425 lines
20 KiB
TeX
425 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-46-possibly-a-plan}{%
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\chapter{Possibly A Plan}\label{chapter-46-possibly-a-plan}}
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\epigraph{``To declare an assertion of the People untrue is unlawful, even
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if it was retroactively asserted by vote to be untrue, at which point
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referring to it as either true or untrue is equally unlawful.''}{Bellerophan formal codex of laws, circa 1321 A.D.}
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The transparent bubble around me was solid, as I found out with a swift
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strike of what must have been at least my fifteenth sword of the day. I
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was pretty sure the one made out of goblin steel was still with the
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Spellblade, since I'd never actually picked it up. Over the span of a
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single heartbeat the Praesi delegation's entire body language had
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shifted. Where before the illusion had been the centre of their
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attention, they now all faced the taller of the two men wearing
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ceremonial armour. I'd expected another illusion to break and Malicia's
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flesh puppet to be revealed but then the stranger smiled and I realized
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I was already looking at it. Shit, she'd never said she was limited to
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using women as puppets had she?
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``Catherine,'' the Empress greeted me in a pleasant baritone. ``You've
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made quite the entrance.''
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I coughed.
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``Would you believe I was just cleaning my sword and my hand slipped?''
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I tried.
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Not so much as a twitch from anyone. Tough crowd.
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``Worth a shot,'' I shrugged.
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``So much for the cunning Black Queen,'' a robe-clad man sneered.
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From the voice, it was the one called Galadan. His interlocutor had
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pointedly not used a noble titled when bickering with him, so odds were
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he was just a talented practitioner snatched young and groomed by one of
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the powerful houses.
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``Galadan, was it?'' I said slowly, lips quirking as the name echoed
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with the taste of Winter. ``I'll remember that.''
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There were days where my reputation was like a stone around my neck,
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making what should have been the simplest matters a brutal grind where
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my best intentions were turned to dross no matter what I tried. But
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there were days, as well, where the balance swung the other way. I was
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standing alone and surrounded, bound by a ward I'd wager had been
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crafted specifically to deal with me, and I had nothing left to bare at
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the man but teeth. Galadan still \emph{flinched}. Malicia chuckled
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lightly at the sight.
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``One does not lightly taunt a tiger, even caged,'' she chided her
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subordinate. ``There is no need for uncouthness, Queen in Callow.
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Threats this early in the conversation strike me as in poor taste.''
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I should go alone with the beat, of course, dance that highborn dance of
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manners and double-speak and bladed implications. But we'd done that for
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a year now, the both of us, and the more I learned about what she'd been
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up all the whole to the more I realized how deeply I'd been played.
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She'd let me bleed my kingdom, my armies, my \emph{people} against her
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enemies while she plotted to unleash the Dead King. I would not condemn
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her for desperation, not when it had driven me to the same madness, but
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there had been calculation behind her despair. She would let the demon
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out of the box only when Callow had seen the wilfulness beaten out of it
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by the Tenth Crusade, and not a moment before. It'd make me a hypocrite
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to talk about the wickedness of making pact with the Hidden Horror, but
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I was not unreasonable in the fury I felt at the knowledge that she'd
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intended to bleed me out for her advantage.
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I spat to the side.
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``You know me,'' I grinned toothily. ``Proper savage, I am. That's how
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they raise us in the provinces.''
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Malicia sighed.
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``There is no need for such antagonism,'' she said. ``You have attempted
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to murder me, certainly, but that is a small thing. Expected, in many
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ways. We had a confluence of interests at the last hour of Liesse, and
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may have one currently as well. It is neither of us that most benefits
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from this squabble.''
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``You funded Liesse,'' I replied calmly. ``Enabled it. You were, to use
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that most damning word, \emph{complicit}.''
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``And yet,'' the Dread Empress of Praes said, ``when presented with the
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finished weapon you agreed with me on the necessity of its existence.
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Our present situation is not so different.''
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I had come to regret it, over the months that followed that nightmare,
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that I had even for a moment agreed with Malicia. That I'd been able to
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set aside the pile of bodies the doomsday fortress had been raised from
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for the golden lie of the peace it might be able to force. I'd often
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thought of pragmatism as the highest of all virtues, since I'd become
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the Squire. So many time I'd crossed blades with heroes and villains who
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were so wrapped up in what they might be able to make of the world that
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they were unwilling to face the reality of what it was. But I'd learned.
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It was a virtue, when properly used, but to embrace it at the exclusion
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of all else was to become Black. Cunning, victorious and brutally
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efficient. Dead inside too, though, more means than man. The kind of
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person that brought only ruin wherever they went.
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``And so the devil complains the other devil is tricking us both,'' I
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laughed. ``Quite the assertion, when you've already escalated the offer
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beyond what either of us can afford.''
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``The Principate is an existential threat to us both,'' the Empress
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said. ``That is fact, not speculation. So long as Procer is not
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dismantled, even victory tomorrow would only result in the same war
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erupting anew in twenty years. You are quite aware of this, or you would
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not have requested signatory status with the Grand Alliance.''
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``Hasenbach isn't the one whose ships are burning your coasts,'' I
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pointed out. ``And Levant's on the march. Bit more to this than the
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First Prince having a go at the East.''
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``Ashur will seek separate peace the moment the Grand Alliance
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collapses,'' Malicia patiently said. ``It will be costly to settle, but
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the Empire is the wealthiest it has been in several generations. The
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Dominion is willing to fight under the cross, but to defend Procer? Even
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if they are cajoled into it and somehow manage victory, they will have
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no stomach for pressing with another war after turning back the Dead
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King.''
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``It's an interesting sell that you're making between the lines,'' I
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noted. ``Instead of your shield protecting the western flank with the
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Principate, you're trying to talk me into being the same for your
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western flank with the \emph{Dead King}. What a favour you're granting
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me. I have to praise the audacity, if nothing else.''
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``Let us not quibble over details,'' Malicia flatly said. ``You meant to
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release him yourself. If betrayal in the terms is your worry, I am
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willing to grant you the right to read the final treaties and sit at the
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signing.''
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``I meant to loose him only on the northernmost edges of Procer,'' I
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sharply replied. ``Where the damage inflicted could be kept to a strict
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minimum and he'd have to defend narrow beachheads against the entire
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Tenth Crusade. You, on the other hand, are handing him almost a third of
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the continent's most densely populated farmland on a silver platter. I
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don't care how good your binding oaths are, if he manages to swallow
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that big a prize the rest of Calernia is fucked. Including me, including
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\emph{you}. You can't possibly be so desperate you can't see that.''
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``There is quite the difference between recognizing someone's rights to
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territory and the other party being able to seize it,'' the Empress
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said. ``Some principalities will fall, I expect. Not enough. And what
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remains of Procer will be embroiled in permanent bloody warfare to the
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north, a grind on the resources of both participants.''
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``See, I would have bought that before I saw Keter with my own eyes,'' I
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told her. ``Saw the kind of tools the Dead King has at his disposal. I'm
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telling you, and Gods I would love it if you actually took me to my word
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for once, he has a fucking \emph{legion} of monsters to unleash. He's
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been sitting pretty on this for millennia, Malicia, picking up every
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strong Named he came across and adding them to his arsenal. Procer can
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barely handle me, and that's with the hand of the Heavens so far up
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their asses you can see the fingers wiggling between the teeth. They are
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not capable of handling what he'll send marching.''
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``Evil,'' the Empress replied serenely, ``does not win wars. That is a
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law of nature, true as sunrise or the moving of the tides. You have
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inherited Amadeus' most dangerous delusion in believing otherwise. He
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could empty all the Howling Hells and it would not matter one bit. The
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only way to eke out a victory, Catherine, is \emph{not to fight}.''
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``And how's that been working out for you?'' I harshly asked.
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``My armies are intact,'' Malicia smiled. ``I have avoided loss of any
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significant industry or resources and maintained my hold on all my core
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territories. Your need to war with every foe in sight, on the other
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hand, has broken your only host, brought several outlying regions of
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Callow to the brink of rebellion and left you exceedingly vulnerable to
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attack from every single other state on the continent.''
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``You know,'' I mused, ``we usually get that speech from the west
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instead of the east. Oh, Callow's on fire but \emph{my} lands are fine.
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You must be a bunch of blunderers. Forgetting, of course, that the only
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reason the princes of Procer aren't bickering over who gets the nicer
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parts of your fucking capital is that my people bled at the borders to
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drive them back.''
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``You expect my sympathy for the costs of defending your own lands?''
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the Empress said, tone mildly sardonic.
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``You know,'' I said, ``that's fair. It really is. It's not like my
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armies gives a damn about the Wasteland. But then you don't get to
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parade the success of your masterful `strategy' either, Malicia, when
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the only thing that makes it work is that my kingdom's in the way of an
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invasion. You haven't played everyone like a fiddle. You didn't raise a
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godsdamned hand even when the Ashurans started sacking your cities. All
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you did was read a fucking map and take a bet on human nature.''
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She laughed in my face, an older man's rich and riotous laughter.
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``Indeed, I truly am a fool for having achieved all my desired outcomes
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without any true cost to myself,'' she said. ``However will I live this
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down?''
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``No cost?'' I said. ``Oh, I wouldn't say that. Your little episode in
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Liesse cost you quite a bit, didn't it? More than half the Legions. Your
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finest generals, and probably the person dearest to you in the world.
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All of Callow, too. How's it feel, Alaya, to join the roster of
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empresses who pissed away a kingdom out of pride?''
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The flesh puppet turned dark eyes on me.
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``One of your better attempts,'' she noted. ``Given two or three
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decades, you might survive a month at court without someone cleaning up
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behind you. Evidently, you are disinclined to cooperate even when it is
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to our common advantage. Let us part ways, then.''
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I went for Winter again. Still just out of the reach of my fingertips.
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The harder I set my will to it, though, the more I felt like there might
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be some give. Was the ward pitting willpower against willpower? There
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were four warlocks keeping this going that I could see, and Wasteland
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mages were taught from the cradle that Creation was theirs to master.
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That didn't breed weak wills, though sometimes brittle ones. I might be
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able to pull that off, given long enough, but it wasn't a certainty. And
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I'd be up to my neck in Sentinels before then. I shifted my stance,
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wrist slowly rotating as I flicked the last of the blood off my sword.
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``This the part where you have your little toy soldiers try me?'' I
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casually said. ``Should be interesting to see if they can kill me.''
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``You are a skilled swordswoman,'' a Taghreb mage snorted. ``Yet not so
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skilled as that.''
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``You mistake me,'' I smiled. ``Even if your pack of silent hounds hacks
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me to pieces, will I actually \emph{die}?''
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That gave them pause.
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``Lost half my face and torso, not even an hour ago,'' I said. ``A Named
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elf did that with one of the dangerous aspects I've ever seen. You think
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you can swing harder than that? I'm genuinely curious, what do you have
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to throw at me that'll keep me down for the count?''
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``Cold iron,'' Galadan hissed.
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I snorted.
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``That's cute,'' I said. ``My own crown is made of that, you mouthy
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second-rater. But, Hells, give it a shot. It's not like my way to the
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throne hasn't been paved by the bodies of Wastelanders who just
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\emph{knew} they had my number.''
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I straightened, gaze sweeping across the Praesi delegation.
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``Well, ladies and gentlemen,'' I said with a savage grin, ``which brave
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soul wants to be the first example I make today?''
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Silence was my answer, and when I inhaled the fear that had swelled up
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under their calm faces I could not be sure whether it was me or Winter
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that delighted in it. The spell was broken by a slow clap. Malicia's
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simulacrum was smiling.
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``You truly do have a talent for this,'' she said. ``Beyond even what
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you were taught. Still, you have ever been slow to learn. Did I not tell
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you, Catherine? To win, it is best not to fight at all.''
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The puppet glanced at her subordinates.
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``The ward anchors will remain here,'' she said. ``The rest of us will
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proceed to the Hall of the Dead and resume negotiation.''
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The man's face turned to me, and inclined Malicia inclined his head by a
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fraction.
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``A good day to you, Black Queen,'' she said. ``May you survive the
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consequences of what you have wrought.''
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The smiled turned mirthless.
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``After all,'' she finished, ``I still have a use for you.''
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Oooh, that'd been \emph{cold}. Had to grant her the due for that, and I
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knew cold better than most. I gathered my will and smashed it against
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the ward like a hammer, but the give wasn't nearly strong enough. If she
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managed to get out of here, this was done. And like she'd said, Neshamah
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would be displeased. Or perhaps disappointed, which seemed like a much
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more dangerous state of affairs. I couldn't reach my mantle, and the
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bubble might as well have been stone. Stone before I'd gotten said
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mantle, anyway, it was a lot less trouble these days. I still had knives
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up my sleeves, thanks to Pickler's cunning little contraptions, but if
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my sword couldn't cut it against the bubble neither would they. The
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Praesi gathered to move out, the Sentinels making a protective ring
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around the remaining delegates and the Empress. My fingers clenched. I
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had no weapon, no power that would work until it was too late. Well,
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except my fucking `invisible crossbow', thank you Past Catherine. Wait,
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\emph{yes}, my invisible crossbow. I didn't physically have one -- I'd
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checked earlier, patted myself down -- but it might be a metaphor. Or
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maybe the sight of me making an ass of myself was a signal for Archer to
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start shooting, which seemed a lot more likely.
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``I wouldn't do that, if I were you,'' I called out.
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The Empress turned.
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``And why is that?'' she said.
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Ah, humouring me. Nearly always a mistake.
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``I'll have to kill you with my secret weapon,'' I replied.
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``Is that so?'' she said.
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``Evidently,'' I drawled, ``you are disinclined to cooperate. Let us
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part ways, then.''
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I brought up my invisible crossbow and fired it right into her throat.
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At which point nothing happened.
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``I was expecting the Archer to ambush us,'' Malicia said after a
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moment.
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``Wards prepared?'' I asked.
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``Several,'' she replied.
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``The plan had a few kinks to work out,'' I admitted.
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If I'd been more prone to assigning sentimentality to the Empress , I
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would have believed her to be somewhat embarrassed on my behalf. Well,
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it'd make two of us. At least years of Indrani's company had more or
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less made me immune to shame and public embarrassment. Mercifully, the
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Dread Empress of Praes set out again without taking a moment out of her
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day to mock me. All right then, back to forcing my way through the ward
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and then having a spot of diplomatic murder. I pressed my will against
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the bubble again, and kept the pressure up. I was gaining ground, inch
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by inch, but it was taking too godsdamned long.
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The arrow took Galadan right in the knee.
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The mage fell with a scream as my eyes widened in surprise. Had there
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been some sort of protective enchantment on him, like there'd been on
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the Exiled Prince? Why else would Archer aim for the knee?
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Unless\ldots{}
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``Oh, fucking Hells,'' I sighed. ``She's drunk, isn't she?''
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Had she seriously been so wasted she'd missed both the signal and her
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mark? Gods, I didn't even know Named could \emph{get} that drunk.
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``Fighting retreat,'' Malicia ordered, tone perfectly even.
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``Archer,'' I yelled. ``The mages around me. Ignore the Empress.''
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I found fear in the eye of the warlock closest to me when I met them,
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and redoubled my efforts to break through. Except that no other arrow
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came. Was this a plan of some sort? Befuddlement distracted me long
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enough I lost a few inches to the mages, and I threw myself back into it
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with gritted teeth. She and I would have a talk about this, when -- the
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second arrow clipped the shoulder of a mage to the side of the bubble,
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drawing blood and a scream but nothing else. I gained back the inches
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I'd lost, but that was all. Gods, how drunk was she? \emph{No, she'd
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have burned it out of her body by now with her Name.} Indrani might
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capricious, but she was also incredibly vain about her marksmanship.
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After missing her first shot she'd have sobered herself up. I came to
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the conclusion a heartbeat before the Empress announced it out loud to
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her escorts. This had never been Archer. This was Thief who'd stolen a
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bow and arrows at some point, and the shots were missing because
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\emph{no one had ever taught her to use the godsdamned thing properly}.
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``Thief, just stab the bastards,'' I yelled angrily.
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Her ruse -- passing for Archer -- had slowed down the Praesi advance
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some but not nearly enough. She should have gone for the mages since the
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start, though charitably I'd assume she'd been trying to make time for
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me to break out of the bubble. I slammed my will against the ward, to no
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avail. This was infuriating. If I'd still had an aspect I could have
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ripped through that like wet parchment. But with the mantle's power had
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come the mantle's weaknesses. Although, I'd learned necromancy when I
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was still\ldots{} No, my tie to Zombie still existed but it was muted. I
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couldn't control her through it. Neither could I summon the arguably
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more dangerous dead thing at my beck and call, Akua Sahelian. It was
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like the bubble was shutting me out of Winter and essentially everything
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outside of the bubble itself. I was pretty sure I could still manipulate
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what was in here, but my body couldn't shift without Winter to handle
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the changes and, and I still had a bit of Winter in here didn't I? I
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glanced down at my sword. I'd gone through over a dozen of those
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fighting the Skein, just making another one out of ice every time the
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last one shattered. It'd become so natural I barely ever thought of it
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anymore. I grimaced. Didn't really help, though. I could make an ice
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javelin out of that, but that was no better than a sword and I doubted
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anything aside from my domain would put a hole in the ward.
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Thief flickered into sight, stabbing into the back of the man whose eyes
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I'd met earlier, but even though she drew blood a streak of lighting
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caught her in the side and smashed her to the ground. An illusion broke,
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and a fifth spellcaster flicked her wrist as she whispered in the mage
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tongue. The lightning kept roiling and Vivienne screamed as she twisted
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on the ground.
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``Flee,'' I hissed. ``\emph{Go}.''
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Except she couldn't, and I didn't have the tools to\ldots{} My fingers
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clenched. I gathered my will, sent it into my sword and broke it apart.
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I ripped from the ice the stuff of Winter, and from it wove one of the
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few things that never left my body. A small dark whistle, pulsing with
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power not my own. Power I'd stolen from a hated foe. Bringing it to my
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cold lips, I blew out and the power vanished. It broke into fine powder.
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Not a sound had been made. It wasn't that kind of whistle. It wasn't
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that kind of call\textbf{.}
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``She's summoning something,'' the sorceress that still poured lightning
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into Vivienne called out.
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``We need every single one of us,'' the man who'd been stabbed replied
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in Mtethwa. ``She's a monster.''
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The blade went through the back of his head, coming out of his month in
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a downpour of blood. Larat clicked his tongue disapprovingly.
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``Now now, man-thing,'' he chided. ``That's just no way to speak about
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your superiors.''
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The rest of the Wild Hunt tore out of Arcadia behind him, and with a
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wild scream I finally shattered the ward. Finally.
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\emph{My turn}.
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