398 lines
20 KiB
TeX
398 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{seed-ii}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Seed II}\label{seed-ii}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{seed-ii}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Seed II}
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\epigraph{``Patience is the art through which rivers shatter mountains.''}{Solon of Many Decrees, founder of the Secretariat}
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Deep beneath the beating heart of the Wasteland, in a repository of
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secrets ancient and terrible, two accomplices debated the truth of
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empire.
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Alaya of Satus had been born to the Green Stretch, but her roots were
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not of the mud. Soninke of no great line was she yet Soninke still, and
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though some of the ways she kept to had sprung from the shores of the
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Wasaliti her years in Ater had seen her embrace the Wasteland's rites. A
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caged bird in the Dread Empire's most gilded cage, she had learned the
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songs of power from the carrion circling the carcass of Nefarious'
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reign. With watchful eye and steady hand she'd taught herself to kill
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without ever baring a blade and to sow ruin with but whisper, the trade
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and tongue of those born high. Patient and smiling, she had learned the
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mistakes and the triumphs of those who called themselves her betters,
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and behind the smile taken the measure of the ailing empire falling
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apart around her. Like a chirurgeon and a sculptor, her hand had marked
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the cut. And so Alaya of Satus asserted this: \emph{Praes is a game that
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can be won}.
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Amadeus of the Green Stretch was the son of corpses now buried, born of
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a land tread by soldiers under different banners with every season.
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Duni, he was, his skin the pale shame of old defeats that Praes had
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deemed filth even in name, and never did he forget it. It was not the
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Tower's promises that whispered in his sleep but the footsteps of his
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youth, the wheel of unending defeats seen from the side with cold eyes.
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In indignation he had become squire, and so sharp a blade found it that
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it slew his rivals and knighted him in black. To the banner he'd raised
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the disgraces of the Wasteland had flocked, be they green of skin and
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red of hand, Named hunted from above or every sharp mind and soul of
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steel that knew contempt but no captain. His was a company of the hungry
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and the lost, sworn to bleed for those unworthy of that blood. And so
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Amadeus of the Green Stretch asserted this: \emph{Praes is a mould that
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must be broken.}
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An emptying bottle of wine stayed on the table, and as arguing the fate
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of a realm was thirsty work it was not long before a second was opened
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-- just as awful as the first, though to Amadeus the smile it brought in
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his friend was sweeter prize than the finest vintage would have been in
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its stead. Tipsy as they were, the Black Knight found that he more
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disposed to poetic language as he might have been otherwise though Alaya
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hardly seemed to mind.
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``If a mill only makes poor flour,'' Amadeus said, ``one must first look
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at the wheat that is brought to it. Yet if, no matter what is fed to the
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millstone, the flour remains poor? Then the trouble is not with the
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wheat, it is with the mill.''
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``You argue then, that Praesi are not of poor make,'' Alaya said. ``That
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the Empire is as a broken mill and so will only ever make broken things
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out of us.''
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``Soninke, Taghreb, Duni,'' Black replied. ``Goblins and orcs and even
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ogres. There is no inherent blemish in any of these people, yet the
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Dread Empire spits out madmen and monsters with \emph{historical}
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consistency. If the people are not the weakness, Alaya, it can only be
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the empire itself that is the flaw. And no amount of clever schemes can
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ever change that, because cleverness is the virtue of an individual and
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it is the structure itself that is faulty.''
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Dark-eyed and lounging, long hair unbound, the imperial concubine -- oh,
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how it had something at the heart if him clench in hatred every time he
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heard the title -- sipped at the cup in her hand before raising an
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eyebrow.
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``Yet this mill has ground out more than what you castigate, Amadeus,''
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Alaya pointed out. ``It has whelped derelicts and disasters, true, but
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not only these: Maleficent first and second, Terribilis of the same.
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Sorcerous and Maledicta. Some of these were greater than others, but all
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were potent rulers.''
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``Ah,'' Black smiled, ``but what circumstances were these? The Praes
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that Maleficent founded, that Maledicta and the first Terribilis ruled,
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is estranged from ours by more than thousand years. And the others you
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name all inherited debacles, an empire falling apart: Maleficent the
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Second came after the Secret Wars, Terribilis the Second after the Forty
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Years of Shame and Sorcerous' predecessor broke three armies in three
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years on the walls of Summerholm.''
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He shrugged.
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``All three of these reigned over days where the order of things was
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fraying. And so I argue that our skilled rulers rose despite the lay of
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the Empire, not because of it,'' Amadeus said.
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``There we disagree,'' Alaya frankly said. ``Maleficent the Second was
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of middling birth and only a general in title. Sorcerous rose to
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prominence as the Warlock, not by ancient blood. Terribilis the Second
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was of a great line, true, yet never ruled as High Lord. In any other
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realm they would have been the shining star of a few years, then doomed
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to disappear when the adversity that raised them passed.''
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The dark-skinned beauty elegantly pointed a finger towards the ceiling,
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and so the Tower above it.
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``The Tower and all that comes with it ensured they were able to
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\emph{rule}, not merely serve,'' she said. ``Praes does not merely
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follow the line of succession of an old blood, as the Callowans do, and
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hope greatness will come of that roll of the dice. We seek out
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greatness.''
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``And do not find it,'' Amadeus frankly replied. ``Or at least not
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sufficiently often to balance the lunacy and incompetence that is much
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more frequently obtained. More often than not the Tower is claimed
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through murder, which ensures that the crowned tyrant is a skilled
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murderer but guarantees none of the traits desirable in a ruler. As a
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method of seeking greatness, it is ineffective.''
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Alaya's brow rose.
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``And so what is to be the cure to this ailment you have pronounced?''
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she asked. ``To shatter the Tower and to establish instead a royal
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line?''
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``A monarchy in the western manner would not take,'' Amadeus said,
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agreeing with what she had not said. ``And to collapse the Tower would
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be more symbolic a gesture than practical.''
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``And yet you sound pleased,'' she said.
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``You have led to the exact point I wanted to make,'' Black said. ``The
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reason a broken Tower or a proclaimed royal house would both be futile
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gestures is the same.''
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``The High Seats,'' Alaya said.
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``The reason no madman or madwoman's folly has been enough to break the
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Dread Empire is that, functionally speaking, more power lies with the
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High Lords and Ladies than the Tower.''
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It was a bold claim to make, though be believed it the truth, so it was
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not without expectation of contest that he'd spoken.
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``You are not the first to make that claim,'' Alaya said. ``Always the
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Haunted Scholar's old work stands at the heart of it, the same three
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reasons given different wording: Ater, the Legions and accretion.''
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Ater, City of Gates, the great capital of Praes and seat of the Tower.
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At more than half a million souls, it was the largest city and most
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populous city in the Dread Empire: the queen of the Wasteland. Within
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its walls the greatest works of a hundred tyrants stood, among them sown
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secrets and wealth beyond one's wildest dreams. The Empire could not be
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ruled without holding Ater, for without it the bureaucracy was
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masterless and near every instrument of rule save for military strength
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mde beyond reach. It was also a city that could not feed itself, could
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not pay for its own upkeep and must keep its gates agape to even enemies
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for the Imperial Court to be worth holding. Anyone holding Ater must
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either rely for food on the ever-vulnerable Green Stretch, on the
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practice of bloody mass field rituals, or on a highborn ally who'd then
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gain great power and influence from that alliance -- if not outright
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become Chancellor.
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The Legions of Terror, in principle, balanced the scales of power as the
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largest and strongest standing army in the Empire. In practice, without
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the backing of the High Seats the Legions would always begin to decline.
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It was taxes and tributes that funded their ranks, and a tyrant
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attempting to assert authority over the lords and ladies of the
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Wasteland would see the flow of gold and steel dry up. War on the
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wayward nobility was one way to force the matter, and often nobles would
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flock to the Tower's banner in those conflicts -- but with the
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expectation of reward, always. Besides, the gains were temporary and
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civil war typically opened the Empire to Callowan raiding as well as
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extortion over trade by Ashur and the Free Cities. Greenskins, the Clans
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and the Tribes, might serve as loyal and effective soldiers if trained
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but fear of the strength they might gain from such meant they were
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allowed to serve only as expendable auxiliaries. The Legions were a
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noose, but one not always tightened around the neck of the ruling
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tyrant's foes.
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The last of the three, accretion, had first become known to Black as
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\emph{Sanaa's Ruse}. An old Soninke story about a young girl outwitting
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her uncle in claiming her mother's inheritance. The eponymous Sanaa
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proposed that to avoid strife within kin a contest be used to choose
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who'd inherit, the rolling of a great stone over a set distance. The
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uncle was reluctant until Sanaa told him he would only have to roll the
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stone for a mile while hers would be for three, in deference to his age
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and power. And so he did not disagree, when Sanaa decreed that to ensure
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there was no cheating the stones could only be rolled in daylight. And
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only then did the uncle learn that his mile was up a steep hill's slope,
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while Sanaas' three were on flat grounds. And though he was a strong man
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one day's span was not enough to finish the trial, and when night fell
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he could no longer lay hand on his stone. So it \emph{rolled back down
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the slope}.
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In a way it was the same with whoever claimed the Tower, for the tyrant
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usually became the enemy of near every High Seat simply by rising to the
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throne. And all those hallowed and ancient lines had at their fingertips
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centuries of accumulated power, influence and wealth. They ruled from
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cities impregnable by most means, and though no ancient bloodline was
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without its murderous squabbles the kinsmen banded together when the
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family itself was threatened. A Dread Emperor, on the other hand, rarely
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inherited the allies and influence of their predecessor. A decade of
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consolidation of authority in Ater, enforced by wars and a river's worth
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of gold, could evaporate into thin air the very moment the slide of a
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knife decided succession. A Dread Empress must undertake the great game
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with only what she had brought to the Tower, while the High Seats had
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behind them the weight of all their line. It was not that the tyrants
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were powerless, for they were not: Ater was the key to ruling the
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Wasteland, the Tower a beacon gathering Named and with the throne came
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the treasury as well as the Legions. It was possible for a tyrant to
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rule largely as they wished, and indeed this was regularly the case. But
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not without the support of some the High Seats, and struggle against
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others.
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With every fresh reign the Tower's stone went back down the slope, while
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the great lines slowly but surely rolled their own forward.
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``It is a well-written treatise,'' Black said.
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``It is the tedious lament of disgraced second-stringer,'' Alaya mildly
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replied. ``One who fundamentally misunderstands the reason the Tower
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stands at all.''
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Amadeus inclined his head to the side, inviting her to elaborate.
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``No tyrant is meant to rule absolutely save if they triumph at the same
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games you now condemn,'' she said. ``That is by design. From inception,
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the Tower has been a way to keep Praes as a single nation through what
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the first tyrants knew to be inevitable civil wars. It is the greater
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prize that prevents the Wasteland from splintering. The rise of the
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bureaucracy in Ater under Terribilis concentrated power there, which was
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dangerous to the fabric of Praes. A succession of Sahelian tyrants
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wielding such authority, for example, would have seen Aksum attempt
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secession within decades. And so resistance from the High Lords became
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entrenched, the difficulty in wielding greater authority increasing.''
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She flicked a finger at the side of her glass.
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``This is not an accident or a flaw, Amadeus, it is the very
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\emph{intent},'' Alaya said. ``No tyrant may wield absolute authority
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without being exceptional in a way that no contemporary High Seat can
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dispute. The middling and the lucky are removed when they overstep,
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leaving only the splendid to undertake great works.''
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``Your argument, then, is that the Empire's difficulty in regularly
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producing effective rulers is not a shortcoming because it is on
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purpose,'' the Black Knight calmly replied. ``Which is absurd, Alaya,
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even if it is true. A government is meant to \emph{function}, if it does
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not there is no compelling reason for it to keep existing.''
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``It does function,'' she said. ``It does exactly what it was meant to
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do, which is keep the Dread Empire together and serve as means to power
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for the individuals of excellence who do claim the Tower.''
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``The for all our pretence of being an empire we are in truth a pack of
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tribes, requiring a charismatic warlord to move us to accomplish
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anything of scale or ambition,'' Black said. ``We both describe as
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disastrous method of rule, Alaya. The only difference is that in your
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understanding the disaster is a deliberate one.''
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``No,'' she disagreed. ``That reform is required I don't deny in the
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slightest, so do not imply otherwise. Where our opinions differ is that
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you ascribe the Empire's failures to institutional blindness and idiocy,
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where I believe them to be the consequence of an initially sound
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structure having survived beyond its relevance.''
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``Let us compromise, then,'' Amadeus drily said, ``and say it was
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blindness and idiocy that kept the structure standing past its time.''
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That earned him the flash of a smile, seen and gone in the heartbeat's
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span.
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``Reform is long overdue,'' Alaya said. ``On that we agree. Yet I
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suspect the manner of it required will see us differ again.''
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``Reform is perhaps too mild a word,'' Amadeus conceded. ``Though
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rebellion has an implication of haphazardness I find rather insulting.''
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While Black saw no particular issue with slitting the throat of unfit
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authority, he had no use for sloppy tools like riots and secession. Such
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matters were best settled with swift, steady-handed precision: the
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scalpel and not the torch.
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``It would need to be comprehensive,'' he said.
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``Seizing the Tower, and then?'' Alaya murmured.
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``Dismantling the underpinnings of the power of the High Seats,''
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Amadeus said. ``I would begin by arranging for mage academies under the
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Tower's direct authority and outlawing those of the nobles.''
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``And already we have civil war,'' she smiled.
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He was no fool, and so had suspected that might very well be the case.
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Though household troops represented the foundational military strength
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of any Wasteland highborn, it was through mages that most lines rose or
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fell. A talented practitioner, helped by a cadre of skilled mages and
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using a potent ritual, could turn around a campaign or make all manners
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of obstacles disappear. All the great lines had sunk fortunes into
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finding, teaching and binding all those born with a strong Gift in their
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holdings -- though some such policies were better implemented than
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others, with Wolof and Kahtan's traditionally the finest in Praes.
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``There will be civil war regardless,'' Black bluntly replied. ``That is
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inevitable. Resistance by the High Lords can then be used as a pretext
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to begin purges of the aristocracy.''
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``To weaken the lines?'' she asked. ``It would cow them, for a time.''
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``It would be convenient to pretend as much at first,'' Amadeus noted.
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``Though the intention is the extinction of every High Seat and
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significant landholding line in Praes.''
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Alaya went still, then after a moment studied him very closely.
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``You do not jest,'' she stated.
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``I am aware a significant amount of mages would be lost by doing so,''
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the Black Knight noted. ``Yet if the cities of the Empire are to be
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purged of demons, their wards and walls pulled down and their private
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armies folded into the Legions then no highborn of influence can be
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allowed to live. I suppose children younger than six could be spared but
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offering any further mercy would be guaranteeing an insurrection some
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years down the line. It would be best to exterminate the aristocracy
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entirely, to my eye, but Wekesa is certain that would represent a
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catastrophic drop in mage births in the following generation. Minor
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lines can be folded into the bureaucracy instead, with the old High
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Seats turned into provinces in the Miezan manner -- with appointed,
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non-hereditary governors of limited terms.''
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There was a long moment of silence.
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``Maddie, they would fight you to the death over this,'' she said.
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``That is,'' the Black Knight smiled, thin and bladelike, ``the idea.''
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``The civil war, assuming you can even win it and --'' she raised a hand
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to silence his interruption, ``and I know you believe you would, given
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time to prepare, or we wouldn't be having this conversation but Amadeus
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you've not even \emph{begun} to see what they can do when feeling truly
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desperate -- yet even assuming you do win it, it would take decades and
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it would ruin Praes as thoroughly as Triumphant's conquests. And we
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would never entirely recover from the losses, not after the purges you
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describe.''
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``Amputating a diseased limb is not weakening yourself,'' Amadeus calmly
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replied. ``It is salvaging one's body whilst it can still be done. We
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would be lessened in some ways, perhaps. But from that position, we
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would then be capable of genuine growth. It is an acceptable loss.''
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``It is a brute force solution,'' Alaya retorted. ``A chirurgeon's garb
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with a butcher's blade. The violence itself is not inherently unfit a
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means, but the impatience you would wield it with spoils the broth.''
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Black's brow rose, but he did not interrupt.
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``Slaughtering an empire's worthy of influential, wealthy and well-armed
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highborn sorcerers through war is impractical,'' she told him. ``First a
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more traditional reign need be established, to carefully oust them from
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the bureaucracy and the Legions. Then one must constrain their wealth,
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lead them to spend their soldiery outwards, and only then would they be
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ripe for the taking.''
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``It would still come to violence,'' Amadeus said. ``The last step will
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be blade in hand.''
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``The last step will be unnecessary,'' Alaya smiled. ``Irrelevance
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serves the essentially the same purpose as extermination, without the
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massive losses your method would entail. War to the knife is a messy
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affair, Maddie. Best the fade away instead: slowly, quietly,
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inexorably.''
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``What you describe can't be done,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch said,
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``without first seizing the Tower.''
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``No,'' Alaya of Satus softly agreed, ``it cannot.''
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The Black Knight sighed and reached for his cup, draining the last of
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the wine. Had he the choice, he'd prefer this conversation to continue
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for hours yet -- there was still so much to say, to debate and plot. Yet
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what had been said here was already enough to see them both killed, if
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reported to the wrong ears. And if the Chancellor learned he was boon
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companion to a member of the Emperor's seraglio, then the very kindest
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outcome would be the both of them leashed through that secret being held
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back. No, it was time to see to the loose ends. His hand came to rest on
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the pommel sword, and as librarians hid in the shadows they thought him
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blind to he set down the empty wine cup.
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``You always end up having to get your hands bloody for the both of us,
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don't you?'' Alaya said, watching him with hooded eyes. ``I think I
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might grow to despise that, one day.''
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Black's sword cleared the scabbard, and dimly he heard a few of the more
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cautious librarians begin to flee. As if that'd help.
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``But not today,'' he said.
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``But not today,'' she softly agreed.
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He went out into the dark, sword in hand, and screams followed.
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