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431 lines
21 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-when-iron-rests}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: When Iron Rests}\label{interlude-when-iron-rests}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-when-iron-rests}} \chaptermark{Interlude: When Iron Rests}
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\epigraph{``What poison is to medicine, war is to empire: apportionment is
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the balance of life and death.''}{Extract from `The Ruin of Empire, or, a Call to Reform of the Highest
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Assembly', by Princess Eliza of Salamans}
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Word of the surrender had rippled through the ranks, drawing out cries
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of dismay and anger before they both turned to disbelief.
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There'd been tension between the Legions and the Army of Callow, when
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some loudmouths in the former had started to say this was just an
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elaborate way to sell out the Legions of Terror to the Grand Alliance,
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but Vivienne had been ready to quell such stupidity. Plants in the ranks
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had done as instructed, gone on the offensive and accused the
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complainers of being traitors in Grand Alliance employ. Enough of those
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arguments had turned to brawl that sergeants got involved, so now the
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most volatile of the rank and file were cooling their heels under arrest
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until this could be played out to the end. On the side of the Army of
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Callow there'd been mostly outrage and laying blame, which to Vivienne's
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mix of grief and amusement had been laid along predictable lines.
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Callowan recruits blamed the Hellhound, or more frequently Marshal Grem
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One-Eye -- whose role in the Conquest still had him closely associated
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to national wounded pride. Most of the eastern recruits, though, both
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the fresh and those brought in from gutted legions after the Doom,
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tended to point the finger at Vivienne Dartwick.
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Hardly unexpected: she the most visible civilian authority over the Army
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of Callow, a known former noble and former heroine. And for the
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greenskins, most damnably of all she had no famous feat of violence to
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her name. It was something to look into remedying, in the long term,
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though it was hardly a priority at the moment. The amusing part of all
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this, of course, was that while it'd been Catherine who'd pulled the rug
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out under everyone's feet with that sudden turn no one seemed to be
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blaming her in the slightest. Vivienne had absolutely no intention of
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changing that, since there were only a few things keeping the Kingdom of
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Callow together and one of them was the myth of the Black Queen
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undefeated, the kingdom's own crowned villain whose uninterrupted string
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of victories had become the backbone of a nation. It would have to be
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maintained, Vivienne thought, in the years to come -- marshals and
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generals and even the Woe could lose, but the Black Queen could not. But
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that was beyond the horizon, and Vivienne Dartwick's troubles were
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current.
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The solution she'd found had been to let the current of older faith
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guide the rumours she sowed. This was not a defeat, it was a trick being
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played by Queen Catherine on her enemies. And Gods be merciful, Vivienne
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thought, but she couldn't even be sure that was a lie. The drow had been
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laid low by that sudden star in the sky, all but the most powerful of
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them battered into slumber for at least a few moments, and even the
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highest of these `Mighty' had been forced to flee in the face of the
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enemy's swiftly resuming advance. Legionaries had moved to hold the
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walls in good order, but within moments of that Marshal Juniper had been
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informed that surrender had been offered to the Grey Pilgrim and then
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accepted, bringing this battle to a close. Vivienne had spent the
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following hour putting out fires, but now the situation was stable
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enough she'd finally been able to head the general staff's pavilion.
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Truthfully she could have done more, and would have preferred keeping
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her finger on the Army of Callow's pulse, but Juniper's last messenger
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had mentioned a message from Catherine with the royal seal. Those
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summons she could not deny, and so she had come.
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``Adjutant's still missing?''
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Marshal Juniper looked vaguely irked at her immediate question, though
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not enough to chide her for it. What Vivienne had expected to be a
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formal war council in how to deal with the fact that the Grand Alliance
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had fully surrounded the camp and was now ordering disarmament and the
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bringing down of the palisade turned out to be rather less crowded.
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Marshal Juniper, with her perennial accessory Staff Tribune Aisha
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Bishara, Grandmaster Brandon Talbot for the Order of Broken Bells and
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Marshal Grem for what some had begun to call the Legions-in-Exile.
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``Whatever duty Her Majesty sent him out on, Lord Adjutant is still
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discharging it,'' Tribune Bishara said.
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Vivienne kept herself from grimacing. Hakram had been a useful
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interpreter of Catherine's occasionally seemingly outlandish decisions
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even before the Everdark, but nowadays the orc's talent for
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understanding the thoughts of their leader had become a priceless asset.
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The journey into that dark place had changed Cat in deep ways, and much
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could be argued of whether all these changes had been for the best, but
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regardless of debate it was undeniable Catherine kept her cards a lot
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closer to the chest than she'd used to. Adjutant's presence would have
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been a boon, Vivienne already suspected, for what was to come. None of
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the others were seated, so she remained standing as well and simply
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joined them at the table.
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``Now that everyone's in attendance,'' the Hellhound said, flicking a
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displeased glance at Vivienne that was met with a raised brow. ``This
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was handed to me by a rider of the Wild Hunt, along with knowledge of
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the surrender and instruction to abide by it.''
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The orc tossed out a leather sheath bearing the royal seal of Callow,
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which Tribune Bishara daintily picked up afterwards.
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``Unless there is an objection?'' the Taghreb politely asked.
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A round of shaking heads. Talbot might have objected, Vivienne thought,
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it if it'd been another officer but he'd always been a little sweet on
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the Hellhound's helper. The wax seal was broken, parchment taken from
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the sheath and carefully unfurled. The dark-haired Callowan caught a
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glimpse of the curved, eye-pleasing calligraphy and repressed a snort.
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Hakram's hand, that, not their queen's. Which might be for the best,
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considering most of the time Catherine's handwriting only skirted the
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edge legibility. She'd actually been taught properly at the orphanage,
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Vivienne knew, but Cat had always written like her thoughts were trying
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to crawl out through a hand too slow to keep up.
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``I, Catherine Foundling, anointed queen of Callow by the grace of the
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Heavens and first of my name-'' Tribune Bishara began.
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Marshal Juniper cleared her throat.
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``The meat, Aisha,'' she growled.
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The Taghreb's head dipped in acknowledgement and she shifted halfway
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through the sentence.
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``So, there's an old story about the Ol' Unconquered,'' Aisha Bishara
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said, ``that they call Theodosius' Dilemma.''
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The Taghreb's tone was cultured and elegant, if so very eastern, but the
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words she spoke reeked of Catherine's slow, almost lazy drawl. Vivienne
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knew it to be at least in part an affectation, as their queen was
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perfectly capable of formal address in her crisp Laure accent. She liked
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to use the casualness, the thuggish country bumpkin swagger, to prey on
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people's expectations. Noble expectations, mostly, Vivienne privately
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admitted. Their queen had spent most her life carrying a sharp contempt
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for the aristocracy that becoming the foremost aristocrat in Callow
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didn't seem to have changed in the slightest. Something wordless
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fluttered through the pavilion at the tribune's words, though, sparing
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only Grem One-Eye. Backs straightening, shoulders loosening, even half a
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vicious smirk tugging at Grandmaster Talbot's lips. They had not been
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left behind, that was what their stance said.
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The Black Queen had a plan in the works, and someone else was about to
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have a very bad night.
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``So in the First League War -- which is a horribly inaccurate name,
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actually, because the League of Free Cities proper hadn't even been
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founded yet and, wait, Hakram, scratch that whole part out, they don't
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need the history lesson,'' Tribune Bishara said.
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She added, in a carefully unamused undertone, that the Lord Adjutant had
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not in fact scratched out anything.
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``So in the First League War, Theodosius kept slapping around southern
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Procer like it was his deeply unloved goblin stepchild until it'd lost
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so many battles it'd gotten physically impossible for the princes to
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deny they were losing the war,'' the Taghreb read. ``At that point, the
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First Prince was getting worried about losing a third of Procer without
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war even having formally been declared, so you all know what happens:
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the Highest Assembly votes to `defend the south from foreign invasion',
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everyone sends armies to reinforce and the First Prince makes a pointed
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suggestion that someone be appointed to run this mess that Theodosius
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\emph{hasn't} already cheerfully brutalized.''
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Vivienne' eyes swept the tent, and found most were raptly listening even
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though most should already know of this bit of history. It was
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certainly\ldots{} colourfully narrated, but otherwise common knowledge
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in those who had some learning of history. And even beyond that. The
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life and deeds of Theodosius the Unconquered were a favourite of young
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boys and girls with dreams of military glory even in cities where no
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Helikean had visited in living memory.
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``That gets us Isabella the Mad, and sets up Theodosius' Dilemma,''
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Tribune Bishara spoke. ``Because Isabella, she doesn't offer a pitched
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battle or take back principalities: she just tosses one wave of soldiers
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after another at any forces that splits from Theodosius' main army. And
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Hells, his people win most of those skirmishes and Ol' Theo gets a few
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ambushes in himself. But every time he wins, he loses soldiers and
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Isabella loses nothing much. He's winning so much it's destroying his
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army, and so he has to make a choice.''
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Vivienne's mind raced ahead, for while she was not great student of
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military affairs she could see the shape of the dilemma outlined. It was
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not as important, she reflected, as the fact that instead of
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instructions Catherine had chosen to repeat a lesson that most of the
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people in this pavilion already knew. Would Marshal Grem? Maybe, as odds
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were that the Hellhound and Tribune Bishara had learned of this at the
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War College and the older orc was said to have been influential on the
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lay of the lessons taught there. Which meant the story was most likely
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meant for her or Brandon Talbot.
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``Theodosius could fight a battle that couldn't be won against nearly
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five times his number,'' Aisha Bishara said, ``to force a decisive
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outcome to the war. Or he could keep tearing through Isabella's
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detachments for months and months, hoping for a better chance as his own
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numbers dwindled with every victory. We all know, famously, the choice
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he made.''
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The Maddened Fields, to this day considered the only defeat ever
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inflicted on the first Tyrant of Helike.
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``Theodosius bet on his legend, on being able to beat the odds and forge
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a miracle,'' Tribune Bishara continued. ``Isabella bet that she could
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ride attrition to a symbolic victory, and it was a brutal wager but she
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got what she wanted. They say that when Theodosius' army retreated in
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good order, there were more than a hundred thousand corpses on the
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field.''
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The tribune's brow rose in surprise.
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``Less than twenty years later, Jehan the Wise hung seven princes and
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one,'' Bishara said.
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Before the implications of that could properly sink in, the Taghreb
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repeated a stroke of madness.
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``I grant to Vivienne Dartwick the title of Lady Dartwick, with all
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assorted honours and privileges; in addition I name Lady Dartwick the
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heiress-designate to the crown of Callow.''
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Vivienne closed her eyes, ignoring the stir from the others in the tent.
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Why? No, that could be picked at later. Why \emph{now}? The granted
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titled was clearly just a way to legally allow the second part without
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making her a member of the ironically-named House of Foundling. So what,
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as heiress-designate of Callow, could Vivienne do that she hadn't been
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able to do a moment ago?
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``Lady Dartwick,'' Grandmaster Talbot quietly said. ``The Royal Guard no
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longer exists, nor any knightly order save mine, yet-''
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\emph{Yet I am, theoretically, equal in status to a princess of Callow
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and first the line of succession,} Vivienne thought, opening her eyes.
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\emph{The Shining Prince, in all but name, and those were the Marshals
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of Callow before such a title existed.}
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``- yet the laws never excluded the Army of Callow nor any other
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addition to our forces,'' she finished softly. ``Which means I am, in
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the queen's absence, the supreme commander of all armies sworn to Queen
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Catherine.''
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``You can revoke the surrender,'' Juniper said.
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In the moment that followed, Vivienne almost did. It might just be
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Catherine's plan, a surrender to check some advantage of the Pilgrim's
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while she schemed some way that allowed her to both surrender in good
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faith yet keep her armies fighting. Diabolist could still use the
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wretched ritual that would bring back the drow to the field, and now the
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enemy's armies would be surprised and in disarray. \emph{Less than
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twenty years later}, Vivienne thought, \emph{Jehan the Wise hung seven
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princes and one.} That was a warning. About winning wars at any price,
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about what came after. About Callow further humbling a weakened Procer
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and-
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``Oh,'' Vivienne Dartwick breathed out. ``\emph{Oh}.''
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``Lady Dartwick?'' Marshal Grem asked, brow cocked.
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``I'll need a horse and an escort,'' she said. ``I'll need to talk with
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the Grey Pilgrim and Lord Marave besides.''
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``Why?'' Juniper asked.
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``Delay disarming as long as possible,'' Vivienne instructed the
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Hellhound absent-mindedly, ``and keep the soldiers ready for fighting.''
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``Dartwick,'' the Marshal of Callow growled, ``what are you doing?''
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``If I'm right,'' Vivienne said, ``then I'm about to trade the full
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release of our armies for our help against the League of Free Cities.''
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---
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``Now, Hakram, I want to be perfectly clear,'' the Tyrant of Helike
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announced.
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Adjutant was still hung upside down by his feet, though given that the
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tripod was now being carried forward at a brisk pace by a swarm of
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chittering gargoyles the motion had set him to rotating. He patiently
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waited until the turn brought him face to face with Kairos Theodosian
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before solemnly nodding.
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``Your mistress, I fear, intends to betray me most immediately,'' the
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Tyrant said, not entirely succeeding at hiding his tone of deep
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approval.
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``That does not seem like her at all,'' Hakram lied.
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The boy gestured dismissively, though with a trembling hand.
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``It was a delightful bit of pettiness from her to send me someone whose
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fingers I cannot meaningfully break, after that little affair with my
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kataphraktoi,'' Lord Kairos idly continued, ``but that is that and this
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is this. Should the Black Queen turn on me -- and she will -- I will
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brutally murder you, if you'll forgive my language''
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``You are forgiven,'' Hakram calmly said. ``Though this seems absurd.
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Catherine Foundling has ever been a close and trusted ally to you, my
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lord.''
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``You're not even afraid,'' the odd-eyed king complained. ``I really
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should have listened to what my father said about Callowan spite, this
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is most unreasonable of her.''
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``Your father had words on the subject of Callowan spite?'' Adjutant
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asked, cocking his head curiously.
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``I wouldn't know,'' the Tyrant cheerfully said. ``After I cut his
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throat all he could manage was wet gurgling noises.''
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Hakram made a mental note of the admission. It would go into the growing
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archive the Jacks kept on the Tyrant of Helike, though whether what the
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boy had said was true or not remained debatable. The orc found him
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exceedingly hard to read even for a human. Silence lingered between
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them, though in the distance the hum of raging storms served as canvas
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for it.
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``I cannot help but notice, Lord Tyrant, that we are not heading out
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into Creation,'' the orc ventured after a moment.
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Unlike the rest of the League's armies, he left unsaid. The last of the
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armies, a ramshackle mob moving in old infantry formations Hakram was
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fairly sure hadn't seen use since the Humbling of Titans, had marched
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through a well-illuminated breach almost half an hour past. Of the hosts
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of the Free Cities, all that seemed to be left was the Tyrant's own
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personal guard of a thousand. And gargoyles, admittedly, too many and
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too similar in appearance for the orc to be able to count. Kairos
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Theodosian looked amused, his red eye suddenly twitching shut and
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remaining that way.
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``I have sent all I need to send,'' the Tyrant of Helike said. ``General
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Basilia is more than a match for the Pilgrim's pet countrymen and the
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unpleasant surprise your mistress is still sitting on.''
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``Might I inquire as to our purpose, then?'' Hakram politely asked.
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``It would be a terrible blunder to feed a spy my most secret schemes,''
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Lord Kairos chided him. ``Do you expect me, Deadhand, to immediately
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unveil my every furtive advance merely because you showed a modicum of
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polite interest?''
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A moment passed.
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``Yes,'' Adjutant replied.
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``Is this what loves feels like?'' the Tyrant mused, then raised a hand.
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``Don't answer, Hakram, it's not like you'd know.''
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The orc cocked his head to the side. The insult did not particularly
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sting. Perhaps if it'd been slung in the early days of the Fifteenth,
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when he'd still wondered if the wariness in Juniper's eyes when she
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looked at him was not uncalled for, but now? Those doubts were long
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buried, and it would take more than a madman's jeering to unearth them.
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It was not, however, the first time the Tyrant of Helike jibed of
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Hakram's leanings towards detachment. That he would keep prodding from
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an angle that would yield nothing was interesting, and suggested two
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things: first, that Catherine had been right on the subject of Kairos
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Theodosian having some skill related to perception of others. Second,
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that what the Tyrant was seeing in Adjutant unsettled him enough to keep
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picking at it like a scab.
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``Soon, I do think,'' the Tyrant of Helike said, looking up at the
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ruinous sky.
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``Soon what?'' Hakram dutifully asked.
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``You see, Adjutant, the histories will speak of tonight as a
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triumvirate of treachery,'' Kairos Theodosian airily explained, ``but
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that will be most inaccurate. Your mistress and I are having the most
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delightful match of shatranj while the Pilgrim and his kingdoms of the
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blind stumble around waving swords and miracles.''
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``But, Lord Tyrant, is the Grey Pilgrim not the Named currently closest
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to victory?'' Hakram asked, purposefully keeping his tone as dull and
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unenthused as possible.
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He was, the orc guilty admitted to himself, beginning to enjoy this a
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little too much.
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``You would be most wrong, Adjutant, most wrong,'' the Tyrant said.
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``Tariq Isbili's mistake is that he believes because he set the initial
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terms of this fight he still knows all of them. And so he putters around
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down in the snow and mud, while the real prize of the night is around
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us. He could get everything he desires, Hakram -- and indeed I suspect
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your mistress is inclined to grant most his wishes, save those that
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inconvenience her -- and still be made of fool of.''
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Adjutant kept his face calm, though for the first time that night his
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heartbeat had quickened.
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``Oh yes, my dear green friend,'' Kairos Theodosian grinned. ``I know
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what your mistress is up to. Seven crowns and one, yes? She has the
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recipe for the making of a Court, and the Hierophant provided the final
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ingredient of that heady brew by cutting an unclaimed realm from the
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fabric of Arcadia and casting it down towards Creation.''
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Hakram stayed silent, unwilling to risk revealing too much through the
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lie he chose to speak.
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``Here's a secret for you, Adjutant,'' the Tyrant of Helike whispered,
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leaning closer. ``The thing that waits for you in the depths of Liesse
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stolen isn't \emph{just} your friend. I would be a great deal more wary
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of what it intends, were I you. For if this night does not go to the
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Black Queen or to myself, well, it is another friend of mine that will
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get his due.''
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The boy retreated, loudly cackling.
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``Ah, but I digress,'' he said. ``I did say that your mistress and I
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were playing shatranj while poor old Tariq was stumbling, did I not?
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Allow me to elaborate. The Pilgrim anticipated there would be trouble in
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Creation, Hakram, and so tossed a ball up and out of sight so that
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providence might allow it to land when it was needed, should it be
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needed.''
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``You are saying,'' Adjutant said, ``that he sent a force through
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Arcadia.''
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``Exactly,'' Lord Kairos agreed. ``And, old hand that he is at turning
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tides, he kept a heroic charge up his sleeve in case matters were truly
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dire.''
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The orc's jaw tightened. In the distance, coming out of the storms with
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tall banners, a glittering tide of horsemen advanced. Proceran banners,
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Levantine banners, the full horse of the Grand Alliance's armies.
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Including, Hakram thought, every prince and princess in the hosts.
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``What is that delightful Callowan saying again?'' the Tyrant of Helike
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mused. ``Ah, yes, I remember now.''
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The boy's eye shone wet crimson, when he turned to grin at Adjutant, as
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if it had already partaken of the blood about to be spilled.
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``Finders keepers,'' Kairos Theodosian said.
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