373 lines
20 KiB
TeX
373 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-22-trip}{%
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\section{Chapter 22: Trip}\label{chapter-22-trip}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A war fought and won for the wrong reasons, under the wrong
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cause, can be a greater threat to the Praes than simple defeat.
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Maleficent the First spoke of villains raising their own gallows, but
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failed to add that the killing stroke in a hanging comes from the height
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of the drop.''}
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-- Extract from `The Death of the Age of Wonders', a treatise by Dread
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Empress Malicia
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\end{quote}
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``Preposterous,'' Prince Arnaud of Cantal blustered.
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He wasn't the only one to speak up in the aftermath of that particular
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trebuchet stone being lobbed, but he was by far the loudest. And his
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heartbeat had not changed in the slightest, though his face was the very
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picture of angry befuddlement. All right, that one bore watching. I'd
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never met anyone this good at acting outside of the High Lords and
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\emph{maybe} a handful of Named. I leaned back into my seat and riffled
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through my cloak pockets until I had my pipe in hand. The small satchel
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of wakeleaf parted under my fingers and I poured the contents into the
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chamber. I had a few matches, but also a quicker way. I coughed until
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Masego turned his attention from the book he was not-so-discretely
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reading under the table to me. I tapped the side of the pipe he'd gifted
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me with a finger. Scoffing, he flicked his wrist and fire bloomed within
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the chamber.
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``Thank you, Lord Hierophant,'' I drawled. ``As for the many statements
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of the Proceran delegation, I'll point you to the Chosen known as the
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Grey Pilgrim. A truth-teller of great skill, as I understand it.''
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The gaze of everyone in the pavilion moved to the old man, still
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standing and devoid of expression. \emph{That's right,} I thought.
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\emph{I'm not lying.} I didn't have to. I very much doubted the Grand
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Alliance would just hand me a tankard and invite me to sit at the table,
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but even a refusal would need more than just Hasenbach involved. The
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Ashurans would have to put the question through committees, unless their
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quasi-king Magon Hadast intervened, and more importantly the Dominion
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would have to go through the Majilis. Their inept, bickering and deeply
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divided equivalent to the Highest Assembly. The entire process could
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take months even for a refusal. And if they accepted? Well, it wasn't
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like I wasn't intending to make deals with all of them eventually. It
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was a necessary component to the Liesse Accords being adopted. It was a
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different approach than I'd intended, but so long as it worked what did
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I care?
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``The Queen in Callow did not speak a lie,'' the Pilgrim flatly said.
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I'd been a bit too much to swallow to tell them outright I was telling
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the truth, apparently. Nice to know even the Peregrine could be petty.
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``This is a trick,'' Princess Adeline of Orne insisted. ``You are one of
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the Damned.''
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Fancy Proceran talk for villain, I took it. \emph{The Chosen and the
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Damned, huh.} Somehow I suspected a lot of foreign heroes who ended up
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fighting against Procer also ended up, by pure coincidence of course,
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painted with damnation brush. I breathed in the smoke, then allowed it
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to billow upwards with my exhale.
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``And?'' I said. ``I already offered the Pilgrim passage through Arcadia
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if your army was willing to assault Praes directly. I'm not exactly
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unwilling to kick in the Empire's teeth, Princess, and I was under the
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impression that was exactly what the Tenth Crusade was about. Or are
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there other concerns I don't know about?''
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My smile turned a little colder at that. She did not flinch, but her
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heartbeat quickened in fear. The taste of it was just as intoxicating as
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the wine I was oathbound not to drink. Brave soul, that one, but out of
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her depth today. She wasn't in on the game the Pilgrim was playing.
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Prince Amadis began to speak, but the Pilgrim hastily cleared his throat
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to stay the man's tongue. \emph{Wouldn't do to have the mortals fuck up
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your scheme, would it?}
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``As a vassal state of the Tower-'' the old man began.
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``Is the Proceran delegation turning back on the premises of this
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negotiation?'' Aisha interrupted smilingly. ``You are addressing the
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Queen in Callow, Grey Pilgrim, by mutual agreement.''
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I beamed at the lovely tribune. Ah, Aisha. Always quick on the uptake,
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wasn't she? If it didn't have `terrible idea' written all over it in red
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ink, it would be tempting to give her a whirl.
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``Over twenty thousand men were butchered by the Army of Callow,''
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Malanza spoke up. ``You expect us to \emph{ignore} this?''
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``All a misunderstanding, evidently,'' I replied calmly. ``I believed
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your expeditionary force to be an attempt at invasion. I regret what
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came from it, but you must understand that Callowans have a chequered
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history with armies crossing our borders after using massive sorcerous
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rituals.''
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There was a muted sound as Brandon Talbot choked on his tongue. The
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implied comparison to the Dread Empire ruffled more than a few feathers
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on the other side of the table, but they couldn't exactly deny the
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bird's eye view of it. Hasenbach's burning of a passage was admittedly
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more grounded than your average Dread Emperor's crowning disaster, but
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the similarities were there.
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``Your alleged intent to seek alignment with the Grand Alliance is
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irrelevant to the negotiations being held today,'' the Pilgrim said.
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I glanced at Aisha. I was pulling one on him so far but it wouldn't do
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to get cocky. The more we conversed the higher the chances he turned the
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tables.
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``That is inaccurate,'' the Taghreb aristocrat replied. ``As is would be
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unlawful to be a signatory of the Alliance while paying any form of
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tribute to the Tower, providing this statement served the purpose of
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answering your question.''
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\emph{So}, I mused, watching Amadis across the table even though he was
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not the object of my thoughts. \emph{You going to keep fighting this
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one, Pilgrim, or give ground and rally for the third?} I'd cut the grass
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under his feet by presenting myself as a possible ally, right in the
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wake of a bloody battle that saw no clear winner. He couldn't work the
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`heroes with their back up against the wall' story angle with a
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foundation that weak, not while the Procerans were fed and under truce.
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`Evil turns on Evil' had been his move, but I should have tiptoed around
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the pitfall by stating in front of a truth-teller that I was willing to
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slap some red crosses onto the armour of the Army of Callow and fight
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the Good fight. That'd make me the one prick in every heroic band that
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crossed lines for the Greater Good, if it worked. The Lone Swordsman of
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continental coalitions, if you would. \emph{Two for two, so far. Parry
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and riposte. But we both know it's the third one that matters, don't
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we}? I puff at my pipe, allowing the wakeleaf to fill my lungs. The old
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man was studying me in silence, but I did not meet his eyes.
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``The clarification was sufficient,'' Pilgrim finally said, and sat
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down.
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Cutting his losses, I presumed, since I was no longer willing to engage.
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I remained silent as negotiations picked up again through
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intermediaries. The Procerans made an argument that reparations were not
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needed if this was all an accident, but Aisha turned it around by noting
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that the sale of supplies was a different matter entirely. That the
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terms of the truce specifically did not prevent them from entering Praes
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took the wind out of their sails, since they had to maintain the
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pretence that their `expeditionary force' wasn't an army meant to invade
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Callow -- if they strayed from that, they were entering a nightmarish
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quagmire of war reparations and official apologies none of them could
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really afford back in Procer. My attention began to wane as the hours
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passed, tediously taking us to Afternoon Bell, but I forced myself to
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follow everything closely. I could not afford to be taken unawares when
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the Pilgrim intervened again. Yet none of the heroes spoke so much as a
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word, and I grew tenser the longer the sword remained hanging over my
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head. My side got its way when it came to terms of payment for the
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supplies, though the Procerans bargained down to only needing to pay a
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quarter of the total sum directly out of their pockets even if it was
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framed as a loan from Hasenbach to them. Odds were the First Prince
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would flip them the finger and that quarter was all I'd ever see, but
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considering I was essentially selling them back their own supplies I'd
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take it anyway. Even just having the documents would give me something
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to use when I had to treat with Hasenbach herself down the line.
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The diplomatic claptrap continued, polite verbal fencing back and forth
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across the table. The crusaders tried to fuck us over what land was
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actually recognized as `under the rule of the Queen in Callow', and to
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my distaste got the better of it. I couldn't exactly make the argument
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that the Red Flower Vales were mine when they were factually in the
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hands of the Legions of Terror, and that meant the northern crusade
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could move against Black down there without breaking our terms. It'd be
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months before they even got out of Callow, I told myself. And it would
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take even more time for them to recover and march on the Vales. By then
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Black would either have won or lost against Papenheim. If he'd won, I'd
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have to trust that he could hold the valleys regardless. I couldn't
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afford for him not to. And if he lost, well, the northern crusade would
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still be forbidden to go further than the Vales until the truce ran out.
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At that point I'd have more immediate problems anyway. We weren't
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halfway to Evening Bell and there was only a single issue that hadn't
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been addressed, guarantees for the treaty -- though we'd have to double
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back to the supplies since that one had been kicked down the slope by
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Prince Amadis. It was beginning to look like we'd walk out of the
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pavilion with an actual agreement before nightfall, which had me wary.
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The Procerans could have delayed much more than they had. We'd
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\emph{expected} them to, as long as the battle for the Vales was
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undecided. This was going well, which meant I was about to have my
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knuckles rapped. Except the Pilgrim didn't get up. It was the mouthpiece
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that addressed the subject, and my fingers clenched under the table.
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This wasn't going to be straightforward negotiations, since it was about
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the mechanisms that would be enforcing the treaty. I wanted oaths to the
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Heavens out of everyone involved, witnessed by a hero, but Aisha had
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pretty bluntly informed me that wasn't going to happen even if I offered
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to make an oath of my own. Our best guess was that they'd push for
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something along the lines of the agreement being made public so anyone
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breaking it would have their reputation tarnished. We wouldn't accept
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that, since they might very well get away with breaking a treaty with a
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villain with praise for being clever in screwing over the enemy instead
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of any backlash for dealing in bad faith. The compromise we'd be working
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for was material value being left behind as guarantee, as well as
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staggered departure for the Proceran host so we'd have a knife at their
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throat if they tried to double-cross us. Breaking a promise to the
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bearer of a fae mantle would come back to haunt them, anyway, so this
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was mostly a precaution to account for any outside solution we didn't
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know about.
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Except after Aisha proposed my terms -- as a starting position to be
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bargained down from, to my chagrin -- the Procerans didn't offer what
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we'd expected.
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``As a sign of good faith, we are willing to offer a royal hostage,''
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the middle-aged diplomat said. ``We would, however, require an
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accompanying observer and a guarantee of safety for both.''
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That had to be the Pilgrim's play, but I wasn't seeing it. There wasn't
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a good angle to use with the supplies deal, at least none that I could
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see, and after that there was nothing \emph{left} to negotiate about.
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All right, then, royal hostage. What could he do with that? Assassinate
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the hostage after I took custody of them, so this entire treaty was
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ripped in half. If Malicia had made me an offer like this, it would be
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what I expected. Except that this wasn't the way Pilgrim did things.
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Sure, he'd basically put his seal on the Saint offing me under a --
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glamoured, I had to concede that much -- truce banner, but that plan
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didn't fit with the way he'd approached this so far. Letting me die for
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the greater good was one thing, and he'd been pretty upfront that was
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essentially his intent when we first sat down for our fireside chat. But
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murder? No, that was going against the grain. He could be banking on
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either one of my people fucking up or Praes being out for blood, though.
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Not outright bloodying his hand, but shaping the situation so it would
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unfold the way he needed it to. \emph{That} I could buy.
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Except I'd have the hostage neck deep in wards in the safest place I
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could find, and Malicia wanted to use Amadis' gaggle of expansionists to
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make a mess in Procer. That wasn't to say if she decided it would be
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useful to weaken me she wouldn't assassinate royalty that wasn't Malanza
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or Milenan, the two she'd ordered me not to kill. But unless she had
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Assassin to call on, which I was almost certain she didn't, she'd have a
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very hard time pulling this off. I had the fucking Hierophant designing
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my defences, these days, and the Guild of Assassins in my pocket. It
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wasn't impossible but it would require a significant investment of
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resources at a juncture when her backyard was already on fire.
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\emph{Pilgrim might not know a High Lord's seat got sacked and the court
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is up in arms about it, though,} I mused. Lack of information? No, I
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could never assume that. Not with the Augur on the other side, and the
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pile of aspects the heroes had to draw from. Hells, it wasn't even off
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the table that one of them had a godsdamned angel whispering secrets in
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their ear. In what circumstances was giving me a royal hostage the
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correct move, assuming they didn't get killed?
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If he wanted this treaty to work.
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Was it that simple? That'd been treating him like an unmovable enemy
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when he was actually willing to work with me? No.~\emph{Be cold. Be
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clear. Be a creature of logic, because the moment you allow your
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judgement to be affected is the moment you lose.} My understanding of
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the Pilgrim, as based in fact, was that he was no more inclined to
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compromise than I. I desperately wanted someone on the other side to be
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willing to work with me, so I was painting what I wanted to see on the
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canvas. If he'd allowed this, it was because he saw a path to victory
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through it. And I couldn't discern what he wanted to accomplish from my
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point of view, so I would have to adopt his. \emph{I am the Pilgrim}, I
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thought. \emph{I have seen dozens if not hundreds of the villains, and I
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am apt at reading them. My truth-telling abilities may run deeper than
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that.} How did I trick Catherine Foundling, if I understood what she was
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after? She wanted the treaty to succeed, so -- no, mistake. That was the
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shatranj board on the ground, not the one he was trying to win on. The
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villain queen has wiggled out of my plan to pit her against other
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villains by trying to make herself into the suspect ally on the side of
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the Tenth Crusade. That is an issue, since it makes her difficult to
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assault. But she took a stance, and every stance has vulnerabilities.
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What is hers? She is behaving like an ally, looking down from Above.
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How much effort would it actually take, to \emph{enforce} that?
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My grip loosened under the table. So that was it. I'd already done it to
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myself accidentally with the Lone Swordsman, back in the day: the
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Pilgrim's play was a redemption story. It didn't matter that I was in
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charge of Callow, if I was no longer a villain. Sure, most redemption
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stories ended in death. Sacrifice to make up for previous sins and all
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that, passing the torch to someone that had the same heroism but less
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blood on their hands. That was just spice in the wine, though, since it
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got him all the benefits of Callow not longer heading down the cliff
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without having to deal the issues inherent in keeping me around after my
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bloody history. In a way, this could be considered an elegantly subtle
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assassination attempt. The Grey Pilgrim or someone he handpicked
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according to his understanding of me would be the observer in the
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Proceran terms, and then all he had to do was wait and let the story do
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the heavy lifting. I laughed softly, ignoring the odd looks it got me.
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Gods, I'd underestimated him. He was playing me on the earthly board to
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win on the story one. Callow, of which I was queen, needed the truce for
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practical reasons. I needed the truce because it was a first step in
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getting the Accords signed. And so I would accept, knowing he was trying
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to kill me through it.
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I admired the calculated methods Black used to kill heroes. I'd learned
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from them, emulated the techniques when dealing with the heroes who came
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into Callow. In that same distant way, I could admire what the Pilgrim
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had done here. My teacher was a villain, so he came at it from the
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perspective that the stories would get him killed. So he avoided them.
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The Grey Pilgrim was a hero, so he came at it from the perspective that
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the stories would get him what he wanted. So he leant into them. From an
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objective perspective, even if this was very likely meant to kill me, I
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could only commend how well I was being played. He'd read what I wanted,
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and was giving it to me in a way that led to his victory. And even
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deeper than that, he must know that even if I saw through this I'd feel
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bound to accept. Because I wasn't Black. I was not a pupil of martyrdom,
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but I did believe there were things worth dying for. If I paid my dues
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in blood to the Gods Above, Callow would avoid the slaughter marching
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towards it. All it required me to do was smile, accept, and kiss the
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knife that would slit my throat. \emph{You have found the thing I most
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want in the world, and used it to kill me}.
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There wasn't a fucking devil in existence that could have played it
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better.
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``And the identity of the hostage and observer?'' I asked, breaking in
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before Aisha could pursue the matter.
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``As the leader of this host, it is my duty to serve as the hostage,''
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Prince Amadis Milenan said, inclining his head towards me.
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And it was no doubt a fortunate coincidence that this honourable
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sacrifice would make him the hero who'd gone into the wolf's den for the
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sake of his men instead of the ambitious fuckup who'd pissed away over
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twenty thousand men trying annex Callow. The other royals would return
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to Procer, where Hasenbach wouldn't be able to blame them -- Prince
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Amadis, after all, was the official leader of the army. And the man
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himself would be out of the First Prince's reach to punish, not that
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she'd be \emph{able} to after he'd become a hostage to save his men.
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He'd come out of this smelling like roses, a tragic figure who had
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fallen prey to the wickedness of the Black Queen. Meanwhile his allies
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in Procer would be building the altar of his legend so when he returned
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it would be to the praise of the thousands instead of blackened by
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inglorious defeat. Burning Hells. Even when I won, with these people,
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they \emph{still} didn't lose. Both sides getting their way had felt
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like a better principle before I'd had to look the truth of it in the
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eye.
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``And I volunteer myself as the observer,'' the Grey Pilgrim added
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calmly.
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I didn't humour him with a reply. We already knew my answer. I leaned
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towards Aisha.
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``I'm going to agree to this,'' I whispered in her ear. ``Use it to
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extract concessions over supplies. You'll find them more flexible than
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anticipated.''
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Her dark eyes were troubled, but she was a Wastelander through and
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through. Her face became a mask and she did not argue with me in front
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of the enemy. I leaned back and my eyes turned to the Pilgrim. I was
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past pretending this wasn't his game.
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``I'll accept these terms,'' I said. ``I believe we're done here?''
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The old man inclined his head.
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``So we are,'' he replied.
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I rose to my feet, flicking a glance at Prince Amadis.
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``Aisha Bishara speaks with my full authority,'' I said. ``She will
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finish these negotiations in my name.''
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It was not proper etiquette, but I did not have it in me to stay seated
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and smile across the table from a man who'd just arranged my death,
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however beautifully. I offered the bare necessities of courtesy before
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leaving, Thief trailing behind me with worried eyes. Hierophant only
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noticed what was happening when I was halfway out the pavilion, then got
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up and left without even the semblance of an explanation. I halted and
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looked up at the descending sun, after I exited the conference. The
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Pilgrim thought he'd won. But he didn't understand quite what I was
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after, did he? That for the Accords to work, there was a need for
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someone enforcing them from the side of Evil. Or maybe he did, and
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didn't believe it would make a difference. In the end, a mistake had
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been made today.
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Whether it was his or mine, only time would tell.
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