415 lines
20 KiB
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415 lines
20 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-kaleidoscope-ii}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Kaleidoscope II}\label{interlude-kaleidoscope-ii}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-kaleidoscope-ii}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Kaleidoscope II}
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\epigraph{``Fear is the mother of character. Without it we remain children
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until death.''}{Queen Elizabeth Alban of Callow}
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Vivienne had once spent a few days running a shell game in the streets
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of Southpool, when she'd still been an apprentice under the Guild. It
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hadn't been about the coin, for she could have made a hundred times the
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coppers from burgling a single noble house. Her teacher had teased her
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about it, calling her a petty hustler instead of a thief, but what she'd
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learned had been well worth a few sardonic comments. Confidence tricks
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were about sleight of hand, but also about reading the other side.
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Gauging how much of a taste you had to give them before the fleecing,
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how much you could squeeze out of them before things got ugly. She'd
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learned more about diplomacy over those three lazy days than through
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years of lessons. It was why she'd pressed to be the one sent to speak
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with the Proceran envoys, that and the undeniable fact that if Marshal
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Juniper went instead it would be a bloody disaster. The orc had a place
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as one of the larger cogs in the kingdom's machinery, but she was
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useless in all matters not military. That the Marshal of Callow seemed
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under the impression that her judgement off the battlefield should ever
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be seriously considered was just a mark of the greenskin's arrogance.
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A child that screamed `kill them all and eat them' every time you
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glanced at them would be about as useful.
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Thief had been forced to lean on the open trust Catherine had shown her
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in the past to be nominated, and the heavy-handedness had won her no
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friends in the general staff -- which essentially ran the camp while Cat
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slumbered. The usual deference shown to Named by mundane apparently
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thinned when said Named had been late to join the cause. Callowans
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listened to her, and her role as spymistress of the kingdom meant she
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had most everyone's ear, but there were few of her countrymen high up in
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the ranks save for Grandmaster Talbot. For all that the rank and file of
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the Army of Callow drew increasingly from her people, the senior
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officers were still largely from from the three legions Catherine had
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brought to her banner. Vivienne saw no need to take issue with that.
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Officers died and retired, and the Legions promoted strictly from within
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the ranks. Her countrymen would keep rising up the ladder until `Army of
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Callow' was more than a name. Any halfway decent thief knew that
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patience was as useful a tool as action, and Vivienne was a better thief
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than most. More importantly, after securing her role she'd had free hand
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to deal with the envoys as she wished.
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First off, there would be no talk of allowing them into the camp. Let
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them remain outside under their banner with the morning sun pounding
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down. They'd shown up around Morning Bell, so Vivienne had let them stew
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outside for another hour. There was no guarantee she would manage to
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fool the opposition, and the longer they stayed there the better the
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chances of Catherine or Masego waking up. She'd not dared to let them
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wait longer than that. If she did, it might be recognized as the
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temporizing it was. An hour should just be taken as an insult instead of
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betraying the relative weakness of the Callowan position. She'd gone out
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alone to meet them, afterwards. Vivienne knew she could master her own
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body language if she concentrated, but anyone else was a risk. The two
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men were still standing when she arrived, and discreetly she studied
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them as she drew near. One was obvious, the wrinkly old man they knew as
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the Grey Pilgrim. The other was known to her as well, as it turned out.
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The distinct nose marked him as a relative of Prince Amadis Milenan and
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the long curly locks were distinctive enough she recognized them from a
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sketch her Jacks had obtained. Jacques Milenan, a younger cousin to the
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Prince of Iserre. His mother was\ldots{} from an Alamans royal line,
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though she could not recall which one at the moment. The man was
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supposed to be high in Milenan's council. Which meant they were taking
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this seriously.
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While she'd assessed them, they'd assessed her. The Pilgrim's face was
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perfectly calm, a mask she suspected he'd worn for so long there had
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come to be some truth to it. Vivienne knew something of pretending to be
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someone for long enough the deception grew roots and leaves. Thief
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swaggered forward, producing her flask and pulling at the brandy inside.
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She sloppily wiped her mouth after and silently used her aspect to trade
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the flask for an identical one that was the same drink, only heavily
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watered. Now she just had to let her breath do the lying, and they'd
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assume her to be less sober than she truly was. The Wandering Bard had
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taught her the uses of fooling others into thinking you an incompetent
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drunk.
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``Greetings,'' the Proceran said, inclining his head. ``I am-``
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``Jacques Milenan,'' Thief interrupted lightly. ``I know who you are,
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crusader.''
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``And you are the Thief,'' the Pilgrim said calmly.
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He was leaning on his staff, Vivienne noted as she approached. Genuine
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tiredness or a ploy?
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``That's me,'' she chuckled, making sure the breeze carried the smell of
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brandy.
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She drank from the switched flask. The mundane envoy did not quite
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manage to hide his disdain.
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``Request was made to treat with the Black Queen herself,'' the Pilgrim
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said.
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``That's funny,'' Thief said. ``That you think you're still in a
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position to make demands, I mean. I was under the impression a fifth of
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your army got wiped and you were one week away from beginning to dabble
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with cannibalism.''
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``Has the queen refused to receive us, then?'' the Pilgrim asked.
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``Your side sends some spare kinsman and a man who tried to kill her,
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then expect Catherine to come out to make small talk?'' Vivienne
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snorted. ``I thought high-handed arrogance was a Proceran specialty,
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Pilgrim.''
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``If you will not treat in good will, there is no need to treat at
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all,'' the Milenan said flatly.
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She shrugged.
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``So walk,'' she said. ``How much good will do you think you've
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\emph{earned}, princeling? You invade our kingdom, attempt murder of our
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anointed queen and all the while plan to carve up our lands to dispense
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as favours. If every last one of you dies drowning, I will not shed a
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damned tear over it.''
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The old man's eyes narrowed. Not because of her words, at least not
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exactly. Because he'd been able to tell she was speaking the truth. He'd
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not expected a former heroine, if she'd ever truly been that, to say as
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much. The very reason Vivienne had said it: she needed to confirm
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whether or not he could still discern truth from lies, and the sentence
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was incendiary enough it should garner reaction. \emph{Good}. She had
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confirmed it. \emph{Bad}. He still had the ability, even when visibly
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tired. That complicated things, not that she'd expected the Heavens to
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provide relief. She wasn't hanging with a crowd on their good side,
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nowadays.
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``Negotiations with a lieutenant would not be binding,'' the Pilgrim
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said.
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``I can speak with my queen's authority,'' Vivienne said, and it was
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technically true.
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She watched the hero closely as she spoke, trying to find out if that
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would register as lie. She'd never actually said that Catherine had
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given her mandate today, and in theory it wasn't impossible for the
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Queen of Callow to grant this particular authority to her one day. The
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old man's face remained unmoving, but that told her nothing. He was too
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clever to be caught through a visible tell twice.
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``My instructions,'' Jacques Milenan said, ``are to treat with none but
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the Black Queen herself.''
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``Black Queen's not coming out for the likes of you,'' Thief said,
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another technical truth. ``Come back with your cousin or Princess
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Malanza and the matter will be reconsidered.''
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If that worked, it might get them through the morning before the enemy
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realized a game was afoot. If it didn't, well, all they had was
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suspicions. They had to be wary of a repeat of yesterday.
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``This is not how proper diplomacy is conducted,'' the Proceran stiffly
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said.
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Vivienne toasted him with her flask.
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``You'll note my Name is not `the Diplomat','' she replied, and took
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another pull.
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She could feel the Pilgrim's eyes on her. Searching, measuring.
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``Then I would request audience with the queen personally,'' the old man
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said.
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``Unless you've suddenly gained a principality or right of command over
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the host, your function here is purely decorative,'' Thief replied. ``As
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far as I'm concerned you have no right to make that request.''
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The hero sighed.
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``I am willing to provide healing to wounded in exchange for the
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audience,'' he said.
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``Chosen,'' the Proceran said. ``Surely you cannot be serious.''
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Thief drank from the flask again so her face would not be visible to
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read. This\ldots{} Would Catherine and Masego qualify as wounded? She
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was not certain they would. And if they didn't, she would be revealing
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their state for no gain. It would also mean taking the man at his word,
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which she hesitated to do. She'd ran with William's crew long enough to
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know some of the more pragmatic heroes had notions about whether
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promises made to the Enemy needed to be kept. On the other hand, if
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those two could be healed most of the army's problems went away. That,
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she decided, was worth the risk. The flask left her lips.
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``An oath to the Heavens,'' she said. ``Of my own wording.''
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``No,'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
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``Fine,'' she conceded, idly waving her drink. ``We can word it
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together.''
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``You misunderstand me, child,'' the old man said. ``There will be no
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healing.''
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``No audience either, then,'' she shrugged. ``We'll expect an answer
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within the hour about whether or not Prince Milenan or Princess Malanza
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will be coming.''
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``That will not happen either,'' the Pilgrim said calmly. ``You have
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betrayed yourself.''
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Vivienne's heartbeat quickened, but she kept her face smiling.
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``Have I?'' she drawled. ``Then, by all means, take another swing. After
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you're driven back, expect the cost of supplies to rise accordingly.''
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The old man met her eyes with equanimity.
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``You were a heroine, once,'' he said.
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``And just like that, you lost my interest,'' Thief said. ``See you
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around, gentlemen. I'd recommend your backers check on the state of
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their coffers before ordering an offensive. My heart would just weep if
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the price of retreat was destitution.''
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And with that last lie ringing in the air, she turned and swaggered
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away. \emph{Shit}. She'd been had. She'd put a good face on it, but on
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someone like the Grey Pilgrim the odds of it fooling him were
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depressingly low. Fuck.
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Time to see how well they could bluff with an empty hand, then.
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---
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``She will be incapacitated,'' Tariq said. ``Not dead, for the Thief
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still had hope, but the Black Queen was hurt by the shattering of the
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gate.''
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Princess Rozala considered the matter with due seriousness, to his
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approval. The young woman had been robbed of true morals by her
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uprising, but her mother had instilled her with a sense of honour and
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duty that allowed some small sliver of them to remain. She was forgiven
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this, for the fault was not her own. Children could not help what they
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were taught. Tariq held great hopes that the horrors of this war and the
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others to come would allow her to grow into the woman she could have
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been. It was a small thing, in this sea of darkness, but every speck of
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light drove back the night. It did not matter that the candle was small
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or passing, only that it burned. It was good to remember old wisdom, in
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days like these. The well-worn truths helped bring perspective to it
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all. Creation was imperfect, and would be until its very last breath.
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All the Heavens required of their children was to leave it a little
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brighter than they had found it\emph{. A hundred thousand pebbles make a
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tower, one piece at a time.}
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``Then we resume our offensive,'' Princess Rozala said quietly. ``Gods
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forgive us all, if we are wrong.''
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The old man stilled his tongue as the Princess of Aequitan began
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discussing marching orders, watching the men and women at the table.
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These four, two princes and two princesses, were the mortal heart of
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this crusade. Or at least the part of it here in the north. Prince
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Amadis Milenan held the most sway, and it was to him the First Prince
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had granted command, but the Iserran had become almost self-effacing
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since the butchery of yesterday. He deferred to the general of the host
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in all things, and in him Tariq read both fear and cunning. The
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possibility of defeat, before thought absurd, had shaken him. Yet he was
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also subtly inviting Princess Rozala to overstep her authority, to
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further isolate herself from the other royals of the host by giving
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unpopular orders. Even now that he had glimpsed the abyss, the man
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schemed. The rot went deep in this one. \emph{Though we be flawed
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instruments, we may yet serve greater purpose}, the Pilgrim chided
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himself. Imperfection was not sin but the very design of the Gods.
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Salvation without temptation was meaningless. The failure of a man to
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recognize his weakness should be met with pity and not blame.
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The other two royals were smaller flames to these two, he would admit.
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Princess Adeline of Orne was young in a way that had little to do with
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age, and still bleeding from her brother's death. He grieved with her
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for the loss, though he'd not known the man. The wake of his passing was
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recommendation enough for his nature. The princess sought alliance with
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Princess Rozala, and Tariq read admiration in Adeline's heart when she
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gazed at the other woman. There could be friendship forged there, if
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trust bloomed, and they would both be happier for it. The Pilgrim
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half-smiled. Perhaps a helping hand could be leant to the matter. The
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last was Prince Arnaud of Cantal, and what the old man glimpsed there
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had surprised him. Laurence was a creature of pure instinct, having
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spent her lifetime blurring the boundary between thought and act, and
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her intuition was a sharp thing. Yet the Pilgrim had doubted her, when
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she'd said that one was the most dangerous of the lot. No longer so now
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that he had gazed within. All that lay there was patience and the utter
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absence of emotion. Tariq watched as the man blustered, speaking
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foolishly of sweeping advance, and how all the others dismissed him in
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their eyes. Even Prince Amadis, who thought himself the cleverest of
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them all.
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All the others had warmed to Tariq, after Laurence acted as offensively
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in councils as she could. Offered him trust, treated him as the man of
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reason holding back the reckless Saint of Swords. All of them save
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Prince Arnaud of Cantal.
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``I trust the Chosen will participate in the assault?'' Prince Amadis
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asked.
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Face never betraying that his attention had waned, the Pilgrim nodded.
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``I have already spoken with Laurence,'' he said. ``Save for the Rogue
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Sorcerer and the Forsworn Healer, we will split with the armies and
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fight with the soldiers.''
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Queen Catherine had brutalized the children, but not beyond repair.
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Antoine's arm had been reattached, and another greatsword found for him
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to wield. With the coming of dawn, Tariq had been able to Forgive the
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death of Mansurin. The young man, displaying the famous fortitude of the
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Champion lines, had only been spurred to greater zeal by his stay Above.
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Little Sidonia, with her laughing eyes and quick wit, would have to
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remain under shroud of preservation until tomorrow. The Pilgrim still
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ached at the memory of seeing the young heroes reaped like wheat as he
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was held back by the Hierophant. He and Laurence had known that the best
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chance to spare lives was to slay the Black Queen early in the battle,
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and that to draw her out the children were the one bait she would not
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refuse. He regretted it still. Resurrection left a scar on the soul,
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always. No one could be ripped from the embrace of the Gods without
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finding Creation and faded and brutish place for the rest of their days,
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even if the memory of the Heavens was withheld. The Pilgrim excused
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himself as the council ended, paying due courtesies before returning to
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his own.
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He found Laurence standing by the marshlands madness had made,
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repeatedly taking her sword an inch out of the sheath and sliding it
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back down. She was uneasy, then. Tariq came to stand by her side but did
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not speak. She would do so herself, when she was ready.
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``I don't like this,'' the Saint finally said. ``Feels wrong.''
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He did not contradict her. Though Tariq had been granted insights, they
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were into the souls of mortals. Laurence de Montfort's strength had come
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differently. Her sword had reached the Heavens, and by touching the
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divine with steel she had attained a sensitivity to the lay of Creation
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he had never seen the equal of in all his years. If she was troubled,
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there was reason for it.
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``She may rise,'' the Pilgrim said. ``The shape of it is there. Wounded
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or unconscious, those she loves besieged, she may return to offer
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salvation at the darkest hour.''
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``And that's not a villain's story, Tariq,'' the woman grunted. ``She's
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hard to predict, and that'll get people killed. You're sure about what
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you saw?''
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The Grey Pilgrim let out a tired breath.
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``What Catherine Foundling craves above all is peace,'' he murmured.
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``On chosen terms, perhaps, but peace nonetheless.''
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His heart had broken a little to see it. That even though she had
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butchered all that she was, the little girl within was still desperately
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grasping at the light she'd once glimpsed Above.
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``She killed thousands,'' Laurence said. ``And she'll kill more, if she
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squeaks away here. Compassion's not my wheelhouse, but whoever made her
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into what she is deserves a slow and painful death. She's been twisted.
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No one sane would ever do what she did to her own soul.''
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The child herself, the Pilgrim suspected, would be infuriated to hear
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someone speak of her that way. Her embrace of her own mistakes rivalled
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any flagellant's.
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``It is going to be a long war,'' Tariq whispered, the weight of the
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years heavy on his shoulders.
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``Longer for us than most,'' Laurence replied, barking out a laugh.
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``We'll be part of the five, old friend. You can be sure of it. I
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already feel the pull.''
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The Pilgrim looked up at mockingly sunny skies. There would be a time,
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after the war turned here and the Red Flower Vales broke, where the
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Heavens would assemble their sharpest blade. The ancient forms would be
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observed. Five heroes, sent into the breach to quell the howling dark.
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Young Hanno would lead them, for the Seraphim had shaped him to the
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duty. As for the faces of the others, they could only guess. That
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charming young Valiant Champion was likely, as she'd followed the White
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Knight before. And there would have to be a practitioner. The most
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powerful of these was the Witch of the Woods, should she survive her
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confrontation with the Warlock. \emph{And the two of us}, the Pilgrim
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added silently. \emph{Relics of an age already past, dusted off one last
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time.} There was always a price to pay, to end the rise of Evil. Tariq
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hoped it was the two of them instead of young lives cut down before
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their prime.
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``She'll be there too,'' Tariq said. ``She always is.''
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``Surprised she hasn't dropped in yet,'' the Saint admitted. ``But it
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doesn't smell like a brewery, and that's fairly telling.''
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``That worries me as much as your unease,'' the Pilgrim said. ``For if
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she has not yet appeared\ldots{}''
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``The worse is yet to come,'' Laurence finished. ``There's a cheerful
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thought.''
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She sighed and stretched her limbs.
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``Well, no point putting it off,'' she said. ``Let's go kill some
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people.''
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So spoke Saint of Swords. The Regicide, to the Principate. The Smiling
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Iron, to the Chain of Hunger. The Fool-That-Cut-Nothing, to no one still
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living.
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``Let's put an end to this war,'' he replied. ``Before it gets worse.''
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So spoke the Grey Pilgrim, whose names were too many to number.
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Fleet-foot and Patient Hand, the Kindly Stranger and the Peregrine.
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Silence followed and legends went to war.
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