468 lines
25 KiB
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468 lines
25 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-harp}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Harp}\label{interlude-harp}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-harp}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Harp}
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\epigraph{``Second, beholden:
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Candle to blind
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And harp to still.''}{Second of the three so-called `Mavian Entreaties}
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\emph{Les Horizons Lugubres} was a tavern in the same sense that silk
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was cloth.
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None could lay foot within its glass and stone gardens without first
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having been vouched for by three patrons, and though the hall's outside
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looked rather trivial its insides were a maze of shifting private
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alcoves: they changed with the sun and the moon, the season and the
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weather, so that no two hours spent there would be quite the same. The
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nature of the establishment had made it a favourite of the Circle of
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Thorns since decades before Louis of Satrons' tenure at the head of the
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league began, though it was under his stewardship that the Circle became
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the hidden proprietors of it. Tonight's surroundings were the work of a
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young woman from the principality of Orne, he'd been told, an artist who
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had one walked the fields of the Red Flowers Vales seeking inspiration.
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The influence was plain to the eye, though for all the provincial
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origins it was exquisite to the eye. Redwood tables and sculptures of
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colours glass -- angled so that the moon's shifting radiance and shadows
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would mimic the touch of wind on grass -- were flanked by panes of green
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and grey painted in the Bourdonnier manner, with the occasional glinting
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metal thrown in \emph{pêle-mêle} to hint at the armour of fallen knights
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and fantassins. It was all rather appropriate, given the reason the
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Circle was convening, and the tart Lange red the affair had been paired
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with by their sommelier lent the hasty proceedings a much-needed touch
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of civility.
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After the last of them arrived and took a seat, being poured their glass
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by the colleague to their left rather than a servant according to one of
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the Circle's more practical traditions, Louis of Sartrons rose to his
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feet. His glass went up, matched by that of the other twelve men and
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women in the room, and he cleared his throat.
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``To Procer, and Her Most Serene Highness,'' he toasted.
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His words were politely echoed, and as one they drank before settling
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into their seats. Louis waited a few moments, tinted light casting red
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shadows like claws on his skeletal face, before addressing his peers.
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``It would appear a coup is underway,'' the spymaster said. ``As of now
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the involvement of the Holies of the House of Light and the Silver
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Letters under Balthazar Serigny have been confirmed. The extent of the
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conspiracy beyond this is unclear, though a degree of royal involvement
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is only to be expected.''
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At the other end of the table, the comfortably withered Antonie of
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Bientaillant rapped her knuckles against the table to signify a desire
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to address the table. Louis acceded to the request with a sight
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inclination of the head.
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``My friends in city guard tell me the conspiracy claims to be acting on
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the behalf of Princess Rozala Malanza, though they have not made this
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widely known,'' Antonie said.
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Bertrand de Gonfallond, sharp-eyed and younger than most in this room,
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rapped his knuckles but a moment later. Louis paused for a moment longer
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than necessary before allowing him to speak, an unspoken reminder that
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lack of courtesy to a fellow patron of the Circle had no excuse.
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``Given the prominence of Balthazar Serigny within the coup,'' Bertrand
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said, ``we must consider that this was made known to Antonie's friends
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on purpose. Balthazar has some knowledge of our laws, as you all know.''
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It was not impossible, Louis thought, or in truth even unlikely. The
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Circle of Thorns served no master but the Principate itself, that was
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its governing principle and foremost law. Not the First Prince, not the
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Highest Assembly and certainly not the House of Light. Given that the
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highest office in Procer was not hereditary, it had been understood by
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wise minds early in the nation's history that the Principate's spies
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abroad could be beholden to any one family or institution. The Circle
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must ever be above the fray of schemes within the bounds of Procer,
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intervening only when there was foreign involvement. If the Circle took
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sides in the Assembly's little squabbles, it risked endangering itself
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and therefore the Principate's eyes abroad. In truth that vaunted
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neutrality had been bent, on occasion, but never too far. Those who
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would have the ambition of playing throne-maker in the Assembly were
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weeded out early in their tenure with the Circle, long before reaching
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positions of true influence. Were these years of peace, or even less
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strenuous a war, an attempt to dethrone Cordelia Hasenbach by another
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princess would merit no debate. And it was undeniable that even in
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these\ldots{} delicate times the only acceptable successor to the First
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Prince was Rozala Malanza, as no one else had the support or popularity
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to keep the Principate from falling apart.
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Yet Procer had come upon the antechamber of the end times, and now the
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lines between the foreign and the domestic had blurred. It did not help
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that the Bastard might be behind what Antonie's people had learned, as
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their young colleague had noted. The head of the Silver Letters had
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learned too much for comfort of their laws and methods during the Great
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War, and he was in no way above using Princess Malanza's name as a
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shield to keep the Circle out of this affair until the dust had settled.
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To his left another knuckle rapped the table, Alejandra of Cuenera
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departing from her usual sullen silence to raise her voice.
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``It matters not if Seregny attempts to trifle with us,'' she said,
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voice faintly accented. ``It is not ours to decided whether Cordelia
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Hasenbach or Rozala Malanza will rule. It is ours to unearth whether the
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attempted transition of power is free of the Enemy's meddling.''
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There was a rippling murmur at the table at that, as much in
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consternation as approbation. Several knuckles rapped, though Louis
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chose that of Joachim of Essenrer -- one of the elders among them, and
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the sole Lycaonese. The Circle had been careful that there should always
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be at least one from the northern principalities among them, though
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recruitment was oft difficult. They could not claim to speak to the
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interests of Procer without the rearguard of their empire having a voice
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at their table.
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``It will be necessary to carve into the Silver Letters,'' Joachim said,
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voice oddly powerful for a man so old his skin looked paper-thin. ``They
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are the weak link. The House will have everything of import in cloisters
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and basilicas, but the letter-openers brought in too many for every
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safehouse to truly be secure.''
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Louis hid his amused smirk at the dig at their opposition behind a sip
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of wine, as many others at the table. \emph{Letter-openers}, Joachim had
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mocked them as, for the head of the Circle at the time of their rise to
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legal employ had mocked the thugs as a `confederacy of letter-openers
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and cutpurses'. There were some who said the name of Silver Letters
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itself had come from the way their first founders had made much of their
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wealth opening the correspondence of the wealthy and powerful to extort
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coin by blackmail. The smirk faded along with the taste of the wine on
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his palate as Louis de Satrons digested the rest of his colleague had
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said. It was true but it would also carry consequences unless acted on
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properly.
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``It appears I will have to be led astray by my personal loyalty to Her
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Highness,'' the head of the Circle of Thorns calmly said. ``As is our
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way, I will depart early to allow you to write the denunciation without
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my presence.''
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He paused a moment. Louis supposed he should mayhaps be moved to say
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more, as if it proved that the Silver Letters or their fellow
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conspirators had not been induced by a foreign power this would be the
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last time he addressed the Circle as its leader. Perhaps at all. Yet he
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had never been particularly prone to such flights of fancy, in truth,
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and he had known everyone at this table for decades. Theirs was not a
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profession that allowed for sentiment, and he would not insult their
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common service to the Principate by looking back upon it with
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unnecessary nostalgia. Theirs was grim and often foul work, and those
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who carried it out oft came to grim and foul ends. They had all known
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that long before earning a seat at this table.
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``You know of my endorsement for my successor,'' Louis said. ``And for
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the seat my removal would leace empty. As for the rest\ldots{}''
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He rose to his feet once more and raised his glass.
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``Let none lay hand on this land,'' Louis de Sartrons said.
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Glass roses to match his, as one.
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``Without bleeding for it,'' they replied, every last hard-eyed.
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\emph{You will be as a circle of thorns set around Procer}, their
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ancient founder Clément Merovins had charged, \emph{so that none may lay
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hand on this land without bleeding for it.} If there was rot in the
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flesh, if the Enemy prowled Salia on this night, then they would rip it
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out root and stem.
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---
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Balthazar had not taken a seat at the table, instead leaning against the
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wall of the ornate Hall of Herons as he indulged himself by studying
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those seated.
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He'd not known the full breadth of their plot, as was not unusual in
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such things, yet at this hour of truth the masks had come down when this
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council had brought out those who wished to form the heart of the coming
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reign. It was no small company, near a hundred to his count. His Silver
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Letters and the Holies had formed the heart of the conspiracy so he had
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known the involvement of near everyone of import, but now the rest of
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the lot had come slinking into the palace he'd taken for them to gather
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like maggots on a corpse he found the disparity of those involved to be
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somewhat troubling. That they'd run thin in matters princely was only to
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be expected, given that near every royal that remained in Procer was on
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one of the northern fronts, but a harvest of two was not so trifling a
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thing: Prince Arsene of Bayeux, one of Amadis' old hounds now trained to
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heed Malanza's hand, had been the easy mark.
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He had much to gain from the Princess of Aequitan rising to higher
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office, as one of her inherited partisans. Princess Cotilde of Aisne had
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been a surprise when he'd first learned of her, and even now she seemed
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highly uncomfortable in the company of the others. It was principle
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that'd turned her against Hasenbach, he gathered. The consolidation of
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the Highest Assembly into a tame thing had smacked to her of tyranny,
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and she'd approached the Holies for moral guidance and advice -- only to
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be brought into the fold of the conspiracy instead. There were only two
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other royals in the city, Renato of Salamans and Ariel of Arans, neither
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of which had been judged safe enough to invite.
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Prince Renato was one of Hasenbach's loyalists, now more than ever as a
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war against the League of Free Cities had miraculously spared his lands,
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and while Prince Ariel was more ambiguous in his allegiances he also had
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a great many soldiers marching on his lands through these `Twilight
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Ways'. Both had only reluctantly accepted the summons to a session of
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the Highest Assembly, and immediately begun delaying on actually moving
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towards the physical assembly until their spies could have better notion
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of what was taking place. They'd learn little, Balthazar had seen to
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that. Between the bloody chaos in the streets of Salia and the
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mysterious deaths of the few captains and officials best known in the
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right circles to trade whispers for bribes the easiest ways to gather
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information had been neatly closed.
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The true trouble with those two was that now that Hasenbach had made a
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fool of him and escaped his \emph{own damned hands} it was quite
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possible she'd taken refuge in the manse of one of them. Both princes
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had refused entrance to both the city guard and the House of Light,
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Prince Renato's captain of the guard splitting open the head of an
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overly ambitious city watch officer without batting an eye. Those manses
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could be taken, the conspirators had the numbers for it, but it'd be
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hard fighting and neither of the royals part of the coup were willing to
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agree to it.
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The precedent might be dangerous to their kind, after all.
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A motion passed in the Highest Assembly could pry open those gates, most
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likely, but the masquerade there had to be played out first. For all
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that the conspiracy was currently lacking princes, with a little
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enthusiasm it could begin the work of \emph{making} a few. There were
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candidates on hand, Hasenbach had seen to that when she'd begun her
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little trick with the restored Guillermont Decree -- she'd had men and
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women of the right blood and birth to serve as successor-candidates for
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every principality left leaderless by the Princes' Graveyard. Much like
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how those who'd plotted to unseat the Lycaonese savage had enjoyed the
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very refreshments in this hall that Hasenbach had arranged for her own
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captains, these royal candidates would now be crowned and made the
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conspiracy's creatures instead of the First Prince's.
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It would begin soon, for the summons to the Highest Assembly would soon
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have been sent a full bell ago and when that time was reached the
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sessions could begin even with the absent. A mere two votes would not be
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enough to pass anything, of course, but there the Holies had come of
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some use. While the crowned heads were away from Salia they had left
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behind \emph{assermentés}, sworn surrogates who could vote in their
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stead. By oath these surrogates were to vote only by the will of their
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prince or princess, yet the House of Light had applied both fear and
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faith to good effect.
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It was the will of the Heavens that certain measures be passed, and to
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vote even by oathbreaking was sinless. To refuse was to serve the Enemy,
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whose dark hands had touched the heart of Cordelia Hasenbach and
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corrupted her body and soul. Those priests could not convince Balthazar
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had seen to himself, now that the Augur was no longer an issue:
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hostages, blackmail and naked threats had been enough to secure a narrow
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majority. He'd have preferred to hold the session without even waiting
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for the whole bell to pass, but both the royals and the Holies had
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refused to hear of it. Rozala Malanza's ascension to holy rule was not
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to be marred by even the slightest of procedural faults. The former
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fantassin thought them fools for it, for though they worried of such
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details being used to overthrow Malanza down the line they were
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forgetting they first had to get the fucking princess on the throne.
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Which he suspected would be harder to achieve than expected, given the
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discordance of conspirators he was looking at. There were Salians there,
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officers in the city guard and the garrison as well as bureaucratic
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officials. Hasenbach's harsh measures against corruption in the capital
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had seen kinsmen from most great families in the region lose a sinecure
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and the assorted income, and as she'd refrained from purging the old
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guard that'd acted with probity quite a few had nursed private hatreds
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of the First Prince for years and only now come out to settle them. It'd
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been Balthazar himself who dug out half of those malcontents, having his
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fresh flush of agents in the capital find out who had grudges while
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ostensibly looking for `Praesi infiltrators', yet Prince Arsene and the
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Holies had stumbled across quite a few themselves.
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It'd been the realization of exactly how many enemies Cordelia Hasenbach
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has made that'd prompted the conspiracy to act, as well as the
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understanding that the window of opportunity was slight. A coup could
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not be had while there were foreign armies within marching distance of
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the capital, and Malanza had been exceedingly clear that she could not
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be seen to be doing the overthrowing herself: it had to be settled
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before she arrived in Salia. Still, the Gods had smiled on them when the
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time came. Some scrivener in the House had unearthed a precedent from
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the Liturgical Wars about a priestess' regency in Segovia that'd had one
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of the holdover faction in the Holies swing over into the camp preaching
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direct action, swinging the House of Light's influence entirely behind
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the coup just in time.
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Some agents of Prince Arsene had caught sight of the priests moving
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guards into the city and the Prince of Bayeux had tentatively reached
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out to the Holies, adding the weight of his own growing conspiracy to
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their own. It'd all fallen into place, just before the last chance any
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of them would have for years if ever, and so Balthazar had set aside his
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own wariness of Princess Rozala in favour of backing the coup to the
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hilt. Never again would he have such an opportunity and Balthazar
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Serigny would not let that fucking murdering savage rule one moment
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longer than he had to. Not when his own sister had never even gotten a
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grave in Brus, just gotten thrown into a mass grave with the rest of the
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fantassins by the northern butchers.
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He might have suffered through that, in truth, even if that'd been the
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day where he'd thrown his support entirely behind Princess Constance of
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Aisne. But Salieri getting an arrow in the back for coming too close of
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the Neustrian camp after dark? Balthazar considered himself a callous
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man and did so with some pride. Callouses were what grew from rough use,
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honest use, and though poets and highborn could afford sentiment the
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likes of him found just as costly as any other luxury. Yet even for him,
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a sister and a husband was too much. It'd been like poison in his veins
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every time he looked at Hasenbach, the knowledge that if she'd just
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stayed in her fucking frozen wasteland like Lycaonese were meant to then
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someone proper could have put an end to the Great War and the only two
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people he'd ever slightly cared about would still be alive.
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And he could do nothing, for even \emph{intent} would be smelled out by
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Hasenbach's pet oracle Chosen. So he'd smiled and served and waited,
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even as she made plain she meant to replace him with some twit from
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Lyonis. He'd kept it all inside him and placed men and women he owed in
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useful places because one day, \emph{one day}, there would be an
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opening. And it had come, hadn't it? Because there truly \emph{had} been
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Eyes of the Empire in the Salia, and his people had caught them along
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with their papers -- including a dated suggestion of how to arrange the
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murder of the First Prince, mentioning the Carrion Lord's own theories
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of how the powers of the Augur worked.
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Given that the eastern monster had run a merry chase around the
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heartlans while making a fool of every force in the west until the
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Peregrine caught him by surprise, Balthazar had read those `theories'
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with great interest. And, upon deciding they were reasonable, finally
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reached out to the Holies afterwards, to\ldots{} lend a hand, and
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perhaps a few suggestions. Not that they'd ever trusted him, which was
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admittedly not unwise of them. Seven priests from the very upper ranks
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of the Holies were in attendance now, representing the House of Light
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along with their swarm of lesser priest attendants. The priests had been
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scheming for longer than any of them, as it turned out. Balthazar had
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seen some of their correspondence with Malanza, and while it'd begun
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innocently enough also it'd begun months ago and grown increasingly
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treasonous as it went.
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The Princess of Aequitan had struck gold when she'd raised the notion of
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restoring the House's seat in the Highest Assembly, by his reckoning.
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That'd been enough to move the ambitious to begin convincing the not,
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and after that it'd only been a matter of time until enough priests fell
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on her side. I'd been bold of her to use the royal seal of Aequitan on
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some of the correspondence, though Balthazar had noted she'd been clever
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enough to do so only on those letters which were seemingly innocent. Not
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all had been penned by her, for perhaps a third were identical to the
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samples of former prince Louis Rohanon's handwriting the Silver Letters
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had in their possession. Yet given how deep the once-ruler of Creusens
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was known to be in her councils that was not unexpected, if surprisingly
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trusting of her. It might be that Rohanon was to be her formal consort
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after her election.
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It was unfortunate that the situation in Iserre had made it impossible
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to send someone directly in the army camp -- Sophie of Lyonis was
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watching Malanza like a hawk for exactly such a thing -- but it had been
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observed by his agents that the letters were in fact coming from the
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heart of the coalition army. He'd even intercepted one, and used it as
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an introduction to begin his own private correspondence with the
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princess. That'd been the last confirmation needed for Balthazar, as
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while someone else might be willing to offer him an empty pardon there
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was no one else who should be interested in very obliquely suggesting
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that Rozala Malanza's younger brother and rival claimant, at court here
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in Salia, should perhaps meet with an unfortunate accident in the chaos
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of the events to come. She likely had her own agents to arrange such a
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thing, Balthazar knew, so he'd taken the request for what it was: an
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extension of trust to bring him more fully into her camp.
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It would be a pleasure to work with a woman such a deft hand at the Ebb
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and Flow, especially one who had the foresight to \emph{hide} it unlike
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so many of her peers.
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``- and so the House of Light had begun to debate whether the actions of
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Simon of Gorgeault have made him graceless, as the known murderer of lay
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brothers of the House.''
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The spymaster's eyes snapped up at the old man who'd been speaking, of
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the Holies from the south.
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``A clarification,'' Balthazar the Bastard said. ``Was Brother Simon
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harmed before being returned to confinement?''
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Gods, let them not have bled the old man. Balthazar was not particularly
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fond of him, but the Holy Society had friends in many high places and if
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they began whining about their leader being harmed during the coup
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there'd be an outrage. The Arlesite priest purpled at being questioned
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in such a manner, but there was no one in this hall who did not know who
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Balthazar Serigny was now -- or why crossing him would be a costly
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mistake.
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``He was not,'' the Holy said.
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Balthazar's brow rose in surprise. Gorgeault was long past his prime,
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but it was known in some circles he'd had quite the adventurous youth.
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He would not have gone quietly.
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``He was not harmed at all?'' the spymaster pressed.
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The priest spoke through gritted teeth.
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``He was not returned to confinement, cutthroat,'' the Holy reluctantly
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said. ``He escaped.''
|
|
|
|
Oh. Oh, those fucking fools. Did they not realize how that changed
|
|
things? Balthazar, much as it burned to admit it, had blundered when
|
|
he'd failed to seize Hasenbach more forcefully. But now the Silver
|
|
Letters were out in force, every priest in the city was keeping an eye
|
|
out for her and the manses of her supporters were under constant watch.
|
|
It was known she'd fled into the high districts after making it out of
|
|
the palace, and those had been closed down by guards and garrison so it
|
|
was a certainty she was still in there. If she was in anywhere but the
|
|
manses, it was only a matter of time before she was found. If she was in
|
|
one of the manses, she could only wait helplessly there. It was still a
|
|
dangerous situation, given the cunning of their quarry, but one that
|
|
could be salvaged: especially if the Highest Assembly came through. But
|
|
now Gorgeault would be out in the streets, and all his little friends
|
|
and their little hiding places that no one else knew about would be
|
|
opened to Hasenbach the fucking moment the other spy found her. Which he
|
|
would, because for an old sack of bones he was sharp as goblin steel.
|
|
|
|
``Serigny,'' Prince Arsene said, voice cutting through the room and
|
|
demanding silence by simple virtues of his station. ``What troubles
|
|
you?''
|
|
|
|
``It troubles me that our friends in the cloth have let slip one of the
|
|
few individuals capable pf smuggling Cordelia Hasenbach out of the
|
|
capital,'' the head of the Silver Letter flatly said.
|
|
|
|
The silence that fell was deafening.
|
|
|
|
``That cannot be allowed,'' another of the Holies said. ``She is to
|
|
stand judgement before the Heavens and the Highest Assembly.''
|
|
|
|
``Shall either bother themselves to fetch her?'' Balthazar cuttingly
|
|
replied.
|
|
|
|
Anger from the priests, which like most of them was growing rather
|
|
tiresome.
|
|
|
|
``Enough,'' Prince Arsene yelled, and when heeded lowered his voice.
|
|
``You have a suggestion to make, I take it?''
|
|
|
|
``I'll need at least two thousand men,'' the spymaster said. ``Retinues,
|
|
city guard or garrison it matters not so long as they are steady and
|
|
will obey orders.''
|
|
|
|
``And what will they be ordered?'' a Salian captain suspiciously asked.
|
|
|
|
``We know what part of the city Hasenbach has fled into, and we've
|
|
sealed it off,'' Balthazar Serigny evenly said. ``Yet I have received
|
|
fresh information that, in her despair, the Wicked Prince has struck a
|
|
bargain with Below and is now attempting to bring forth demons into the
|
|
city.''
|
|
|
|
There was a pause.
|
|
|
|
``For the sake of Salia,'' the Bastard smiled, ``we shall have to burn
|
|
her out.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Wearing heavy cloaks, in deference to the last winter chill and not any
|
|
great need for discretion, two tall silhouettes strode within the
|
|
southernmost gate of Salia. The Witch of the Woods frowned, smelling
|
|
blood and smoke, and inclined her head to the side questioningly.
|
|
|
|
``Order must be restored,'' the White Knight calmly agreed.
|