436 lines
20 KiB
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436 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-crusaders}{%
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\section{Interlude: Crusaders}\label{interlude-crusaders}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``There is no absolute virtue to peace. To avoid war out of petty
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fear is the exact same moral failure as waging war in name of it.''}
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-- Clément Merovins, fourth First Prince of Procer
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\end{quote}
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``They're up to something,'' Princess Rozala of Aequitan said.
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She had, that very morning, received a second report on enemy movements
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that baffled her. Unlike Amadis, who already saw their victory as writ
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in the sky and was positioning to benefit from the aftermath, the only
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daughter of Aenor of Aequitan had made deep study of their enemy. Oh,
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the Prince of Iserre was not a fool. Ambitious beyond reason, perhaps,
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but no imbecile. He'd be much easier to deal with if he were. Yet he
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only ever saw war as the pursuit of political advantage through steel,
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and that blinded him to the nature of the foe before them. Rozala was an
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Arlesite of ancient line, and her kind were as distinguished with the
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sword as they were with verse. Her people had fought and fought well in
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almost every major war since the founding of the Principate, and the
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Malanzas had been famed as generals long before they rose to royalty.
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Which was why this `Army of Callow' worried her. The Legions of Terror,
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in their current incarnation, were admittedly one of the finest military
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machines on Calernia -- second in lethality perhaps only to the army of
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Helike, though much more numerous. Yet that was not what she was facing:
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more than half the Army of Callow was foot from that same kingdom, and
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more worryingly under the Black Queen's banner rode \emph{knight}s.
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Prince Papenheim had taught her mother a bloody lesson in the dangers of
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engaging heavy cavalry with light, at the Battle of Aisne. Rozala had no
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intention of repeating the mistakes that forced Aenor of Aequitan to
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drink mandrake extract. She had seen the aftermath of the Regal
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Kindness, and it was neither of those things.
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``Praesi are known to have a certain low cunning,'' Prince Arnaud of
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Cantal mused. ``No doubt they've some sort of parlour trick in the
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works.''
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Rozala eyed the middle-aged man with open distaste. The man was the
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living justification of every prejudice about Alamans arrogance, and she
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would have disliked him for that even if her agents had not learned
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about his\ldots{} proclivities. She was no Lycaonese prude, but someone
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taking a knife to that man's cock would have been a boon to Creation.
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``We underestimate the Empire at our own risk,'' Princess Adeline of
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Orne sharply replied.
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Rozala inclined her head in thanks and the other young woman offered the
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ghost of a smile in return. Adeline had already hinted that she was not
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so securely under Amadis' thumb as the prince seemed to believe, through
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subtle intermediaries. Of all the royals to have crossed the Stairway,
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the Princess of Aequitan was fondest of this one. Adeline had ruled Orne
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for less than a year now, ascending to the throne after the
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assassination of her brother at the hands of what was speculated to be
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the Assassin himself. The princess understood the dangers of tangling
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with the Tower better than most. She also despised the First Prince to
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the bone. The Augur had, after all, not seen fit to give warning about
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her beloved brother's coming death. Cordelia Hasenbach, they were
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learning, could kill simply by staying silent.
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``It is unseemly for women of your standing to quake at the coming of
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the Carrion Lord's bastard,'' Prince Arnaud sneered.
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Rozala's lips thinned. There were persistent rumours that the Black
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Queen was the villain's illegitimate daughter, though she put no more
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stock in those than the speculation she was some distant Fairfax spared
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after the Conquest and reared in secret over the decades that followed.
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``It is unseemly for a `man' of your standing to be such a relentless
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jackass, Arnaud,'' Princess Adeline replied with a lightness that belied
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the anger beneath it. ``But you don't hear \emph{us} snipe about it, do
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you?''
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Rozala sighed almost inaudibly. The Princess of Orne needed to learn to
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leash her temper, else they would eat her alive in the Highest Assembly.
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An ally this easy to bait was more liability than grace. She would have
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intervened to soothe the tempers, but Amadis finally decided to grace
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them with his presence. He was not, she saw, alone. The kindly wizened
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face of the Grey Pilgrim was a welcome addition to this council, but the
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other silhouette flanking the Prince of Iserre was not. Laurence de
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Montfort was short and skinny, for so infamous a woman, and her creased
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cheeks were showing the mottled spots of creeping age. They did nothing
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to detract from the austere presence of the Saint of Swords. The
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Princess of Aequitan stiffened, though she forced her shoulders to
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loosen before anyone could notice. Not royalty could ever be comfortable
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in the presence of the Regicide.
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``I do hope my lateness caused no offence,'' Amadis Milenan affably
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smiled. ``It occurred to me that an infusion of wisdom to this council
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would benefit us all, hence my company.''
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The smile was a little too broad, Rozala decided, to be entirely
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truthful. Had the heroes strong-armed him into inviting them along? They
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had certainly begun wielding their influence more strongly since the
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crossing. For all that the Saint was the one who brought sharp
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discomfort, it had been the Grey Pilgrim that brought terms back from
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the failed attempt at diplomacy in the south. The man was much more
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influential than his easy manners suggested.
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``We are honoured to be offered seat at his table,'' the Pilgrim smiled,
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inclining his head.
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``Honoured, yes,'' the Saint drawled, a hard smile splitting her face.
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The Regicide had been exceedingly clear about her low esteem for royalty
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as a whole, which cast interesting light to the rumours she'd once been
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the lover of Klaus Papenheim. It would take someone with stomach as
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steady as the Iron Prince's to bed that one, Rozala silently conceded.
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For all they knew all there was down there was more swords, though for a
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Lycaonese that might just be spice in the wine.
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``No offence at all,'' Prince Arnaud smiled brightly. ``We always
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welcome the advice of those Chosen by the Heavens.''
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Rozala hid her derisive snort behind a sip of wine as the heroes and
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their glorious leader took their seats.
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``Princess Rozala was expressing worries about Praesi scheming,''
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Princess Adeline spoke up.
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More to break the heavy silence than anything else, the ruler of
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Aequitan suspected. She did not grudge her the distraction.
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``Ah,'' the Grey Pilgrim smiled gently. ``Always a subject worthy of
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interest, yet I would caution you that it is not Praesi we face. It
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would be a mistake, Your Graces, to believe the army to the south
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anything but Callowan.''
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Rozala disliked the notion of taking military advice from priestly
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vagrant, however high his repute, but the circumstances warranted
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prudence. It was a villain that led the Army of Callow, and she knew
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little of their breed compared to the old man.
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``Callowan she may be, but her throne was built on sand,'' Amadis
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languidly added. ``Her grasp on the kingdom remains shallow. Duchess
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Kegan Iarsmai has already replied to my envoys.''
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Rozala hid her surprise. For all of Amadis' swagger, she'd fully
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expected the House of Iarsmai to remain aloof from the crusade until a
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clear winner could be discerned. The Prince of Iserre's smile broadened
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as he looked at her, the unspoken gloating ringing loud.
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``Though she will not declare for us openly at the moment, she was
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willing to send a detachment of the Watch to join our forces,'' Amadis
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revealed. ``They've already begun to sail across the Silver Lake, and I
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expect they will swell our ranks in time for battle.''
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The Arlesite princess frowned, displeased she'd been cut out of
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negotiations involving military matters.
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``And how many of the Watch did she pledge?'' she asked.
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``A full thousand,'' Amadis said. ``Easily worth thrice that number, if
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the old histories are to be believed.''
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\emph{And what did you have to promise that Deoraithe fox to get them, I
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wonder}? Rozala thought. Amadis Milenan had been rather generous of late
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in partitioning the kingdom he expected her to conquer for him.
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``You really should have been smacked more often as a child, Amadis,''
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the Saint of Swords idly said. ``Gods know a few bruises would have done
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wonders for your character.''
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The silence in the tent was so absolute it was nearly palpable. Rozala
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smothered a very unseemly grin.
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``Pardon?'' the Prince of Iserre coldly said.
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``You heard me just fine, you repulsive little wart,'' Laurence de
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Montfort said. ``Kegan Iarsmai fought a campaign with the Black Queen
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less than a year ago and you think that, what? Your viper tongue
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befuddled a \emph{Duchess of Daoine}? That house was putting Praesi
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heads on pikes back when your ancestors were shitting in their own huts.
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She's playing you like a spectacularly dim fiddle.''
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Amadis Milenan's face purpled with fury. It was unlikely, Rozala mused
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with dark delight, that anyone had insulted him this bluntly even once
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in his life. The Grey Pilgrim cleared his throat.
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``Laurence,'' he reproached.
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The Saint of Swords sighed.
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``Fine,'' she said. ``The honourable Prince of Iserre is displaying the
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intellectual faculties of an \emph{averagely} dim fiddle.''
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The Grey Pilgrim looked pained.
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``What my blunt-spoken friend means, Your Grace,'' he intervened, ``is
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that Catherine Foundling belongs to a very specific breed of villainy.
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The nature of her Bestowal is what my people call a \emph{thresher}. One
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who separates the wheat from the chaff. She will earn great enmity, but
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also great loyalty. And she has fought by the side of Duchess Kegan
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before, against common foe.''
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Rozala was honest enough to admit that watching the Prince of Iserre
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having to swallow his cold fury to avoid beginning a feud with heroes
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was making her evening. Perhaps even her month.
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``The Duchess bargained well,'' the prince stiffly said. ``And extracted
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great concessions in rights and territory. The Queen of Callow has
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naught to offer of equivalent value.''
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So, land had been sold. Rozala wondered how far he'd gone. Had Laure
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been offered up? Denieralmost certainly, it was the old dagger the
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Fairfaxes had kept pointed at Daoine's belly in case the Deoraithe began
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talking of independence again. The Princess of Aequitan quietly cleared
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her throat, gaining everyone'd attention.
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``I'll be blunt,'' she said. ``The Black Queen should scare everyone in
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this tent. She has displayed surprising restraint so far, but this is
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the same woman who crucified a few hundred mages after the Doom to make
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a point. We are cornering her, and she has a reputation for baring her
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fangs when cornered.''
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Rozala sipped at her wine, drawing out her point in a reminder that in
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matters military it was her word that counted most.
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``We marched out believing she'd come after the first bait we set out,''
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she continued. ``The failure of the trap at Harrow makes it very clear
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we were wrong in our assessment. And that is without considering she not
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only knew about the overtures to Baron Darlington, but turned that
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debacle into an offer of her own. I expected she scares the Duchess a
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lot more than we do, at the moment. Any contribution from her is
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suspect.''
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\emph{I'm not going to let you forget the Darlington failure any time
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soon, Amadis}, she thought, smiling at the Prince of Iserre. \emph{So
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much for the north rising up behind the Black Queen.}
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``Making terms with the Enemy is always a fucking blunder,'' the Saint
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of Swords said. ``Mark my words, the moment she feels the noose
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tightening the usual horrors are coming out. You should have smoked her
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then and there.''
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``She spoke truth, Laurence,'' the Grey Pilgrim stated, and there was
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iron beneath the mildness. ``Do not gainsay me on this. I find it deeply
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shameful that any of us would hesitate at an opportunity to lessen the
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bloodbath, no matter the provenance.''
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``You've always been soft, Tariq,'' the Saint said. ``The only thing I
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agree on with this band of clucking hens is that the east is in need of
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a good cleansing. The rot will only spread if we spare the flame. We go
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in half-hearted, and you know we'll have to come back in twenty years.
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Assuming we're still around.''
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Something pale and cold roiled in the Grey Pilgrim's eyes. Rozala felt
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the taste of a storm against the roof of her mouth. It unsettled her
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enough she spared no irritation for having been called a hen.
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``You should know better,'' the hero quietly said, ``than to question
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how far I will go to spare this world pain. You, of all people.''
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The old woman looked uncomfortable, then chastised. Rozala's eyes
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sharpened with interest. Of all the Named gathered under the banner of
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her army, these two were known to be first among equals. That they would
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quarrel at all had interesting implications. Until now, the politics of
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the heroes had been utterly opaque to her save for the fact that the
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other Levantines took the Pilgrim's words as sacred writ. All of the
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Named had resisted attempts to induce them into a deeper relationship so
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far, but if this rift before her was exploitable there were\ldots{}
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possibilities to keep in mind. Known ties to a Chosen would silence her
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brother's ambitions for good, no matter his schemes.
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``Apologies,'' the Saint finally said. ``You know my temper.''
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``Like a bear with a bad tooth,'' the Pilgrim fondly said, patting her
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hand. ``Already forgotten. We are all worried about the young ones in
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the south.''
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Princess Adeline cleared her throat daintily.
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``Apologies, Chosen,'' she said. ``But if I may ask, are you speaking of
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the heroes marching for the Vales?''
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``I was under the impression the remaining Calamities were expected to
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fold,'' Rozala added warily.
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If the Red Flower Vales held, their position up north became exceedingly
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precarious. Their supply lines would be effectively impossible to
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maintain as soon as they passed Hedges, and the First Prince had
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indicated she would be \emph{displeased} if the crusaders turned to
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foraging in Callow. The Arlesite princess wasn't going to starve her
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army out of fear of offending Hasenbach, but she'd also rather avoid
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kicking that nest of wasps for a while still.
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``In matters of might, the Carrion Lord is outmatched,'' the Pilgrim
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agreed. ``So, we suspect, is the Warlock.''
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The Saint snorted inelegantly.
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``The Witch is from Brocelian Forest,'' she said. ``What she learned,
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she learned from the Gigantes. And that lot ruled the roost while the
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Praesi were still busy figuring what cocks are for. She'll pulp his ass
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across the valley floor, if they go spell for spell.''
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``Young Hanno has already fought the Black Knight once,'' the Pilgrim
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smiled. ``He will not repeat previous mistakes. Yet the opponents are
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villains grown old, and this is a rare thing for a reason. It will not
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be an easy victory.''
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``The man is one of Ranger's toys,'' the Saint conceded. ``And that
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ornery old bitch plays rough. He won't go down without making a mess.''
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The Levantine flicked an amused glance at his companion, but did not
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comment.
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``We thank you for your guidance,'' Prince Amadis said calmly. ``Yet I
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fear we have strayed from the purpose of this council. Princess Malanza
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was expressing worries, I believe?''
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Rozala nodded.
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``It's clear that the Black Queen is expecting to give battle on the
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outskirts of the Barony of Hedges,'' she said. ``But I've been getting
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reports of her splitting up her host, and that honestly baffles me. We
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outnumber her by more than two to one. She should be the one attempting
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defeat in detail, not the one offering me that opportunity on a silver
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platter.''
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``She is barely more than a child,'' Prince Arnaud shrugged. ``Blunders
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are to be expected.''
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And there went the only Alamans royalty in the tent, breaking his
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silence to offer idiocy.
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``She's a girl that never lost a battle,'' Prince Amadis warned. ``In
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matters of statecraft poor judgement is to be expected, but she is not
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unskilled at war.''
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``She could have gotten arrogant,'' Rozala admitted. ``It's not uncommon
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in undefeated commanders, and that she was confident enough to offer
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limiting rules of engagement when so heavily outnumbered is telling. But
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I imagine the Exiled Prince and the Summer Court told themselves much
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the same right before she ripped out their guts.''
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``Though her nature is undeniably warped,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, ``she
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struck me as remarkably clear-sighted in some regards. Not a woman prone
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to blind mistakes.''
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``There's a whole city of dead Callowans that begs to disagree,'' the
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Saint drawled.
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``It is not only the children of the Heavens that can learn from their
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mistakes,'' the Pilgrim chided her. ``She will be wary of being burned
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in that manner again.''
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``Perhaps she intends to gather her forces through the fairy gates,''
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Princess Adeline suggested.
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``We know there's a delay for journeying through Arcadia,'' Rozala
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replied, shaking her head. ``And she can only take one host at a time.
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There are three columns marching towards us. Even if she timed it
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perfectly, she'd still have a third of her army in the wrong place when
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the battle begins. Which, to put it bluntly, she cannot afford if she
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wants even a shadow of a chance of winning.''
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``We know the Wild Hunt is sworn to her,'' Prince Arnaud said. ``Perhaps
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she \emph{can} make multiple gates.''
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``I can't dismiss that possibility out of hand,'' the Princess of
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Aequitan agreed. ``But that still begs the question of \emph{why} she'd
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split her forces in the first place. She has to know we'll be expecting
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gates to appear at our flanks and back when we engage. There would be no
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element of surprise, and that is half the advantage to be had with them.
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And if our foot moves quickly enough towards the gates, we could even
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keep her penned inside Arcadia. It is risking disaster for no gain I can
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discern.''
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``That is worrying,'' the Grey Pilgrim admitted. ``I must see to the
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children, Your Graces, but I will seek guidance from Above on the
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matter. Perhaps a meaning to this can be divined.''
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Rozala hid her surprise. She'd been under the impression that
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future-telling was rare even among heroes, and often too vague to be of
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any practical use. The Augur was rumoured to be speaking in tongues half
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the time, and that Hasenbach was constantly struggling to turn her
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attention to threats instead of weather patterns. If the Grey Pilgrim
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could truly discern the workings of Fate, however, this was major
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advantage. It was irritating that such a thing would only now be
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revealed, but then Rozala was hardly in a position to chide the man for
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it.
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``We will look forward to hearing your wisdom, Chosen,'' the Princess of
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Aequitan said.
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The man rose, and bowed deep. He cast a look at the Saint, who smiled
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but shook her head. Rozala schooled her face into calm. She had an
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inkling that what would follow would not be pleasant. Silence followed
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in the wake of the departing Pilgrim, until the Saint of Swords sighed.
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``He's a good man, you know,'' Laurence de Montfort said. ``Likes to see
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the best in people.''
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``A-`` Prince Arnaud began, but he was interrupted.
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The Saint raked her fingers across the table, leaving deep gouges in the
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wood that no mortal fingers could have made. The sound was deafening, an
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ugly grind of steel.
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``Shut the fuck up, you insignificant toady,'' the Saint said. ``Now,
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Tariq chooses to believe in your moral fibre but I \emph{know} better. I
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know the wickedness that you crave, that sweet whisper of earthly power.
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There are some among you, even now, that believe holy war can be made
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tool of ambition.''
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The old woman smiled at them, cold and terrible and utterly indifferent
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to their survival.
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``You will not disappoint this nice old man,'' she said. ``You will keep
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to the terms, and not seek to work around them. And if you seek
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otherwise?''
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The Saint barked out a harsh laugh.
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``You might be under the delusion that the consequences of ripping you
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animals to pieces would give me pause,'' she mused. ``Discard that
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notion, princelings. The only people I answer to are up Above, and they
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exactly what you are made of.''
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Laurence de Montfort rose to her feet, shrugging.
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``Think of me as the angel on your shoulders,'' she suggested. ``You
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know, the one that says `be Good, my children, or I will \emph{fucking
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dine on your entrails like an orc}.''
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The Saint of Swords smiled at them, wagging a finger.
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``I think we have an understanding, don't we?''
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No one nodded.
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No one needed to.
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