556 lines
30 KiB
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556 lines
30 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{fatalism-iii}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Fatalism III}\label{fatalism-iii}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{fatalism-iii}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Fatalism III}
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\epigraph{``I fear the man of one book, even if that book is about the
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pastoral habits of the common Callowan cow. Have you ever looked into
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the eyes of a cow? They are a depthless abyss of cold nihilism.''}{King Edward IV of Callow, the Sufficiently Paranoid}
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In the days before the founding of the Principate, Salia had been little
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more than the ancient tribal grounds of the Merovins. Though rich in
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game and copper -- mined, one no longer admitted in polite company, by
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slaves from rival Alamans tribes -- it'd been a modest village of less
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than five thousand. The Merovins were known as hunters and warriors, not
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farmers, and had preferred to raise lodges in now-cut forests rather
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than gather in a city-fortress as the Arlesites to the south had
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practiced since times immemorial. That it'd been chosen as the seat of
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the council that founded the Principate had been due to a potent mixture
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of luck and politicking by Clothor Merovins. Salia had been well placed
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to host the armies returned victorious from the First Crusade and the
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fall of Triumphant, and had represented something of a compromised
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between the already-squabbling factions of Alamans chiefs and Arlesites
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kings who both desired the council closer to their own holdings. It was
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a famous story that Clothor had sold all his possessions, down to his
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last pair of boots, to bribe the recalcitrant into agreeing.
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Like so many stories on which the foundation of realms were built, it
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was a lie. Clothor had been one of the wealthiest men in the
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not-yet-Principate, having discretely stolen the Callowan tributes meant
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for Dread Empress Triumphant that were getting readied when the
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continent-wide rebellion against her reign began. Still, there was a
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grain of truth to the story: the man had near-beggared himself buying
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alliances with lavish gifts and promises, though he had kept his boots.
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And still Cantal had nearly been chosen at the site instead. It would be
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a very difference Principate that now stood, Cordelia thought, if the
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chieftess of Cantal had succeeded at her own intrigues. But Clothor had
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been both wilier and the better speaker, going on to win the contest and
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then the crown itself: the very first of the First Princes of Procer.
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One of his very first orders had been to raise what was now the Chamber
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of Assembly on the grounds where the celebrated council had taken place,
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and it was surrounded by those centuries of history that Cordelia
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Hasenbach now sat.
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Salia was now the largest city of Calernia: when winter came around and
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the labouring \emph{manants} who'd toiled on the fields throughout
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spring and summer flocked to city with their seasonal wages, near nine
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hundred thousand souls dwelled within the boundaries of Procer's
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capital. The city had been turned into a work of art by First Princes
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and Princesses, spires and churches and sprawling gardens -- some of
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those meant only for winter, even, built so that the frost and snow
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themselves would become adornments. There was ugliness as well, entire
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districts of huts where the peasants took sick and died in their own
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wastes while the wealthy partook in exotic banquets mere miles away. And
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yet Cordelia had found she loved Salia, for all its flaws, with the same
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depth she loved the Rhenia of her birth. It was a city unlike any other
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on the continent, the ever-beating heart of an empire that risen from
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nothing to stand above all realms that saw the sun. Where else could one
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find Arlesite poet-duellists declaiming in contest with Alamans lay
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brothers in gardens that depicted different acts of a play with every
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season? Or grim-faced Lycaonese veterans trading drinks and war stories
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with fantassins who'd served in wars halfway across the continent?
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The wealth of Salia was in the people, not the coin or the facades, and
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it was a rare day where the First Prince of Procer did not wake humbled
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that they had been placed in her care.
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Yet in that sprawling, glorious and riotous mess there was one place of
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utter stillness. One that had not changed since the savage days of
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Procer's founding, where it had been hard men and women wearing furs and
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stolen riches -- never without a blade, even when bathing -- who had
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changed the world: the Chamber of Assembly, seat of the Highest Assembly
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of the Principate. The walls were naught but whitewashed limestone, the
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rafters were ancient oak that creaked when touched and the chamber had
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carried a faint scent of wood smoke ever since the palace around it
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caught fire during the second Liturgical War. A halfway-skillful
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merchant would own finer hall than this after a decade's work, and yet
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never once had the royalty of Procer asked the chamber should be built
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anew or replaced. For within there stood twenty-four thrones, none
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younger than six centuries. One for every principality in the realm,
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dragged from all over the Principate to stand forever in this room.
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Princes and princesses ruled from palaces all over Procer, but there was
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only one Chamber and one Highest Assembly: the words spoken in this
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smoky hall resounded to every corner of Calernia.
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Cordelia's own seat was the same that had been set by Clothor Merovins
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himself. A spit of grey granite polished by the waters of the lake it'd
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been dredged from, without even a back to lean against. Cunning Clothor
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was said to have mourned before all that he'd emptied his treasury so
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deeply bestowing gifts upon his allies he could not even afford to have
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a proper throne carved. The blonde prince rather admired the man who'd
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been her earliest predecessor. A great warlord, yes, but one of the rare
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examples of that breed who'd understood the worth of the softer ways of
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statecraft. Many kings and chiefs came to that council with thrones that
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now stood before her, gilded and set with jewels or made of enchanted
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stones and rare trees from the Waning Woods. Yet Clothor Merovins'
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humble spit of granite was the only one that stood on a dais, an inch
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higher than all the others. In truth, two seats in the chamber
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rightfully belonged to Cordelia. The same she now sat, and another far
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to the back.
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One of the triplet thrones of Rhenia, Hannoven and Bremen, famously
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carved from the same pale chalkstone on which First Princess Frederonne
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Merovins had wed the Prince of Hannoven, sealing her conquest of the
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Lycaonese principalities by twining bloodlines. Her own father had died
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assaulting the walls of Rhenia, where even after the fall of every other
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Lycaonese principality the hosts had held out with desperate defiance,
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but Frederonne had shown enough foresight to predict that fighting the
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Lycaonese to the bitter end would leave her own people to defend against
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the Plague and the Dead in their stead. Cordelia's Rhenian throne was
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covered by a silk banner displaying the Hasenbach heraldry of crowned
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bronze mountain peak on deep blue, signifying that she had named no
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sworn delegate and still held the voting rights for the principality.
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The technical matter was complex, and relied on the legal fiction that
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she was two different people: the Prince of Rhenia, her birthright, and
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the Princess of Salia which was a title bound to the greater one of
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First Prince. Before the last of the Merovins died the principality of
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Salia had been its own realm and remained under their rule even when one
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not of their bloodline was First Prince, though the ruler of Procer had
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right of administration over the city, by custom.
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It had been over a hundred years since then, however, and Cordelia had
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come to benefit from the additional vote and attendant legalities more
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than she'd ever expected she would.
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``The assembly recognizes \emph{l'assermenté} for Prince Amadis Milenan
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of Iserre,'' the Master of Orders announced, thickly-accented Lycaonese
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voice perfectly pronouncing the Old Chantant term.
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The white-haired Master was one of her own Rhenians, one with a talent
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for languages she'd put into place within a month of ascending the
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throne. In this battlefield of courtesies and ceremonies, there were few
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advantages more precious than an arbiter of ceremonies entirely loyal to
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her. Cordelia's eyes blue eyes flicked at the sworn delegate of Iserre,
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one of Prince Amadis' seemingly never-ending parade of kinsmen of
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middling talent. Olivier Milenan was young, barely in his twenties, and
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handsome in much the same way as his very distant uncle. Not the
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sharpest of intriguers, this one, though hardly slow. She suspected he'd
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been chosen by Amadis largely because while of princely blood Olivier's
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branch of the family was impoverished and so the sum entire of his
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fortunes rested on the goodwill of his crowned kinsman. This one would
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not cross his uncle, lest he got back to rotting in the gutted mansion
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where he'd been raised in utter obscurity. Rising to his feet, Olivier
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Milenan straightened his back.
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``By ancient oath, I speak only the words of my prince and none other,''
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he said.
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``You were heard by these hallowed grounds,'' the Master of Orders
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replied. ``Let no lie mar your tongue, no heresy your soul and may the
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Heavens grant you righteous purpose in this exchange of words.''
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Every individual in the chamber save those two repeated the sentences
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with practiced cadence. As First Prince, Cordelia was exempt from such
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proceedings. As Prince of Rhenia, she was not. Other royals were few in
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attendance, in this particular session. The rulers Creusens, Orense and
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Valencis had graced the capital with their presence, as well as her old
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ally the Prince of Brus, yet every other was a sworn delegate. It
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mattered little: their instructions would be royal, if not their
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bearing.
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``My countrymen,'' Olivier Milenan spoke, his voice well-trained and
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pleasant to the ear, ``I stand before you today to speak of grave
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matters. The Principate has upheld its duties to Creation and undertaken
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the waging of just war against the wicked crowns of the East, yet in
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doing so a heavy price has been exacted. While our armies manoeuvre and
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quibble, Dread Empress Malicia's hungriest hound pillages and rapes his
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way through our realm heedlessly. Already Cantal has suffered such
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depredations, and now my own native Iserre seems destined for the same
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savage fate.''
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It had not taken long, Cordelia mused, for the first instruction of the
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Master of Orders to be disregarded -- \emph{let no lie mar your tongue}.
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The Carrion Lord's horde of murderous vagrants might be looting
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everything granary in sight, but they at least observed their own
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regulations: rapists and murderers were hung. The man's rhetorical
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flourishes were not of great import, though what would follow them was.
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The First Prince had already deduced the gist of the motion the man
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would present. She had, after all, a letter addressed to a bastard among
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her papers. It was the number of those willing to support the motion
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that truly mattered. This was the first formal session held since the
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defeats in Callow, though half a dozen informal ones had taken place.
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The important difference between the two was that in a formal session,
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any motion put to the First Prince would enter the public records.
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Including the votes and if her personal Right of Refusal was used
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afterwards. That she would be driven to that was unlikely, as she should
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still have enough support they would fail to secure a majority, but it
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was possible for her and her allies to be forced to vote in a manner
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that would damage their reputation with the people\emph{. If you have
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the votes to corner me, Milenan}, she thought. \emph{Do you?}
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``Our cities are empty, our fortresses gather dust,'' Olivier orated,
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voice resounding. ``Why? Because we have sent our soldiers to war,
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observing the decree of our anointed First Prince. Do not mistake this
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for intriguing, my friends, for none stand more loyal to Her Most Serene
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Highness than the braves of Iserre. I merely weep for the fate of my
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people, who must wither and die even as their valiantly crusading
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cousins stand leashed and impotent mere weeks of march away. Where is
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the Iron Prince, I ask you? What right does the Prince of Hannoven have
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to part kin from besieged kin by such cruel decree?''
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There were murmurs of approval at that. Uncle Klaus had never been
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popular down south, in part because he'd led her armies in their
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crushing of theirs yet also because he himself made no mystery that he
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held most of them in contempt. His decision -- though it had been
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presented as hers -- to let the Legions of Terror march into Procer
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without pursuit had only deepened the enmity. The sworn delegate from
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Bremen loudly spat on the floor, scarred face purple with anger, much to
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the distaste of the closest southerners. Uncle Klaus had carried her
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crippled cousin back through five leagues of marshlands under ratling
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pursuit after a skirmish went south, Cordelia knew. If blades were
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allowed into the chamber, she might very well have drawn. The Iron
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Prince was misliked here, but he was fiercely loved by his own people.
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``The Prince of Iserre asks not for glory or reward, though for this
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realm he has greatly bled,'' Olivier said. ``He only asks for loyalty to
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be repaid in kind, and the heart of Procer to be protected from the foul
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works of the Praesi. Iserre motions for a formal petition to be
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presented to the First Prince, requesting that the army under the
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command of Prince Klaus Papenheim be tasked with the defense of Procer
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itself.''
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Cordelia kept her face unruffled. The choice of a petition petition had
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been a clever trick of procedure, she had to admit, and one that'd
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surprised her. Milenan was within his rights to make a direct request to
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the First Prince, though not a demand -- the Principate had joined a
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crusade, which meant she had supreme authority over all armed men and
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any attempting to wrest it from her would be committing treason. Would
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that her opponents were such fools. If it had been a direct request,
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every delegate and royal casting their vote in favour of it would be
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effectively declaring they had lost faith in her ability to prosecute
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this war. In the middle of a crusade, that would be costly to their
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popularity at home as the people's mood had grown distinctly vengeful. A
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petition to request, on the other hand, would produce a formal document
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open to any attending sitter's signature that would be presented to her
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after the session. The vote over the motion itself would not be added to
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the record, keeping the implicit rebuke to her entirely private.
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It was clever in the sense that it allowed principalities neither in her
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camp nor Prince Amadis' to express their dissatisfaction: they could
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back the motion to have the petition, then withhold their signature on
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the document. Young Olivier had been busy in his uncle's service, she
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realized, and moreso than she had thought. He'd never have presented the
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motion if he did not believe it would pass. \emph{And when that petition
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is made passed along to every prince in Procer,} Cordelia thought,
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\emph{which we both know you will do, the unity of your uncle's own
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faction will be brought in contrast with my own dying alliances.} With a
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single act he was forcing her to publicly deny a petition that would be
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very popular in certain parts of her realm, wounded her prestige in the
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Highest Assembly and signaled to fence-sitters it might be time to place
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their coin on the horse pulling ahead. Alamans intrigue at is finest,
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this: three birds with a single stone, all headed for the thrower's own
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kitchen. How best to strangle this, then, before the blow caused a
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bruise?
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``The assembly recognizes \emph{l'assermentée} for Prince Arnaud
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Brogloise of Cantal,'' the Master of Orders announced.
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The sworn delegate, her dress and apparel perfect to the extent that
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even Cordelia could only be admiring, inclined her head respectfully
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before speaking.
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``The Prince of Cantal seconds the motion to petition the First Prince,
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and moves for immediate vote over it,'' she simply said.
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Striking swift, was it? They \emph{had} succeeded at arranging this
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under her nose, but assuming victory could be won by simple haste was
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rather bold of them. The Master of Orders glanced at her and she cleared
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her throat. His eyes went down to her lap, where he found her hands
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folded primly.
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``The assembly recognizes the Prince of Rhenia,'' he smoothly said.
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There was a ripple at that. The three Lycaonese in the back wore open
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smiles, and her old comrade Prince Frederic of Brus was leaning forward
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eagerly.
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``The Principality of Rhenia thirds the presented motion,'' she smiled
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calmly. ``Moreover, it requests for both the vote and preceding address
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to be entered into the formal public record.''
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A glint of amusement passed in the Master of Orders' rheumy eyes.
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``As per law, such a request can only be granted by the First Prince of
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Procer,'' he said. ``I now put the question to Her Most Serene Highness,
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First Prince of Procer, Princess of Salia.''
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Cordelia inclined her head.
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``I grant the request,'' she simply said.
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The blonde prince felt every eye in the room turn to her. Faces had
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blanked, eyes gone thoughtfully. Even Olivier Amadis had been visibly
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taken aback before mastering himself and was now staring at her warily.
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\emph{Wonder now, boy}, she thought. \emph{What I know that you do not.}
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Uncle Klaus was preparing for a march north even as session was held,
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after all. Let the record show Amadis Milenan's own nephew dragging his
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name through the mud even as the Iron Prince gathered supplies for his
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march to turn back the Dead King. Let every single one of these vultures
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be named as the handful that would abandon all of northern Procer to
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salvage their granaries. \emph{Scrape me raw if you dare, Milenan. I am
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willing to lose a little skin if in exchange I can have you and your
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fellows flayed in song in every tavern from Rhenia to Tenerife by the
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year's end. The men who sold Procer. It has a ring to it, does it not?}
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She met the boy eyes and smiled pleasantly.
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``Shall we proceed with the vote?'' she asked.
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Her gaze swept the rest of the room\emph{. And now we find out what
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worth are the bargains you made, Olivier. Will they stick with you, when
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they smell a trap? There is no one in this room unware that he who rides
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the Ebb must beware of the Flow.} Her prompting added to the sworn
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delegate from Cantal's had made it inevitable vote would immediately
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follow before any further discussion could be had. The Master of Orders
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called on the thrones in sequence, and it was an effort for Cordelia's
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face not to grow grim. Most of the supporters were expected. Iserre,
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Cantal, Orne, Creusens, Segovia and Aequitan. Prince Amadis and his
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closest supporters, those who had been defeated at the Battle of the
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Camps and were well aware that if the Iserran cause sunk they would soon
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follow it into the depths. Bayeux she'd expected as well, as parts of
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its countryside had been torched by the Carrion Lord. Orense, however,
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was an unpleasant surprise. She had saved its evidently ingrate prince
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from brutal Levantine raids barely more than a year ago. How quickly
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gratitude turned to naught. The sworn delegate from Valencis hesitated
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before abstaining, which was telling. If not for her ploy that would
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have been another vote in favour. Eight in favour, out of twenty four
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votes, and it could very easily have been nine. How many others had
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simply hidden their late change of heart more skillfully?
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The motion failed, and she had scored a wound that would not show for
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months yet, but she could feel the wind turning. The matter of the
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coming conclave needed to be squashed, lest today's abstentions become
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tomorrow's knives.
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---
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Cordelia was not one to easily discard etiquette. Rules were the
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birthing bed of civilization: common foundation could only be found when
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people agreed on the most essential standards of behaviour. Etiquette
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was merely the regulation of relationships between individuals, and
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while it could be used to oppress it could also be used to free. Rules
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always cut both ways
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Yet if there was one particular set she could grind into dust, it was
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the stringent courtesies governing audience between the Holies and the
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First Prince of Procer. It was a throwback of the Liturgical Wars, one
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no ruler of Procer had every felt quite secure enough to revisit. She
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was ushered into the Starlit Cloister by a handful of sisters who had
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taken vows of silence, her personal guard forced to remain outside, and
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led to a private garden. There she was guided in removing her dress and
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regalia before submitting to hour-long ablutions that left her without a
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single speck of artifice. Even her hair was unbraided, made to course
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down her shoulders without the slightest of stylings. It was wearing a
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white shift unflattering to her Hasenbach frame and barefoot that a
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brother finally sought her out, bowing low before informing her she was
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to be received.
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The entire process was said to be symbolic, a stripping of earthly
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trappings before she could be allowed to speak with souls untainted by
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such matters. Cordelia herself was of the opinion that the point of the
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exercise was to humble the ruler of Procer and disarray them before
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taking them into the very seat of power of the Holies. It was a gauntlet
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of rather unsubtle pressure, and one she resented. The Holies, after
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all, were a purely Proceran notion: an assembly of the leading priests
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of the House of Light's basilicas and cathedrals, with a smatter of
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administrators and highborn lay people added to the mixture. Still,
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unpleasant as this was it was a necessary unpleasantness. While the
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Holies might not wield authority in any official sense -- their very
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existence was informal, and the requirements for counting among their
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number opaque to any outside of the House of Light -- their influence
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assured that anything they agreed on would miraculously become policy
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shortly afterwards.
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They must be convinced, at all costs.
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The corpulent brother guiding her did so through a handful of sunlit
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corridors before pausing before a thick oaken gate. He bowed once more,
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observing the required angle perfectly, and left without a word.
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Cordelia allowed herself the weakness of a moment's rest to gather her
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bearings. She silently marshalled her arguments, brought to mind faces
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and names and associated interests. They could be moved, as all men
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could be moved. Through the wood she heard a spatter of female laughter
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and the sound of cup being dropped, brow rising in response. Her hand
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rose to the heavy iron ring on the door, knocking thrice before pulling.
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The absence of a footpad to serve that purpose in her stead was yet
|
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another petty little test for any seeking audience. The door creaked
|
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open, and immediately Cordelia's face stilled. She'd had audience with
|
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the Holies only once before, shortly before her coronation, and this was
|
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not the ornate hall where she had then been received.
|
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|
|
It was instead a cramped arched dining room, filled with only a long
|
|
table and a handful of seats. In the back a woman was leaning her seat
|
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so far back half the legs were off the floor, feet resting atop the
|
|
table. She was old, skin creased and her forehead mottled with spots
|
|
under a braid of stark white hair. The eyes, though, the eyes were
|
|
sharp. Dark and patient.
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|
|
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``Good evening, Your Highness,'' the Saint of Swords nonchalantly call
|
|
out.
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|
Her mind spun. She'd set out aiming to find out which of the Chosen had
|
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demanded the conclave, and already she had her answer. She
|
|
absent-mindedly noted a handful of details in quick succession -- there
|
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were two cups, not one, and one had been toppled. It'd spilled liquor
|
|
all over the table. The other goblet was in the hands of the heroine,
|
|
inclined at an angle that allowed her to recognize water within. They
|
|
were alone in the room, the only other door behind the Saint, and the
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chandeliers casting light allowed moving shadows to be cast into the
|
|
corners.
|
|
|
|
``Laurence de Montfort,'' Cordelia calmly replied, inclining her head by
|
|
the barest of fractions. ``An unexpected pleasure. I was led to believe
|
|
I would be addressing the Holies.''
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|
|
|
``I sent them away for a walk,'' the heroine still known in Procer as
|
|
the Regicide shrugged. ``This is a talk for adults, not squabbling
|
|
children.''
|
|
|
|
Most royalty in her position, Cordelia thought, would be wondering if
|
|
they were about to be carved up. She knew better. There were matters in
|
|
which the First Prince did not trust the judgement of her uncle -- tax
|
|
policy, trade, putting his seal to a budget that did not overwhelmingly
|
|
favour the army -- but he was a very sharp judge of character. \emph{A
|
|
hard woman}, he'd said of the Saint, \emph{but she always means well.}
|
|
The blonde prince claimed a seat at the opposite end of the table
|
|
without waiting for an invitation. The Chosen was not the host, here,
|
|
only another guest.
|
|
|
|
``I take it this conclave is your work,'' Cordelia said, settling down
|
|
and forcing herself to ignore the unpleasant itch of her shift against
|
|
her skin. ``Should I expect the Grey Pilgrim to join us as well?''
|
|
|
|
``Tariq's busy skinning of the many cats making a racket in your
|
|
backyard,'' the old woman dismissed. ``I'll be following him as soon as
|
|
this business is finished.''
|
|
|
|
``And what business would that be, exactly?'' she asked. ``Your
|
|
reputation does not mention an interest in statecraft.''
|
|
|
|
The Saint of Swords set down her cup on the table, then dragged her legs
|
|
down. Her chair returned to the stone floor with a sharp clack.
|
|
|
|
``I find I am disappointed in you, Cordelia Hasenbach,'' the Regicide
|
|
said. ``You're promising in a lot of ways, I won't deny. You're taking a
|
|
hatchet to the rot, however politely, and you've been herding the
|
|
crowned wolves well enough. But this? You should know better. You're
|
|
Lycaonese. You know the Enemy's face.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia cocked her head to the side, keeping the pretence of calm in
|
|
truth rapidly leaving her.
|
|
|
|
``Not merely the conclave,'' she deduced. ``It is your own notion to
|
|
have the Black Queen named Arch-heretic of the East.''
|
|
|
|
The old woman grinned harshly.
|
|
|
|
``They were eager enough, truth be told,'' the Saint said. ``Just needed
|
|
a little push. That I needed to give it at all is what got me in such a
|
|
meddling mood. You're flinching, Hasenbach. You've been down here too
|
|
long, the iron's beginning to rust.''
|
|
|
|
The First Prince's lips thinned. It had been a very long time since
|
|
she'd been offered such blatant disrespect.
|
|
|
|
``You know less than you think,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
```Ol King Bones is stirring, you mean,'' the Chosen replied.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia's fingers tightened in her lap, a rare lapse of control on her
|
|
part. How did she know? Had the Heavens whispered the secret in her ear?
|
|
No, it did not matter. If she \emph{did} know, why would she act so
|
|
recklessly?
|
|
|
|
``You should be aware, then, that further prosecuting the war against
|
|
Callow is unwise,'' the First Prince said. ``War on two fronts is
|
|
foolish at the best of times. War on two fronts when one is the Kingdom
|
|
of the Dead is \emph{lunacy}. We cannot start a life and death struggle
|
|
with the Black Queen when the marching dead gather north. It will be the
|
|
ruin of the Principate, Saint. No amount of miracles can make hosts
|
|
fight two battles simultaneously.''
|
|
|
|
``You mean,'' Laurence de Montfort said softly, ``to make truce with the
|
|
Enemy. Listen to yourself, girl. Your ancestors would cut your bloody
|
|
throat for this.''
|
|
|
|
``My ancestors were guarding a handful of passes and crossings,''
|
|
Cordelia sharply replied. ``I am charged with the entirety of Procer,
|
|
and my failure would mean the slaughter of millions. I would rather be
|
|
censured by the blind dead than watch the risen kind butcher half the
|
|
Principate. You are gambling with the lives of more people than you have
|
|
ever seen, Saint. What worth will your soft sentences be, when the Army
|
|
of Callow falls on our flank and Keter devours the rest?''
|
|
|
|
``You don't understand what this is, do you?'' the Saint smiled. ``This
|
|
is not the War of the Grand Alliance or the second invasion of Callow.
|
|
It's the \emph{Tenth Crusade}. You slapped the gauntlet down, girl, and
|
|
now Below's picking it up. There is no compromise to be had anymore, no
|
|
subtle manoeuvering. You declared war on the Hellgods, and the sword
|
|
will not return to the sheath until one side falls.''
|
|
|
|
``A crusade can be waged intelligently,'' the First Prince said. ``It
|
|
must, or it will fail like those before it.''
|
|
|
|
``That's where you misunderstand,'' the Saint amiably said. ``You think
|
|
all of this\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
Her hand moved to encompass their surroundings.
|
|
|
|
``Is inviolable,'' she continued. ``It's an understandable weakness. You
|
|
rule here, after all, and love for your people is no sin. But everything
|
|
dies, Cordelia Hasenbach. Even empires.''
|
|
|
|
The blond woman paled.
|
|
|
|
``This is treason,'' she coldly said. ``As good as a confession you seek
|
|
the destruction of the Principate.''
|
|
|
|
``This whole damned house is \emph{rotten to the bone}, girl,'' the
|
|
Saint said. ``You've toiled and troubled and fought like lion, but it'll
|
|
die with you. You know that already, deep down. Maybe the Principate was
|
|
what it should be, ages ago, but it has not been in a very long time.
|
|
It's greed and power and lies, hungry wars and treachery made into the
|
|
mortar of palaces. The sickness is all it knows, now.''
|
|
|
|
``You are mad,'' Cordelia spoke in a hushed whisper. ``Gods Above, your
|
|
mind has gone and you would take all of us with it.''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, we'll bleed,'' the Saint mused. ``We'll lose \emph{badly}, at
|
|
first. And then we'll claw our way back up, inch by inch. Evil always
|
|
wins at the start, but it's us who owns the conclusion. And from the
|
|
ruins something better will rise. This empire's already a corpse, but
|
|
we'll send it off with a pyre glorious enough it'll redeem the old
|
|
faults.''
|
|
|
|
``I will have you arrested,'' the First Prince of Procer said. ``I will
|
|
have you killed, if that is what it takes.''
|
|
|
|
``You just worry about getting the armies marching,'' Laurence de
|
|
Montfort dismissed. ``Odds are I won't survive the scrap, but that's all
|
|
right. It's a good war to die in. It'll be the crusade that settles it,
|
|
you see: too many old monsters came crawling out on both sides. Won't be
|
|
the kind of losses a side can recover from.''
|
|
|
|
``You are not listening to a word I say,'' Cordelia whispered, aghast.
|
|
|
|
The Saint of Swords rose to her feet jauntily. The First Prince's
|
|
muscles clenched, though she managed to flinch when the Chosen
|
|
approached her. The old woman clapped her shoulder.
|
|
|
|
``Keep your chin up, girl,'' she said. ``Sacrifice is always ugly
|
|
business, but we'll come through in the end. To rise from the ashes,
|
|
there needs to be a fire first.''
|
|
|
|
The Saint of Swords strolled out, boots slapping against the stone, and
|
|
the sound of the door closing behind her was the death cry of an era.
|