and would not remain under the Tower's
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thumb, but if I ever got \emph{too} out of line Malicia would have to
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react and coin was one of the better ways she had of hurting me. And
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there were risks, of course, to an unstable and war-torn country
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starting to mint its own coin. It'd been patriotic sentiment more than
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trust that saw people embracing the new currency, and sentiment was a
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dangerous thing to use as foundation.
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I was popular enough in Callow that at the moment there was no real
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chance of uprising, but I would have to be very careful to keep it that
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way. Thief had made it clear that up north I was considered to have
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picked up the worst of the Fairfaxes overreaches and the most grating
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Praesi methods, then made both them my reign's central tenets. I had
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strong grip in central Callow, where a lot of people still saw me as the
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woman who'd given the boot to the most hated aspects of Praesi rule and
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taken the field repeatedly to keep the kingdom safe. In the south,
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though, it was a mixed bag. Hakram had overseen the feeding and settling
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of the refugees and that'd raised my reputation by extension, but Laure
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still loomed tall in everyone's memories. It didn't help that
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southerners tended to be more religious, as a rule, and that for all
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that my coronation had been at a Sister's hands I was still very much a
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villain. Down there, I was backed only so long as every other
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alternative was measurably worse. At least Procer's known involvement in
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the Liesse Rebellion had them almost as hated as Praes: the backlash in
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sentiment had only grown starker when rumours trickled in that the Tenth
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Crusade would be going through Callow. Conspiracies were being peddled
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that the First Prince had arranged it all to weaken the country enough
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it wouldn't be able to fight back, and the way they were not waning but
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growing in popularity had the Empress' signature all over it.
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Her Dread Majesty had been quiet, of late, but it would be a blunder to
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believe that meant she wasn't setting up the board for her later moves.
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I'd begun to work on Callow too late, I knew. Less than a year of seeing
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to the country, when I had to both double the size of the army and
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rebuild a third of the realm? That Ratface had managed to find the coin
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for any of this was a testament to how ridiculously resourceful my
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former Supply Tribune was. I'd had to resign myself, in the end, to the
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truth that this was as much good as I could do before the swords came
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out. And there never really had been a doubt that the swords
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\emph{would} come out, which was why I'd poured so much coin into the
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Jacks even when Juniper was howling in outrage. If I started to fight
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this war only when the armies began marching, I'd lose. It was as simple
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as that. Black had once told me that if I didn't start acting instead of
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reacting I would rack up greater and greater disasters, and I cursed
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myself still for not having listened to him then. I would not make that
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mistake again, and that meant going in with both a plan and a notion of
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what my opponents were up to. I had my plan. It'd taken me months and
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more people brought in to put it together than I was truly comfortable
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with, but I had the the skeleton of the Liesse Accords on parchment. Now
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I just had to make sure everyone else in this mess was ready to sign
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them, and that was a different beast.
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Malicia, I knew, never would agree. That meant Malicia had to go, sooner
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or later, and that put a particular tone to the fact that her
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spymistress was contacting me on the eve of my departure for the
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northern campaign.
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The scrying basin lit up and I leaned over, watching my interlocutor
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closely. Ime looked older than when I'd last seen her. The lines on her
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face were deeper, and though her hair remained dark I suspected there
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was dye behind the absence of white locks. She was warier speaking to me
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than she'd once been, as she should be. Aisha's kinsmen had dug up a few
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things about her when I asked. She'd been one of the Heir's closest
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supporters, when Black had still been the Squire, and the only one to
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survive my teacher's unsurprisingly thorough retribution as he rose to
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prominence. She'd been inserted at court under Dread Emperor Nefarious
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as a hidden ally for the then-concubine Malicia, and later served as the
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Empress' most precious informant in Ater during the civil war. Anyone
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who could deceive a Chancellor and a panoply of Praesi highborn could
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not be taken lightly, so I was about as wary as she herself was looking.
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``Your Majesty,'' the spymistress greeted me.
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Her face was small, on the stone basin I used for official scrying with
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the Tower, but remarkably detailed. Masego had done good work with the
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instrument.
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``Lady Ime,'' I replied, inclining my head.
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``I bear word from Her Most Dreadful Majesty,'' she said. ``It has come
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to the Tower's attention that you will be leaving for campaign with
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dawn.''
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``As agreed, the defence of Callow is part of my responsibilities as
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tributary state of Praes,'' I said. ``Though reinforcing Black at the
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Vales is no longer feasible, I will be meeting Prince Milenan's army in
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battle.''
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``The prompt discharging of your obligation does you honour,'' Ime said,
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though we both knew that to be empty words. I wasn't doing any of this
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for the Empress' sake. ``The Tower has, however, instructions in the
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specifics of that discharge.''
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Ah, and there we went. \emph{I know what you're after this time, you old
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spider.} I was about to be told, I suspected, that Amadis Milenan was to
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survive his little jaunt through the Whitecaps.
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``It will be my pleasure, of course, to listen to such instructions,'' I
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mildly replied.
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I'd learned to choose my words more carefully, and not just because I
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had a fancy hat. Ime understood perfectly well the backdoor I'd allowed
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myself in this, but I'd not given her grounds enough to harden her
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language. We were still at the part of the game were my deep love and
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loyalty for the Empress was fantasy we both pretended to be fact.
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``It has been decreed in the Tower's interests that certain royals
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within the crusader host be spared the sword,'' Ime said.
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``Fascinating,'' I smiled, wide and mirthless. ``Shall I guess the
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names?''
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``In deference to the current state of war, that will not be
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necessary,'' the spymistress blandly replied. ``There are only two:
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Prince Amadis Milenan of Iserre and Princess Rozala Malanza of
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Aequitan.''
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The schemer and the general. Essentially the only two people that
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mattered in that army, aside from the heroes. I allowed the empty smile
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to lapse.
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``And this\ldots{} decree,'' I said. ``Does it bear the Tower's seal? Or
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is it simply an instruction from Her Dread Majesty?''
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\emph{How far are you willing to push this? Are you going to make it
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treason to disobey?} That, at the moment, was the most important bit to
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find out. The line the Empress took on this would tell me quite a bit.
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Like, for example, if ignoring her would be followed by immediate
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reprisal. The last news from Aisha's relatives had the Ashuran war fleet
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in the Tideless Isles, an obvious prelude to attacking Praesi shores, so
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I doubted any of the Legions would be marching west. I had a garrison in
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place at Summerholm to stop them cold if they did, anyway. But the kind
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of pressure she was willing to bring down would give me a glimpse of her
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timetable: when was she going to stop thinking of me as a disposable
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asset and instead consider me a threat to deal with? She only had two
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armies in place to ward off Procer, and Black wasn't going anywhere now
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that Prince Papenheim was on the move. \emph{So tell me, Malicia, when
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is your play inside Procer going to make me irrelevant to the defence of
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your borders?}
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``A mere instruction,'' Ime smiled charmingly. ``Her Dread Majesty
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recognizes the realities of battle may prevent you from carrying out her
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intent.''
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\emph{At least until the passage is secure, then}, I thought. \emph{Now
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show me the knife, Tyrant.}
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``Of course, failing to achieve this may cast doubts about your ability
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amongst certain circles,'' Ime continued. ``As we are currently
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mustering for the defence of the coast, I regret to inform you that Her
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Dread Majesty lacks the men to enforce the safety of trade routes with
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Callow.''
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So, the moneybag. Not unexpected. She wouldn't do anything too overt,
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no. Wouldn't even let her people be involved. She just needed to whisper
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in the ears of the right High Lords and the wolves would start going
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after my granaries and my traders while my army was on the wrong side of
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Callow to stop them. How typically Praesi that even when I was marching
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against an army that wanted her head on a pike she'd still threaten to
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shove sticks in my wheels. My fingers clenched. As always, the Empress
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toed the line skilfully. Escalation, but not enough it would cripple me
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or force heavy-handed retaliation on my part. I'd had a tutor in Praesi
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politics lately, though. One I despised, but Akua Sahelian knew the ways
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of the Wasteland the way only a monster born to its highest reaches
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could. Time to put what I'd learned to work. I'd spent months scrabbling
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for every way I knew to check Winter's influence on my thoughts, well
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aware of how much of a liability it made me when I swam in the deeper
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waters, and one of the side-effects of that had been learning exactly
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how that influence rose when I reached for the mantle. \emph{Fear}, I
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instructed myself. \emph{Fear but nothing else}. I smiled, and let
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Winter coil through my veins.
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Frost tinged the sides of the stone basin as Ime's face went blank.
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``Sabra Niri,'' I said, tone caressing the words, and she shivered. ``I
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was surprised, to learn of your kinship to the High Lord of Okoro.''
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Her name had been learned, not given, and this made difference. It was
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still a foothold. Fear spread in her mind like a drop of ink in water.
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Thinned, yes, but contaminating every part of her. I could taste it,
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even through this thin link of sympathetic sorcery. I savoured it. I
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watched the curve of her neck, and considered snapping it. A little
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reminder to Malicia that threats were not inconsequential. Perhaps too
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brutal, I mused. Taking simply her sight would be sufficient. I could
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whisper through this working and shatter those pretty little orbs with a
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single word. Make bauble of them, perhaps. A bracelet for her to wear as
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a reminder of the costs of slighting me\emph{. Fear. Fear but nothing
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else}. A weak, indecisive design. I balked at it. We would see.
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``Have you ever heard the Wild Hunt ride, Sabra Niri?'' I asked quietly.
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It was a pretty mask of calm she wore, but it was a very thin and feeble
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one. It would be delightful to rip it off.
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``I am not certain what you imply, Queen Catherine,'' Ime said.
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``It comes slowly, triptych unfolding,'' I told her. ``First you hear
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the horns. Distant, like-``
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My voice was halfway other, the crack of glaciers and the stillness of
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fallen snow.
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``- a promise, almost a whisper,'' I said. ``Then you hear the hooves,
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and that is when you know yourself hunted.''
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She began to speak, but I clicked my tongue. Her lips closed and she
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swallowed loudly.
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``The last thing you hear, Sabra Niri, is the laughter,'' I murmured.
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``It is sport to them, you see. Like a deer that can scream and oh, how
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they \emph{enjoy} the screams.''
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``The Hunt is under your command,'' Ime said. ``To send them after
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citizens of the Empire would be rebellion.''
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``Citizens?'' I mused. ``No.~\emph{Animals}. Animals are what they would
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pursue.''
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I turned my gaze on her.
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``Wherever they might be,'' I softly spoke. ``Whoever might shield them.
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They would\ldots{} disappear. As if by the hand of a god.''
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I smiled and showed my teeth, knew them sharper than a human's should
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be. Hunger made fangs wherever it spread.
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``Shall we speak of gods, Sabra Niri?'' I asked.
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``The Wasteland is not without learning in this matter,'' she replied.
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``Then perhaps it should it should pay heed to these old lessons,'' I
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said. ``I wish you sweet dreams, Sabra Niri. And a kindness, for the one
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you once offered -- running never helps, but it is still better than
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being \emph{caught}.''
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I cut the strings of the the spell, before I could talk myself into
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claiming her tongue for the arrogance of \emph{having threatened me}.
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The sheer gall of that insect -- I breathed in and out, slowly. Fear.
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Fear and nothing else. I'd stayed within the bounds. I spent half an
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hour alone and unmoving in the solar afterwards, letting the influence
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of Winter ebb. It was worse than the chats with Hasenbach, because this
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time I'd leaned in willingly. That made a difference. When I embraced it
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of my own free will it was always slower to recede. Gods, I wanted a
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drink. But the way my hand refused to move told me the oath considered
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me on campaign already. It'd been playing with munitions, letting Winter
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out, but that was the entire point. So long as Malicia believed me
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unstable, willing to escalate starkly at the first offence, she would be
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wary of starting her usual games. \emph{Except it's not pretending if I
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really am that volatile, is it?} I clenched my fingers. I couldn't stay
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queen, not in the long term. Not when I had that lurking thing in the
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back of my soul and no real solution to leash it. But the only person I
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could feasibly abdicate to was Anne Kendall, and Thief was sure she
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didn't currently have the backing to stay on the throne if I put her
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there. Which I couldn't do, anyway, not without starting a war with the
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Tower and likely Black as well. For now, I had to stay. Under all the
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checks I could manage without crippling the kingdom's rebuilding. Fuck,
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I missed Hakram. It was always easier when he was around, and once more
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I regretted sending anyone else to Vale would have slowed necessary work
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by months.
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Dawn found me looking through glass panels, an open manuscript on my
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knees. We'd be moving out soon, to fight a war against unbeatable men in
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a battle where I had to refrain from spilling my enemy's blood.
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\emph{Whether they be gods or kings or all the armies in Creation.}
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Well, the Heavens were certainly attempting to deliver.
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