390 lines
20 KiB
TeX
390 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-64-breathe}{%
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\chapter{Breathe}\label{chapter-64-breathe}}
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\epigraph{``Fifty-three: a trusted companion who, after a string of personal
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disappointments, begins to dress in darker colours should no longer be
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considered a trusted companion.''}{``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown}
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I didn't mind heading out to Salia for the talks, and there were so many
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of those to be had: the peace conference, Callow's petition to join the
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Grand Alliance and the Liesse Accords themselves. The treaties making up
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the Grand Alliance had first been signed in the Proceran capital, so the
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symbolism in Callow doing the same there would be powerful, and for the
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rest having the Highest Assembly at hand would save a great deal of
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time. Considering most armies in Iserre had fought months of strenuous
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skirmishes and battles, I foresaw the First Prince's invitation would be
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accepted. In truth, considering it was Arnaud Brogloise who'd approached
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me with the notion in private, odds were the Dominion had already agreed
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and Hasenbach was simply sounding me out to avoid public embarrassment
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if I refused. The First Prince was too clever not to know the moment she
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got everyone else to agree on Salia she'd effectively forced Kairos'
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hand, since him having a fit then would mark him the enemy of everyone
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invested in seeing peace secured. No, I understood why Cordelia
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Hasenbach's capital would be the seat of the talks and indeed preferred
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it that way for reasons of my own.
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But we were haggling, so damned if I wouldn't get something in exchange.
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The First Prince, through her envoy, had been pushing for the Army of
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Callow and the Exile Legions to make camp in northwest Brabant but we
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flatly refused. Reports from the Jacks made it clear that the
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principality of Brabant was overwhelmed by refugees from the lakeside
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holdings to the north, and that the front against the Dead King in
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Hainaut had been on the edge of collapse for some time. If we raised
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winter quarter there my armies were the second line of defence whether
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they liked it or not and we'd be surrounding by hungry, desperate
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people. We pushed for northern Arans instead, which was more than
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reasonable in my opinion: it put my soldiers close enough to the
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northern passage they could be supplied by Callow through it while
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propping up the right flank of the Hainaut front. Where it got messy was
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my insistence that the armies be allowed to raise their camps close to a
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city and my soldiers be granted access to said city while on leave.
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Brogloise had not been particularly inclined to grant me adjacency to
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anything but the dead until I started hinting Salia might be a little
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too far for my tastes. That had the tune changing pitch, as I'd thought
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it might.
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He still demurred from outright agreeing until Prince Ariel of Arans was
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consulted over the matter, though I threw in agreement to the four
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thousand escort and four hundred retinue in Salia to make sure it'd be
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worth the candle to Cordelia. I made it plain that the drow were not my
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slaves or minions but allies from another nation, the Empire Ever Dark,
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and that the Firstborn required an emissary when time came to discuss
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both peace and the Accords.
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``You want the Highest Assembly to recognize the legitimacy of this
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Empire Ever Dark,'' Brogloise mildly said.
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``If you'd prefer,'' I said, ``the princes and princesses could come
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explain to the sigil-holders why without a vote being held in Salia they
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can't belong to a real nation.''
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``It'd be extending diplomatic recognition to, well,'' and there the
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envoy looked faintly embarrassed, ``the grisly minions of some wicked
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foreign deity.''
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``I'm not asking you to trade embassies,'' I patiently said. ``I'm
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asking you to recognize that fifty thousand warriors would get the
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Firstborn a seat at the table even if they required newborn babies as
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refreshments. How many more enemies can Procer afford to make right now,
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Brogloise?''
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There was more nuance to the situation that I would have liked, as it
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happened. As a rule, the Principate didn't usually consider itself bound
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by treaties to entities beholden to the Hellgods. Whoever held the Tower
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was usually Arch-heretic of the East, which meant no agreements with
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them need be upheld, and neither the Kingdom of the Dead nor the Chain
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of Hunger offered treaties. Agreements in the Free Cities were subject
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to the authority of the League itself, which meant none of those cities
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sworn to Below were usually a direct interlocutor to the Principate save
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in secret pacts not admitted to. In short, there was very little
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precedent for Procer making any sort of treaty with a state that
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worshipped the Gods Below and considering it worth more than what the
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ink and parchment had cost. Largely, I could admit in the privacy of my
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own thoughts, because very few of those states ever put much stock in
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keeping to their word. On the other hand, as of now I was still Queen of
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Callow and if the Principate was incapable of negotiating with me --
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still a villain, regardless of the waning of my Name -- then this would
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all head downhill rather fast. The former Prince of Cantal retreated
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somewhat gracefully at that, noting that even if official recognition
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could not be guaranteed then at least a legal equivalent could be.
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It'd do. I would not expect miracles, even when the Principate was so
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deeply in trouble. It had been the preeminent power of Calernia, on the
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surface at least, for too long. The arrogance had been bred into its
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rulers by generations of genuinely being some of the wealthiest and most
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influential individuals on the continent. I'd not coddle the highborn,
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when the time came, but neither would I got out of my way to step on
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their toes. My deep personal dislike for most royalty of the west was no
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reason to get in my own way when it came to greater purposes. We
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discussed a few other details of logistics, namely where the escort of
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four thousand would be offered amenities -- as it turned out, from towns
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less than a day's march from Salia itself -- and the practicalities of
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bringing an armed retinue into the capital. I had no intention of
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turning over any of my people who were alleged to break laws to Procer
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for trial, but I indicated I was willing to hold them to that standard
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while they stayed in Salia so long as it broke no laws of Callow or
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regulations of its army. I gave an inch on my insistence that any such
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lawbreaking would be dealt with by Callowan trials, allowing for an
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observer appointed by the First Prince to sit in on the proceedings
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should it come to that.
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We ended the talks soon after that, since Hasenbach now needed to herd
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her royal cats before she could agree to what I'd required. Vivienne and
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Hakram both stayed with me after the man left, the three of us seated in
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a silence that was rather contemplative. The former thief had kept notes
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herself throughout most of the talks, though mostly on the exact
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language of what had been agreed between Brogloise and myself. It'd been
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a surprisingly large amount, though less than one might expect from
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literal hours of talking. Still, I could not help but notice that a
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great deal of the tediousness I associated with diplomacy vanished when
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I ended up in an arguable position of strength. \emph{Fancy that}, I
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sardonically thought. I shook away the cynical amusement. Pleasant as
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indulging it could be, I had no time to waste on indulgence at the
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moment.
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``You saw something, didn't you?'' I asked Hakram instead.
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``Not in him, but in what he spoke,'' Adjutant agreed. ``It is a
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question of logistics, Catherine. Hasenbach cannot agree to signing the
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Accords without having first consulted the Highest Assembly, yes?''
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I cocked my head to the side, not bothering to assent to something be
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both knew to be true.
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``Arnaud Brogloise has had the written text of them since the night of
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the battle,'' Hakram continued. ``Which means that, up to this meeting
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being held, Hasenbach and the Highest Assembly had a day and a half to
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both read the papers, debate their content and hold a vote -- the offer
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made, of the Carrion Lord turned over in exchange for a signature? It
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was lawfully binding, coming from an envoy with the man's invested
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powers.''
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``Which is doable,'' I pointed out. ``They could call session at night,
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if necessary. They don't necessarily need to read the whole thing
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themselves, either, they can have scholars they trust sum up the
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contents.''
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``Not if the Assembly also has to wrangle together succession for seven
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principalities too,'' Vivienne quietly said. ``Even in times of war they
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have conventions, Cat. And they'd have to arrange it all over scrying,
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too, which is faster than messengers but still a devil's delay.''
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I drummed my fingers against the table as I began thinking back on all
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that'd been said. They were right, these two. And more than they knew,
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considering all the different things Brogloise had agreed on in the
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First Prince's name.''
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``They'd need to vote over hosting all this in Salia,'' I said. ``Over
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the amount of soldiers allowed in the capital. Shit, that should have
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been a tip off shouldn't it? That this is diplomacy and we still got so
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much \emph{done}.''
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``Bad faith negotiations?'' Vivienne suggested. ``Hasenbach could be
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making promises without having held vote over them yet, banking on
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confirmation afterwards.''
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``That's too sloppy for who we're dealing with,'' I grunted. ``Setting
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aside anyone wanting her deposed would be handed a pretext if she did
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it, she'd be playing with fire when it comes to us -- and she won't risk
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that when Procer's out in the wilds with the wolves prowling.''
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``Then there remains one plausible alternative,'' Hakram said. ``Which
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is that Hasenbach has held those votes and rammed them through the
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Highest Assembly by virtue of having the votes to pass essentially
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anything she'd like without debate.''
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``That can't be the case if the royals who abdicated here got their pick
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of successor on their throne,'' I flatly said. ``There wasn't a lot of
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loyalty to Cordelia Hasenbach in that crowd even before the campaign
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cost them their crown.''
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I grimaced. That meant seven empty seats in a voting assembly of
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twenty-three, which was a significant chunk, and considering the main
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opposition to the First Prince had coalesced around Princess Rozala, who
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was here in Iserre there'd be no one with the influence to seriously get
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in her way. No, by simple arithmetic I could see Hasenbach having
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finagled what was essentially run of the place. Between the Lycaonese,
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the lakeside principalities and those in the south that were quaking in
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their boots at the thought of the League coming in to stay? On one hand,
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this meant I could actually make bargains with the First Prince and
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expect to see them bear fruit. On the other hand, this whole situation
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had the potential of turning into a nasty brew if accusations of tyranny
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were thrown around and enough people listened.
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``Nothing we can do about that from here,'' Vivienne pragmatically said.
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``And I've just begun to restore contact with the Jacks in broader
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Procer, so it'll be some time before we can hear of what's happening in
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Salia.''
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I leaned back into my seat, closing my eyes to think. I tended to think
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of Hasenbach as a largely reasonable woman, when it came down to it.
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Arrogant and high-handed, yes, but not bloodthirsty or blind in her
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principles. She'd despised me and all I stood for but never closed the
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door to negotiation because to her diplomacy was a preferable path to
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war if it could lead to the same ends. I couldn't say I liked the woman,
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but I held to a degree of professional respect towards her. She had,
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after all, held her own against Black and Malicia for years and come out
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ahead as often as not. So when I'd heard that she was dredging something
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out of Lake Artoise through Kairos I'd suspected it wouldn't be pretty,
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but also been inclined to take it as a precaution on her part. A weapon
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to unleash if all else fail, not a stick she'd begin waving as a club
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near everyone else to get her way. I'd been reasonably certain, deep
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down, that she wouldn't ever use what it was she was having dredged.
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Now, though? They were all justifiable, practical steps she was taking.
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I knew that. But there was a word for people who did things like seizing
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control of the Highest Assembly and digging up ancient weapons, and it
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wasn't \emph{heroine.}
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``Vivienne,'' I said, opening my eyes. ``Lean on the Jacks, I don't care
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how many you end up burning. The situation in Salia is no longer the
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highest priority.''
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``The dredging,'' Hakram gravelled, studying me closely.
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``Find out what Hasenbach is fishing out of the lake, Lady Dartwick,'' I
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said. ``And find out \emph{quickly}.''
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The woman who was likely to be my successor nodded decisively, and we
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left it at that.
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---
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If there was anyone who still kept to the ancient faith that'd had had
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the stones on the barrow-top raised, they'd be within their rights to
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call this desecration. My affairs had been removed from the heart of the
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Mavian prayer, brought back to my tent, but given that this would be the
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first fireside night we held in more than a year I'd charged Adjutant
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with\ldots{} furnishing it properly. Which was why where some olden
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thinning boundaries had once been arranged, now a deep and broad fire
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pit had been dug by legionaries with shovels. Benches were brought up,
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the roughly-hewn kind that regulations frowned upon but appeared just as
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inevitably as washerwomen -- both the kind that actually washed clothes
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and the one that did, as well as those impressively enterprising souls
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that did both -- and peddlers when an army stayed in the same place for
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a time. The only reason the benches were discouraged were because they
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were a waste of wood and often got in the way of the swift deployment
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that Legion camps were meant to enable, though so long as legionaries
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left them behind most officers let the matter lie. They made for a
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comfortable enough arrangement around the fire, and with a handful of
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seats they made up the heart of the arrangement.
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The drinks were as broad in arraignment, Adjutant having gotten his hand
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on a barrel of Laure ale as well as what I suspected to be a wide array
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of confiscated liquors. In an exercise of nostalgia for our College days
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we'd killed two pigs and put them to roast on spikes, before prudently
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arranging skewers of horse as well given the number of greenskins among
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us. For those of us with `cow teeth' there'd be a massive communal plate
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of biryani as well, out here in Procer the cumin and pepper that went
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with the rice almost more expensive a luxury than the rest of the meal
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put together. I claimed my seat there not long before night fell,
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abusing my queenly prerogatives to get a decent bottle of wine while I
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read through the last of the reports Juniper had sent me. There was
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speculation among our general staff that the League's armies were less
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than a month away from running out of food, which would be rather
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interesting if it were true. Already preparations for the likely march
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on Arans were beginning, too, though Tariq and I would have to see to
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the practicalities of that. A Named or two might be able to slip in and
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out of Twilight on their own -- especially here in Iserre, where it
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would be so thinly parted form Creation -- but not an army. That would
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require a gate, and a great deal of power.
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I handed back the reports to the officer who'd brought them to me in the
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first place just before the first two of my little band of miscreants
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strolled in. The first I'd seen not too long ago in this very place,
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though Robber had apparently since led his cohort in a reckless ambush
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on Levantine mages he'd somehow lived through without taking a wound.
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The other, though, it'd been quite a while. Senior Sapper Pickler had
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never been what you'd call a sociable woman even at her most convivial,
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and between her suddenly expanded budget in building engines and my
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ever-broadening duties it'd been ages since we saw each other outside
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our work. She had, like Robber, visibly aged -- her leathery skin was
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more deeply creased, her angular face grown gaunter. She'd gotten
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bigger, too, larger in height and frame than most goblins. It was said
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that Matron lines -- and as a Matron's daughter, Pickler was of a purer
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strain of that than most could claim -- grew larger and lived longer
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than most of their kind, though the rumours of sharper intellect as well
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I'd never put much stock in. It was easy to claim superior wits when the
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opposition was kept ignorant on purpose.
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``Your Majesty,'' Pickler greeted me.
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To my surprise, without a hint of irony. I glanced at Robber with a
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cocked eyebrow.
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``It is your title,'' he defended.
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``She's never that deferential,'' I flatly said. ``\emph{None} of you
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are ever that deferential.''
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The sapper was, I noticed only then, carrying a handful of scrolls.
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``Pickler,'' I said, reluctantly amused, ``are you trying to sweeten me
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up before asking funding for your latest project?''
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A heartbeat passed.
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``No,'' she tried.
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``What's in the scrolls, Pickler?'' I nonchalantly asked.
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``\ldots{} recipes,'' she slowly said. ``For cooking. Which is a pastime
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I took up since we last spoke.''
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``I thought cooking was a strictly male thing for goblins,'' I said,
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eyeing Robber.
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``No Matron would ever eat anything another female had a hand in
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making,'' he agreed.
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``I began out of my deep respect for human culture,'' Pickler said.
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``Which I never mentioned until now because\ldots{}''
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Out of genuine curiosity I let her try to think her way out of this one
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without interruption.
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``\ldots{} because I believed it so obvious it did not bear
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mentioning,'' she triumphantly finished.
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Her professed respect was slightly undermined by the way she'd said
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\emph{human} culture instead of, you know, mentioning an actual culture.
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Still, I knew how to bring this to a solid finish,
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``That's a shame,'' I mused, ``I mean, I need to blow all that dwarven
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gold on something and you know how I love a good siege engine. I sure
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wish someone had schematics to show me.''
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Robber discretely shook his head, the filthy traitor, but she wasn't
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paying attention.
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``I also have schematics, Your Majesty,'' the Senior Sapper immediately
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said, voice almost visibly brightening. ``For unrelated reasons.''
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``So close,'' Robber moaned. ``\emph{So close}, Pickler.''
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I glanced at the cup in my hand, finding it mostly empty, then shrugged.
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``What the Hells,'' I said. ``Drag a seat here and show me what you've
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got. So long as Robber keeps pouring me wine, anyway.''
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By the time the others began drifting in we were half an entire bottle
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in -- I'd ordered our mutinous manservant to begin cupbearer duties for
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her as well -- and loudly arguing about the practicality of even greatly
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ameliorated scorpions against undead.
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``It's not like I don't think siege has a role to play,'' I said. ``But
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bolts aren't going to win us an engagement, Pickler. \emph{Massed
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catapults}. That's our force multiplier.''
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``Why don't we just pick up stones and throw them at Keter, while we're
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at it,'' she hissed back. ``Or better yet, import a dwarven pebble and
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toss that. \emph{Shame on your line}, Foundling.''
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``And you were so sweet to me earlier,'' I mourned.
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``Oh, a human put on a crown and started ruling other humans,'' she
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scathingly said. ``How unprecedented. You still can't do abstract
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mathematics properly, I bet.''
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``I've had other things on my plate,'' I replied, perhaps a tad
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defensively.
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``What's this about shaming Catherine?'' a voice cheerfully called out.
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``I can't believe you'd leave me out of that.''
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The rest of the lot had come as a wave, it seemed. Archer, who'd just
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cheerfully thrown her hat into the ring, and with her Hakram and Masego.
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At a glance, Juniper and Aisha was further down the slope and climbing
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up while talking animatedly. Everyone, then. I leaned back into my seat.
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``Don't mouth off, wench,'' I replied to Indrani. ``I bet you can't do
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abstract mathematics decently either.''
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``Funny you would say that,'' Archer said, and grinned like I'd just
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made a mistake.
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\emph{Godsdamnit}, I thought, and prepared to take my lumps.
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