550 lines
26 KiB
TeX
550 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-6-furor}{%
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\chapter{Furor}\label{chapter-6-furor}}
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\epigraph{``The words of one sage are wisdom, the words of a hundred a
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riot.''}{Atalantian saying}
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What was it with Proceran cities and looking kind of shoddy?
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Rochelant at least had bothered to put up walls at some point in its
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history, which the Callowan in me could not help but approve of, but
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those miserable piles of mud and stone looked like they hadn't seen a
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day's maintenance in the last century. I wouldn't need sorcery to knock
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those over, just a sapper with a few tools and a pile of firewood. On
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the other hand, I couldn't help but stare at the size of the place --
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come winter, and we were definitely there, there must have been at least
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twenty something thousand people living in there. Rochelant was a
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goblin's dream playground, all wooden thatched houses and narrow alleys,
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but by Proceran standards this was considered a \emph{small} city. There
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would be a handful of those in Iserre alone, with the eponymous capital
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being significantly larger. Sometimes it boggled the mind how many
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people actually lived within the borders of the Principate. Sure, these
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were the heartlands and by far the most densely populated part of the
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realm, but I wouldn't be surprised if the total population of Procer
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beat that of Callow and Praes put together. \emph{But the behemoth is
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quarrelsome, and slow to wake}, I thought. That'd been the sole saving
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grace of the Principate's bordering nations since the crowning of the
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founding First Prince. Yet both those flaws would have to be fixed, if
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the war up north was to be won.
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There was a reason I would have peace as set by the Liesse Accords or no
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peace at all. Procer resurgent, purged of all its weaknesses, might be
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almost as dangerous to Calernia as the Dead King himself. Cordelia
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Hasenbach did not strike me as particularly ambitious when it came to
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acquiring new territories directly -- her game had always been a
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diplomatic in outcome, when she was the one leading the dance -- but
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there was no guarantee her successor would be so inclined. I wasn't
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going to bloody Callow and its allies just to enable the latest imperial
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expansion of the `Wardens of the West', as the rulers of this realm so
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arrogantly titled themselves.
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``Ivah wasn't making it up,'' Archer mused. ``They really \emph{haven't}
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bothered to put up sentries. Bold, I've gotta say.''
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The walls were only about a dozen feet high and I had doubts they were
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thick enough to resist even a single good hit from a trebuchet, but the
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part Indrani had focused on was perhaps the most important: there was
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not a soul patrolling atop them. Or guarding the city gates, which were
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as wide open as such a narrow gap allowed. The snowy dirt road leading
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to them had been use recently, though. There were hoof marks leading
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into the countryside, so whoever held command in there was fielding at
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least some patrols. I pulled at the reins of Zombie the Fourth, though
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the dead horse I'd spared form ending up in a drow cookpot to serve as
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my undead mount instead showed no reaction to the gesture. Necromancy,
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insofar as I was truly doing that -- and Akua had expressed her doubts
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on the subject many a time -- had gotten a little rougher since I'd
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traded in Winter for Night. Whatever strange spark of intelligence my
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good little abomination Zombie the Third still held wherever she was --
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unnecessarily -- grazing at grass was absent from my new mount. The
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Sisters insisted this was a consequence of my raw handling of Night, but
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I disagreed. There'd been something to Winter that was missing in the
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Night, even after the latter had devoured the former. Crow-Andronike
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stirred on my shoulder, displeased, but did not take up the argument. It
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was probably for the best that her sister had remained with the southern
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expedition, because she most definitely would have.
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``The smoke means chimneys and fires are still being used,'' Akua noted
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from my other side. ``In large enough amount it cannot be solely the
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soldiers of the League doing so. That implies some degree of coherent
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thought remains to the inhabitants.''
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``Not a demon, probably, unless it is,'' Indrani summed up.
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Diabolist looked deeply pained at the phrasing, but did not disagree. I
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smothered a smile and urged Zombie forward with a twist of will. The
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company of drow around us was heavy on Lords, at General Rumena's
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insistence, though to be fair I hadn't bothered to argue. Ivah, Soln,
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Sagas and Vadymir: the majority of my surviving Peerage was trailing the
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three of us, with around four dozen rylleh of mixed sigils following
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behind them in turn. As long as the moon was out, the power at my back
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was the equivalent of fielding a small army. In power, anyway, and that
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was always tricky business. All that was necessary for them to turn into
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a mere fifty drow was the right ward or miracle. They'd been predators
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among predators, down in the Everdark, but where the Firstborn had been
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shedding their own blood for millennia up here the war had two sides.
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For all their centuries of fighting and deep wells of Night, I often
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wondered how well my Peerage would truly stack up against a well-trained
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hero. \emph{We'll have to find out, eventually}, I grimly thought. I
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shook off the thought and turned by attention back to the present.
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The closer we got to the city, the more I became convinced there were
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eyes on us. There was not a soul immediately through the gates, which
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made that rather interesting. Andronike's sliver of godhood on my
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shoulder should be quite enough to make a wreck of any attempt to scry
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us, implying \emph{something} was actually watching us directly.
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``Archer?'' I murmured.
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Even under the hood and cloth I saw her brow creasing.
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``Correct me if I'm wrong,'' Indrani said. ``But I'm guessing if these
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people can't even put together the coin for decent walls they shouldn't
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have enough to put up gargoyles on them.''
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Akua stilled.
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``Helikeans are fond of animating stone,'' the shade said. ``Though
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admittedly they've rarely succeeded at anything larger than a dog.''
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Now that I knew what to look for, I could make out the small silhouettes
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that'd wedged themselves into holes and fissures. Imp-like sculptures of
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rough stone, some with the heads of dogs and others more lizardlike.
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Many had wings, though not all. I'd missed them at first look, I
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thought, because none of them were moving even the slightest bit. Not
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even the eyes.
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``No sentries, huh,'' I said. ``Looks like our good friend the Tyrant is
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a little more careful than he lets on.''
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Ivah slid up to me, head already bowed, but I waved away the apology
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before it could be spoken. It'd been the kind of detail someone unused
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to having to consider what people could and could not afford -- in
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essence, not a drow -- might have missed. Living in massive ornate ruins
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could be a blind spot of sorts, and both Ivah and its scouts had spent
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their whole lives living in the remnants of their old empire.
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Interesting, though, that the mistake would fit so well. Had the Tyrant
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gotten lucky, or was there more to it? Regardless, it seemed that my
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army's last visit to Rochelant might not have been as discreet as we'd
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previously thought. The Tyrant of Helike, I suspected, would be waiting
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for us.
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``You'll know next time,'' I simply told Ivah. ``Mistakes are to be
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expected. It doesn't matter, so long as you learn from them.''
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``As you say, Losara Queen,'' the Lord of Silent Steps murmured back.
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With a bow it retreated, just in time for us to enter Rochelant in
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lockstep. The gate above us was arched, and I felt petty satisfaction at
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noting that my earlier prediction of poor wall depth proved entirely
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accurate. The muddy road into the city ahead of us was probably the
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closest thing to an avenue there was to be found in here. Broad enough
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for a cart to go through, anyway, which had probably been the measure it
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was built on.
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``Akua,'' I simply said.
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Diabolist met my eyes, inclined her head and as we passed in the shade
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cast by a house she vanished into thin air. She had her instructions
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already. My arguably finest expert in sorcery would be taking a look at
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the influence taking hold of Rochelant, though she was to retreat and
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return to me the moment she started feeling it herself.
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``It is here,'' Andronike spoke from my shoulder. ``Like waves lapping
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at the shore. There is a source further in.''
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``Not feeling anything,'' Indrani noted.
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``For which we give thanks to the Night,'' I mildly replied.
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I had no intention of walking into a place like this without one of my
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crow-goddesses serving as a shield.
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``My thoughts exactly. Hail the Sisters, all that good stuff,'' Archer
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snorted.
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She'd never been one to meet a deity and not debate whether to try to
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stab it, I recognized with a sigh.
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``We head for the source,'' I told the drow. ``Andronike?''
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``None may hide from me after dusk,'' the crow claimed.
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That might even be true, as I immediately felt a pull in the Night
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guiding me forward through the streets. Given how narrow they were, the
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drow had to spread out over rooftops to keep even a semblance of
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formation. They did so in utter silence, ethereal silhouettes in the
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moonlight that left no mark and bore no weight. We'd left the main road
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behind, and with that any semblance of this city not being a nightmarish
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mess of cramped alleys. Tough sometimes it was so tight that Archer
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couldn't even stay at my side, our journey through was informative in
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some ways. There were still people inside the houses, though not nearly
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as many as there should be this late out. The sounds in the distance
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told me that Ivah's report of `tribunals' had not been idle chatter: I
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could hear shouting in Chantant, the bay of a mob out for a good
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hanging. The first trial we came across was on the steps of a House of
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Light, and the sight of a roiling mob of nearly a hundred had me
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ordering my horse to a halt. The Procerans did not pay us the slightest
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attention, though the other foreigners did. Watching on passively from a
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distance, a dozen soldiers in scale armour were standing apart from the
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crowd. Sword and board men, the lot of them, though the mail beneath the
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scales going down to their knees was a style of armour known to me.
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Helikean, though these men-at-arms were missing the javelins their lot
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was reputed to bear.
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The Tyrant's soldiers looked at us, but before long returned their
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attention to the citizens. \emph{So you knew we were coming}, I thought.
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\emph{Or your orders are not to care about outsiders coming in.} Gaze
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returning to the Procerans, I tried to parse out the mixed shouts of
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Chantant and Tolesian they were using interchangeably and found only
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mixed success. The man they were attempting to hold a tribunal over was
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obvious, a brother from the House of Light wearing what had once been
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very nice robes now ripped and dirtied. Accusations bribery and withheld
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healing were tossed at him, but my interest lay in the fact that there
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were other priests among the crowd. Shouting with the others, red-faced
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and thirsty for blood. Whatever was animating these people, even
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priesthood was no opponent for it.
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``They're not resorting to violence yet,'' I noted out loud.
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``That robe didn't rip itself,'' Archer replied.
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Yes, but she was missing the point. For all the anger and fervour
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stirring up the crowd, they were not simply tearing the accused apart.
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The process was rough and loud, but accusations were being laid and
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witnesses called. Some law, I suspected, was being obeyed. But whose? It
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was certainly not the laws of Iserre, or even those few that held for
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the entire Principate. We stayed long enough to see the crowd begin
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voting on the seven among them that would make up the tribunal and pass
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the sentence, though I did not remain to witness what would be the
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inevitable conclusion. There were already headless corpses staining the
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front of the House that told me the nature of it. The Helikean soldiers
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parted wordlessly for us when I rode past them, Archer at my side. None
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of them caught sight of the shadows following me by way of the rooftops.
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Three more of these trials we encountered as I let the Night guide me
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further into Rochelant, each headed for grim ending.
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``There's something in the air here,'' Indrani grunted as we passed the
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third.
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``Blood,'' I flatly replied.
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I glanced to the side as she pulled back her hood a fraction, revealing
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troubled hazelnut eyes.
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``This almost feels like a domain, Cat,'' she said. ``Only wrong. Winter
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was cruel, but it was\ldots{} clear. This has a fever to it, a sickness.
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Whatever's at the centre of this, it is \emph{mad}.''
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I shivered, fingers closing tightly around my ebony staff. I'd heard
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what she did not say. It was mad, and so it was dangerous -- and we were
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head towards it.
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``And still we advance,'' I said.
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Stillness held for a moment.
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``Well,'' Archer said, pulling down her hood. ``Not like we ever let
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good sense get in the way before.''
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I sent Zombie forward, knowing there was a grain of truth to that.
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Andronike's talons dug into my shoulder as we made our way out of the
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alley not long after, a sign we'd reached the source of this bloody
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dream. The clamour could be heard long before I saw anything with my own
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eyes, the wave of sound that was hundreds of people talking and
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screaming and moving. Before us stood what was likely a marketplace,
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though packed full with citizens as it was that could only remain a
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guess. Men and women were standing in line in the back, up against a
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tavern, and I watched as the one in front was dragged to the side and
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beheaded before the parted corpse was dragged away out of sight.
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Immediately the tribunal that'd passed the sentence returned to the mob,
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and voting began on who would make up the next as the second in line in
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the back was brought to the front. This was it, I thought. Even with the
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crow goddess on my shoulder shielding me from the worst of this, I could
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feel something rippling in the air. A steady pulse like a heartbeat.
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Leaning on the height temporarily granted to me by my horse, I followed
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the sensation to its source.
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There was a table to the side of the proceedings, more a pile of crates
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than anything else, and at is sat a single man. Tanned in the way of the
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Free Cities, he was dressed like a beggar in worn robes too loose on his
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frame. Which was thin, though not the thinness of the heathy. He looked
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like he'd had too many lean meals, or perhaps like the fire in those
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grey eyes had eaten away at his body from the inside. The Hierarch of
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the League of Free Cities, for this could not be anyone else, was
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middle-aged and balding. His eyebrows were thick and bushy, both they
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and his sparse beard warring between white streaks and dark brown. One
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of his boots, I could not help but notice, had been so poorly sown back
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on the sole was coming off at the front. I looked at him, saw him
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scribbling on a clay tablet while intently following the proceedings,
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and felt the slightest bit of fear. He looked like no one, I thought.
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But coming from his body like an invisible current was some deep and
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terrible power the touch of which could be felt over all of Rochelant.
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It was not reaching into my mind, not yet, but it felt as if raising my
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hand would allow me to feel the unseen ripples.
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``That's an aspect,'' Indrani said, voice hushed. ``\emph{Gods}, how can
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that be an aspect?''
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``Andronike?'' I asked.
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The crow-goddess did not reply for a long moment, until I turned my head
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to look at her. If a bird could look uncomfortable, I saw, it would be
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something like this.
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``This is\ldots{} difficult,'' Andronike said, voice tight. ``The pull
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is strong.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``You're having a hard time fighting him,'' I croaked. ``What the Hells
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is this, Andronike? He's Named, not\ldots{}''
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``Faith,'' the crow got out. ``This is faith, Catherine Foundling. Pure
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unadulterated belief, untainted by doubt or hesitation. It \emph{sings},
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and the world sings back.''
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``Faith in what?'' I asked.
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``Nothing,'' Andronike hissed. ``A snake eating its own tail. It is
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bleak madness screamed by endless throats, and it would stand tribunal
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over the Gods themselves.''
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I swallowed. And the Tyrant of Helike was using this man as a
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\emph{pawn}?
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``We need to leave,'' Archer said. ``We're not ready for this. Not
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without Masego.''
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I breathed in, breathed out. Fear was the death of reason. None of the
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reasons I had come here had changed. If anything, the depths of the man
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I was still looking at made it \emph{more} important to get a handle on
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what the League was after. I allowed my staff to slip my fingers and hit
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the frozen ground. Calling on a breath's worth of Night, I used to
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support to get off my horse. Indrani sucked in a breath.
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``Cat, this is a trap,'' she said.
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``And still I advance,'' I ruefully smiled. ``Andronike, safeguard
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them.''
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The crow left my shoulder, a few flaps of her wings landing her atop the
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head of the eerily-still Zombie.
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``It will sing to you, First Under the Night,'' the goddess warned.
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``Ah, but that's the trick,'' I told her, baring my teeth. ``You can't
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go mad \emph{twice}, o goddess of Night.''
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Limping against my staff, I slipped into the crowd. The sound and power
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beat at my eardrums like a ram, in some way intertwined, and it took me
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by surprise hard enough some man almost elbowed me off my feet. I grit
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my teeth and shoved back with my staff. It should have stung, but the
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man was too busy screaming his vote in Chantant to notice. Going
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straight through would see me trampled, I decided, so I made my way to
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the edge instead and began circling around. The pounding in my ears was
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relentless. Again and again it came as I stumbled around half-blind,
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until I could almost make out words. Almost. I caught my breath against
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a half-fallen stall, and only then gathered enough attention to notice
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the woman staring at me. She was, it was almost too absurd to think,
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aggressively nondescript. There was a muted look to her face, as if her
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thoughts were halfway elsewhere, though as she narrowed her eyes I felt
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something brush against my mind.
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Somewhere very far away, Sve Noc bared their teeth in displeasure.
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The stranger paled, eyes turning bloodshot, and clutched her forehead as
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scarlet began dripping out of her nostrils. \emph{Shouldn't have done
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that}, I thought. \emph{In there be monsters, my friend.} I immediately
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felt dozens of stares settle on me, but I ignored them and began the
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journey again. Not far, now, and where the Hierarch was seated a gap had
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formed in the crowd. I pushed the last woman out of the way, though I
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froze just after. I could have sworn I'd hear someone whisper in my ear,
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though the words had been indistinct. My fingers clutched the staff and
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I drew comfort from the sensation of the Night within, letting out a
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deep breath and putting myself together. The Named, I saw, had not so
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much as glanced at me. Neither did he bother when I stepped around the
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makeshift table until I stood behind him. I glanced down at the words
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being scribbled on the clay tablet with a stone stylet. That wasn't
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Chantant, I noted. I didn't recognize the language, although at one of
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the words was very close to the Mtethwa for `protest' so it might be
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tradertalk. The second Maleficent had held the region under her grasp
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for long enough there'd been some bleed into the local tongue, I'd read.
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``Will anyone but you actually be able to read those?'' I said in
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Chantant.
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I'd meant to speak lightly, but my voice came out rough instead. The
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Hierarch finally paused in his writing, turning to look at me. There was
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something calm, almost resigned, to the stare. As if nothing of Creation
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could truly ruffle his feathers.
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``Irrelevant,'' the Hierarch replied in the same, tone chiding.
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``Transcripts must be kept of trials held.''
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I blinked. Huh. Not the answer I'd expected. The power battering at my
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mind was weakening, I felt, slowly but surely. Did the aspect require
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concentration?
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``I am-''
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``You have the look of a foreign tyrant,'' the Hierarch accused.
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``Back home it's called regular tyranny, though,'' I replied, and
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immediately bit my tongue.
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I'd really thought I was done with the whole taunting dangerous,
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powerful madmen thing but apparently old habits died hard. The
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Hierarch's brow furrowed as he seemed to seriously mull over that. The
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battering ram slowed even further.
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``That seems logical,'' he muttered. ``It should be passed on to the
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Republic for consideration.''
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Then he turned those dark eyes back on me.
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``You do not deny the charge of tyranny?'' he pressed.
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``You already laid out your stance in our correspondence,'' I said.
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He seemed vaguely surprised, then thoughtful.
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``You are Cordelia Hasenbach,'' the man stated, half-questioningly.
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A moment passed, while I was genuinely at a loss for words. \emph{Ah}, I
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thought. \emph{So this is why the Tyrant thinks he can make a pawn of
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you.} For a heartbeat I debated actually pretending I was the First
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Prince just to see if I could make some trouble for her, but discarded
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the notion just as quick. Best not to roll dice when they had teeth and
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a noted fondness for biting.
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``Catherine Foundling,'' I replied. ``Queen of Callow.''
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If he felt embarrassed about the mistake, he didn't show it in the
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slightest.
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``There's no such thing,'' he told me sternly.
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``Queens or Catherine Foundling?'' I said. ``Because one of those
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debates is a lot more philosophical than I'm equipped to handle.''
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Behind us the clamour of the crowd had quieted some, but by the sounds
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of it the trials hadn't stopped. Neither had the aspect, I thought, at
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least not entirely. But what had been a trumpet earlier was a murmur
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now, and that I could handle while keeping most of my wits about me.
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``Aristocracy Is A Festering Wound Upon The People,'' Anaxares of
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Bellerophon gravely informed me. ``May Hail Strike It Repeatedly For A
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Thousand Years.''
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That seemed a little excessive. There shouldn't be much left to hail on
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after the first century.
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``Preaching to the Choir there,'' I said. ``I've never fought a war
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against someone who didn't have some sort of title.''
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``Yet you are a queen,'' he said, blithely ignoring his previous
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assertion there was no such thing.
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``For the moment,'' I shrugged. ``I intend to abdicate when it's
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feasible.''
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``So your kind always claims,'' the Hierarch said, eyes turning flinty.
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``Give me the right, they say, give me the laws and the swords. I will
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keep you safe until the storm has passed. And service becomes rule, rule
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becomes tyranny until \emph{lovingly} the yoke is fastened around our
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|
necks.''
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Like the hammer on the anvil, the ram against the gate, the dull
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pounding of his power began to sound in the distance. Slow. Swelling.
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Implacable. But I would not be cowed that easily.
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``Is this why the League has gone to war?'' I asked. ``To end crowns?''
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There wasn't a single thing that changed about him, I thought. He was
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still a skeleton of a man in ill-fitting robes, a scarecrow with a
|
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scowl. Not a single thing had changed, and yet\ldots{} If I strained the
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|
ear, I could hear the chorus. The howls of the mob. Chains ripped apart,
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|
palaces toppled and bones being crushed. Torches starting a fire that
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|
would spread across the world. A song of revolt, of rebellion. I could
|
|
feel it, like warm wine running through my veins. It was harsh and
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|
unforgiving, but oh how \emph{glorious} it was. How easy it would have
|
|
been to partake of it and let that warmth swallow me whole.
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|
``We are all of us free or we are none of us free,'' the Hierarch of the
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|
League of Free Cities said, voice like steel. ``There is no middle
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|
ground. And for the lashes struck at our back, all will be called to
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|
account -- if gallows must be raised for devils and angels alike,
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\emph{so be it}.''
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|
I almost, out of sheer contrariness, pointed out that devils did not die
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|
but only disperse\emph{. But would they really, if it was this man
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|
passing the sentence?} Suddenly I was not so certain. My mistake, I
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|
thought, had been trying to think of him as either a terror or a fool.
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|
Fear had dogged me, wading through his aspect, but it had retreated as
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|
we spoke. As the man proved to be so uninterested in his surrounding as
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to be lost. I'd allowed the cadenced little phrases, the obvious
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|
mistakes and ignorance, to lull me into believing him\ldots{} adrift.
|
|
Living in his own world. But Black had warned me about people like this,
|
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hadn't he? About Named who did not see Creation as it was but how it
|
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\emph{should be.} Men and women who embraced their vision so deeply they
|
|
bent the world around them to match it. My mistake, I thought once more,
|
|
had been to believe he must be only one of the two. He was not.
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|
The Tyrant of Helike had not sharpened this blade so carefully to cut a
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mortal empire, I decided. There was a broader game unfolding.
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|
``It's a pretty dream,'' I said. ``A pretty speech. But you ended it
|
|
before you got to the end -- the part where you declare war on the rest
|
|
of the continent for those same pretty things, and it eats you alive.
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|
It's not a fight you're going to win, Hierarch.''
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|
The man's lips quirked, his face serene save for the scorn.
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|
``War against Calernia,'' he said amusedly. ``As if tearing down masters
|
|
was the same thing as warring on their slaves. You betray yourself,
|
|
tyrant. You think I wage war on them?''
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|
The stylus flicked at the crowd of Procerans. The axe went up, the axe
|
|
went down. Another dead man, dragged into the alley.
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|
``The old faceless thing bade me to choose a side,'' the Hierarch said.
|
|
``And at long last, I have.''
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|
|
|
My eyes narrowed. The old faceless thing. There weren't a lot of
|
|
entities out there that would fit that epithet. Anaxares of Bellerophon
|
|
smiled, crooked teeth bared.
|
|
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|
``You think us outnumbered?'' he said. ``How many of us are there,
|
|
tyrant, and how many of \emph{you}?''
|
|
|
|
I could have wounded him, then. Not with a blade -- here and now, even
|
|
if he did not lift a finger, I did not think that would end well for me
|
|
-- but with words. A reminder that he marched with slavers and monsters,
|
|
that his own League would turn on him in due time. That he should get
|
|
his own fucking house in order before tossing stones at mine. Or maybe
|
|
that power would fail him, in the end, and that like the city-state that
|
|
spawned him his road would end in blood and whimpering. But there would
|
|
be a place and a time for that, and it was not tonight.
|
|
|
|
I had seen the sword, and must now see its wielder.
|
|
|
|
``It's a lovely song,'' I said instead. ``But it's always easier to
|
|
break than to make.''
|
|
|
|
The Hierarch's gaze returned to the trial, where the accused was being
|
|
dragged to the fore.
|
|
|
|
``There will be one for you as well, one day,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``But not tonight,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Not tonight,'' he softly agreed.
|
|
|
|
I left as the man bent back over his tablet, hand moving anew to write
|
|
words only he could read.
|
|
|
|
It was past time I had a chat with the other madman in this city.
|