364 lines
19 KiB
TeX
364 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-79-hitch}{%
|
|
\chapter{Hitch}\label{chapter-79-hitch}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``The crocodiles in the pit ate the condemned too quickly when
|
|
starved and only nibbled when well-fed, which is why we bespelled them
|
|
to be always be hungry for a little more. Thankfully they do not wear
|
|
clothes, and so can still be told apart from the rest of my court.''}{Dread Emperor Perfidious}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The conversation did not truly resume after we returned inside.
|
|
|
|
Hasenbach was burning with the need to reassess the situation, I caught,
|
|
to summon her advisors and generals and reconsider where Procer stood
|
|
after the several revelations I'd dropped onto her lap. It drastically
|
|
changed her nation's situation going into the negotiations, I knew that
|
|
very well. Though the First Prince still needed the Grand Alliance as a
|
|
whole I'd likely gone from an important ally to the single most
|
|
important foreign relation of the Principate. There was no point in
|
|
further kicking the hornet's nest by trying to get anything out of her
|
|
before she was certain of where she stood, not that I minded. Time was
|
|
on my side as much as it was on any mortal's: what I brought to the
|
|
table only became more valuable the closer to the end of truce we came.
|
|
Naturally, before we left the balcony I'd made it clear to Hasenbach
|
|
that the affairs of the Firstborn were not to be spoken of even with her
|
|
closest advisors. Sve Noc kept me out of arcane eyes and ears, but loose
|
|
lips were harder to ward against and there was no doubt that Procer was
|
|
currently a barrel afflicted by an army's worth of leaks. That she did
|
|
not argue the matter was a sign, to my eye, that she correctly
|
|
understood the stakes involved.
|
|
|
|
I got dark looks from Malanza and Brother Simon as the talks effectively
|
|
stalled after we limped back to warmth and excuses were soon made for
|
|
the Procerans to depart. From their point of view, I'd gone outside with
|
|
the Warden of the West after she humiliated herself at my feet and
|
|
returned her both troubled and boiling with the urge to leave. They
|
|
might be assuming threats had been involved, which admittedly given our
|
|
respective positions would be child's play to hand out. Foolish in the
|
|
long view, of course, but then my people were not known to be fond of
|
|
anything long save for prices. Cordelia had not willfully tugged at my
|
|
conscience without reason: it was the closest thing she had to leverage
|
|
on me at the moment. She'd snapped her pride over her knee to try to
|
|
begin evening the scales between the two of us, which I supposed was
|
|
laudable. It didn't, of course. Even the scales, or make me fonder of
|
|
her on a personal level. She wasn't my friend, she'd not somehow ceased
|
|
to be the same woman who'd thrown my people to the deeps out of
|
|
convenience. But that did not change the necessity of fighting back the
|
|
Dead King or the perils lurking in overplaying my hand while it was
|
|
still the strongest at the table. They were separate matters, and I need
|
|
not like the woman to work with her.
|
|
|
|
Besides, in some ways I genuinely respected her. Often that was better
|
|
than liking someone, when it came to making bargains: fondness waxed and
|
|
waned, character tended to be more stable a foundation for agreements.
|
|
We stayed in the hall after the three Procerans departed, Hakram and
|
|
Vivienne rising as Hasenbach departed the way etiquette dictated while I
|
|
did not. I wasted no time in weaving a ward of Night after they left, as
|
|
I had no intention of being eavesdropped upon by the inevitable spies
|
|
that'd be waiting with their ear pressed against the door.
|
|
|
|
``Whatever Hasenbach has dredged up, she can't use it yet,'' I bluntly
|
|
told them. ``It's not a Hell Egg, unless she's a much better liar than I
|
|
thought and surprisingly shirt-sighted to boot. I'm leaning towards the
|
|
remains of an angel at the moment.''
|
|
|
|
``William needed forty-nine hours to call Contrition, but little more
|
|
than that,'' Vivienne noted. ``Though the Choir whispered many secrets
|
|
to him in his dreams he did not share, and I have only the shallowest
|
|
knowledge of such matters.''
|
|
|
|
It was nice to see that green Named on both sides of the fence ended up
|
|
mostly fumbling their way through the dark. If the Heavens had handed
|
|
out some sort of manual to their champions while Below ate dust it'd be
|
|
deeply unfair. On the other hand, I grimly thought, I'd not be all that
|
|
surprised in such a situation to hear that Below did hand out a manual
|
|
but some villain had burned all the copies to hinder the competition. I
|
|
had, after all, yet to encounter a single villain who put stock in the
|
|
notion of fair play.
|
|
|
|
``The Lone Swordsman was a hero in Contrition's service, treading the
|
|
remains of one of their own and bringing them forth,'' Hakram pointed
|
|
out. ``It was an alignment threefold, pouring out after years of heroes
|
|
being suppressed by the Carrion Lord. It seems unlikely the Principate
|
|
will benefit from such factors in its own attempts at mastery.''
|
|
|
|
``Hero is the heart of the matter here,'' I said. ``The First Prince
|
|
either needs one of those taking orders from her or a legion's worth of
|
|
priests to make anything out of those -- still speculative, so let's not
|
|
get ahead of ourselves -- remains.''
|
|
|
|
``Would it not be, in a sense, an angel's corpse?'' Vivienne suddenly
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
I cocked my head to the side, unsure of where she was headed with this.
|
|
Hakram let out a rumbling noise.
|
|
|
|
``The Dead King is the greatest necromancer that ever lived,'' Adjutant
|
|
reminded me.
|
|
|
|
I sucked in a lip, but after a moment shook my head.
|
|
|
|
``The water in Lake Henghest was blessed and that was just from
|
|
\emph{touching} the remains,'' I said. ``Light tends to screw with
|
|
magic, anyway, and this is about as consecrated as a corpse can get.
|
|
Necromancy shouldn't be able to raise it.''
|
|
|
|
A beat passed.
|
|
|
|
``We'll still ask Masego just in case,'' I added.
|
|
|
|
``Diabolist as well,'' Vivienne calmly suggested. ``Her knowledge of
|
|
such lore might be deeper than even Zeze's.''
|
|
|
|
I shot her an assessing look. It'd always been a given I would talk with
|
|
Akua about this -- as Vivienne had intimated, if anyone would know about
|
|
angel necromancy it would be Wolof's most terrible golden child -- but
|
|
I'd not wanted to rub it in her face. My successor's expression was hard
|
|
to read, leaving me few hints as to her thoughts. Was this an oblique
|
|
way to tell me I need not walk on eggshells when it came to Akua
|
|
Sahelian, or simple blunt pragmatism? Something to mull over later.
|
|
|
|
``It's a liability even if it can't be raised,'' Hakram gravelled.
|
|
``Bringing that into a battle with the Hidden Horror is like wading into
|
|
a goblin feast-night with pockets full of munitions. It can only end one
|
|
way.''
|
|
|
|
Most Named would balk at being compared to goblins no matter whose
|
|
banner they flew, but it was rather heartwarming to imagine the likes of
|
|
the Pilgrim consigned to the fate of metaphorical goblinry.
|
|
|
|
``The Dead King's one looming trouble, but the Tyrant's another,''
|
|
Vivienne darkly said. ``That man would strike the match to the whole
|
|
world's pyre just for a laugh, Cat, and he's not nearly as neutered as
|
|
you think.''
|
|
|
|
``His armies really are headed south,'' I told her, ``you told me as
|
|
much yourself and the Eyes confirmed independently. The League's fallen
|
|
behind the Hierarch and Kairos with him, but not the point of utter
|
|
idiocy: they're not going to backstab a continent-wide alliance in the
|
|
middle of throwing down with Keter. Not even for a few southern
|
|
principalities. They'll know damn well that if we lose they're screwed
|
|
too and if we win we'll return it all a hundredfold.''
|
|
|
|
Frankly, if I were an utterly amoral monster with the intention to
|
|
expand and in charge of the League's political decisions, I'd promptly
|
|
sign the Accords to avoid falling on the wrong side of the mutual
|
|
defence clause against non-signatories and then simply \emph{wait}.
|
|
Patience would mean the Grand Alliance's armies bleeding against Keter,
|
|
and when those armies all went home \emph{then} I'd strike at southern
|
|
Procer. Riding to the Principate's defence again would be wildly
|
|
unpopular with all its allies, after a brutal grind against the dead up
|
|
north, which would limit the effectiveness of the treaties. If the
|
|
League then gobbled only limited territories, like Tenerife and
|
|
Salamans, there might be heavy pressure on Procer to then accept a peace
|
|
should offer be extended.
|
|
|
|
``That only means that the horse he's riding is not longer the League,''
|
|
Vivienne said, eyes sharp. ``It might be the Hierarch, or the Dead King
|
|
or a dozen other flavours of madness. We don't \emph{know}, which is
|
|
half the trouble with that one.''
|
|
|
|
``His play here is to take a swing at the White Knight,'' I said. ``Has
|
|
to be, he had the man summoned by treaty just so he could stand trial.
|
|
And Hierarch could make that troublesome, I suppose, but if he does then
|
|
he's signing his own death warrant -- decapitating a hero is breaking
|
|
the truce, Vivs. Especially if it's the Sword of Judgement. They do
|
|
that, neither Hierarch nor Tyrant walk out of Salia alive. Not with the
|
|
kind of power that's gathered here.''
|
|
|
|
``There'd be legal grounds for an execution, considering he's an Ashuran
|
|
hero that fought in an internal League war and presumably took likves,''
|
|
Hakram said. ``And even a public attempt would stir up trouble among the
|
|
heroes when it's pointed out to be lawful under the Accords.''
|
|
|
|
Which I did not doubt for a moment Kairos Theodosian would. By now full
|
|
copies of the text had been made available to all delegations, even the
|
|
League's, so there was no doubt he'd either read or had someone read
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
``More likely he wants to strike at Judgement through the White Knight,
|
|
which I'll lose no sleep over,'' I said. ``I'll give fair warning to all
|
|
involved but besides that it's no trouble of mine. I owe no debt to any
|
|
Choir, save that which would be paid in steel.''
|
|
|
|
Hanno was personable enough and seemed to think well of the Seraphim,
|
|
but I'd weep no tears for the Choir of Judgement getting a taste of its
|
|
own medicine even if that lesson came by madman's hands. Either the
|
|
angels would lose a few feathers or either of the two villains at the
|
|
head the League would get a taste of smiting. I couldn't see a losing
|
|
proposition in that for either Callow, the Accords or even myself.
|
|
|
|
``The Tyrant of Helike is nearing the end of his thread,'' Hakram said.
|
|
``He's burned too many bridges, we all saw that much at the Graveyard.
|
|
If not for the Dead King's more pressing threat, half of Calernia would
|
|
already have banded together to crush him. His actions have isolated the
|
|
Free Cities diplomatically as long as he lives and his defeats mean he's
|
|
losing prestige within their ruling structure. Given the informality of
|
|
his pre-eminence among the League, that could mean the waning of his
|
|
influence.''
|
|
|
|
I worried my lip.
|
|
|
|
``He's cornered, you're saying,'' I slowly said.
|
|
|
|
Which was not a good thing, in a villain of Kairos Theodosian's calibre.
|
|
Best to kill him with a clean, quick stroke than let him scheme with
|
|
desperation moving the hand.
|
|
|
|
``Or exactly where he intended to be from the beginning,'' Vivienne
|
|
said. ``When a skilled enemy makes an obvious mistake, it is no such
|
|
thing.''
|
|
|
|
That last part was a quote from the \emph{Strategoi}, as I recalled,
|
|
which was an amusing piece of irony considering it was believed to have
|
|
been written by Theodosius the Unconquered.
|
|
|
|
``Either way we should share our concerns with the Grand Alliance and
|
|
have some of our people look into whatever it is he's up to,'' I mused.
|
|
``Fair enough. Best not to let him make a mess even if it's not in our
|
|
backyard, strictly speaking.''
|
|
|
|
I leaned back into my seat, glancing at the cup of cooled tea I'd barely
|
|
touched. Yeah, I wasn't going to force myself to drink that even if it
|
|
came across as rude and Hakram had somehow tricked himself into
|
|
finishing his own. Still, while the Tyrant remained a threat he was no
|
|
longer the most pressing of my concerns. The First Prince's ruinous
|
|
little project weighed deeper on my mind, because it felt like a
|
|
ready-made pivot in someone's story -- and not one of my making, which
|
|
was even more worrisome.
|
|
|
|
``Double down on efforts to unearth what it is the First Prince dredged,
|
|
and where it's headed,'' I ordered Vivienne. ``Have your people look for
|
|
large concentrations of priests as well.''
|
|
|
|
I paused.
|
|
|
|
``Concentrate your efforts on Lyonis and Brabant, for that last part,''
|
|
I added. ``Maybe Brus as well, if you can spare the people.''
|
|
|
|
As far as I was concerned Cordelia Hasenbach was acting foolishly by
|
|
meddling with doomsday weapons, but that did not make her a fool. She'd
|
|
know that gathering priests in great numbers close to the northern
|
|
fronts would bring a lot less scrutiny than doing the same in the south.
|
|
Especially in Brabant as it was, by all reports, drowning in a tide of
|
|
desperate refugees who could certainly use some food and healing. If the
|
|
weapon could be moved, and for it to be of practical use against the
|
|
Dead King it would have be, then if we found where it was headed we
|
|
could double back from there. Going at this from the other way might
|
|
finally allow us a peek through the veil of secrecy that'd surrounded
|
|
this entire affair. I sighed, then cracked my shoulders.
|
|
|
|
``Hakram, I don't suppose you could send for a change of clothes?'' I
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
I'd lost the habit of plate, and the weight of the metal did no favours
|
|
to my leg even if I could not feel it at the moment. The sooner I was
|
|
back in cloak and leathers the better. Might add a light coat of mail,
|
|
though, because really there was never a reason \emph{not} to wear
|
|
armour if you were wearing clothes at all. I'd not deny that my
|
|
preferences in clothing had been shaped some by the unfortunately high
|
|
amount of times I'd been stabbed in my life.
|
|
|
|
``They are already on their way,'' Adjutant replied, because he was a
|
|
prince among men and always would be.
|
|
|
|
``Good,'' I said. ``Well, folks, the talks begin in earnest tomorrow.
|
|
Let's see if we're ready for them.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I wasn't sneaking out of Salia, not exactly.
|
|
|
|
That would imply that a pack of spies wouldn't have noticed me saddling
|
|
Zombie and leave the palace with the slight escort of three knights in
|
|
dark cloaks, or that I would have hidden my departure from my
|
|
companions. But I'd not made it clear where I was headed for either and
|
|
pretty much let the assumption that I would be going back to our camp
|
|
stick. Hakram could read me like a book, so he knew there was more to it
|
|
than I'd said. He also trusted me same as I trusted him, though, so he
|
|
didn't ask. I doubted that my having conversations with the White Knight
|
|
would cause much of a scandal if it came out -- even radicals under the
|
|
Heavens would think twice before claiming I could corrupt the Sword of
|
|
Judgement -- but it'd certainly raise eyebrows, and very much attract
|
|
attention. I'd rather not have to deal with the Pilgrim coincidentally
|
|
coming by for a chat, or someone's admirably optimistic attempt to
|
|
eavesdrop through arcane means, so it'd stay quiet for now. Though this
|
|
was not casual, could not be given who we were, keeping such talks
|
|
informal would allow the illusion of it to last a little longer. I'd set
|
|
out early after dark, since I did genuinely intend to get some work done
|
|
when I passed through camp and led out my escort at a brisk trot.
|
|
|
|
We were followed, to my utter lack of surprise. Riders kept pace at a
|
|
respectful distance behind us maybe a dozen, most likely at the First
|
|
Prince's behest. Though I was First Under the Night and the dark had
|
|
already fallen, I was not unaware that my spilling blood in Salia would
|
|
bring great complications. Even putting down some overly ambitious
|
|
robber or some drunken rowdy fantassin would meant I'd killed a Proceran
|
|
under truce, and for many reasons that was best avoided even if
|
|
justified. No, Cordelia had likely sent those riders to serve mostly as
|
|
diplomats. And maybe guides, given the gargantuan size of this damned
|
|
city, but I could see to that with prayer truth be told. So long as I
|
|
was willing so suffer Komena's rampant mockery of my sense of direction,
|
|
anyway. \emph{Easy not to get lost, when you fly over the streets}, I
|
|
grumbled. South we rode, through the palatial streets and estates of the
|
|
Lineal and then the large plazas and avenues of the markets known as
|
|
\emph{Les Vendeuses} -- which were awake and swarming with people even
|
|
at this hour, for the city never slept and the glow of torches and
|
|
lanterns lent it all an air of the fantastical. Keeping to the broad
|
|
avenues that'd been built to allow for carts, as many as four of them
|
|
I'd wager, we made good time cutting through towards Merovins avenue.
|
|
|
|
From there it'd be an uncomplicated ride, straight south until we were
|
|
through the low districts and the Griffon Gate. Out of curiosity I'd
|
|
slowed down on my way through some of the marketplaces, taking a look at
|
|
what was being peddled. The array of goods, even at the tail end of
|
|
winter and while Procer was at war, was rather bewilderingly large.
|
|
Ashuran silks, Levantine ceramics and even Taghreb silverworks were on
|
|
display, not to mention what must have been goods from more than half of
|
|
the principalities in Procer. It was no wonder I'd been taught that the
|
|
Principate was near capable of sustaining itself through trade between
|
|
its own princes: it was a large empire and one that lacked for little.
|
|
Save perhaps for restraint, but was that not ever the way with empires?
|
|
My knights were gawking as well, which was no surprise. None of the
|
|
three looked older than thirty under the hood, so none had known Callow
|
|
save under either myself or Black -- and under both reigns little had
|
|
been traded with Procer save for arrows and insults. I'd be surprised if
|
|
either had left the kingdom before this campaign. Still, it would not do
|
|
to linger forever so I spurred on Zombie to a brisker pace.
|
|
|
|
It did not last long, as it happened. A smooth turn around a counting
|
|
house brought us in front of an open shop from which no less than four
|
|
signs had been hung, all painted with bright red letters. Unlike the
|
|
rest of the signs I'd seen in this city, the words on this one were in
|
|
Lower Miezan instead of Chantant or Tolesian. \emph{Bundles Of Wakeleaf,
|
|
So Cheap It's Almost Crime}. \emph{Vale Summer Wine, So Many Bottles You
|
|
Can't Drink Them All. We Did Not Steal The Wakeleaf, We Swear, That
|
|
Would Be A Crime. I Guess You Could Drink Them All, If You Are A Drunk.}
|
|
With morbid curiosity I led Zombie closer to have a better look, and to
|
|
my mild surprise there did seem to be a genuine stock of neatly wakeleaf
|
|
bundles. And a few crates of wine, one of which had been opened and
|
|
revealed the impurities-riddled glass bottles that were typical of my
|
|
homeland. I gesture for my knights to rein in their horses and
|
|
approached one of the hanging signs, touching the K at the end of
|
|
`drunk'. Red wetness marred my gloves, the paint hadn't even had time to
|
|
dry yet.
|
|
|
|
An indignant hissing sound came from the shopfront, as a surprisingly
|
|
tall gargoyle in a too-large dress and a merchant's hat pointed a
|
|
half-empty sleeve at me accusingly. The insides of the dress moved, so I
|
|
drew it up with the tip of my staff and found another gargoyle down
|
|
there, who looked at me with a scandalized gasp. Another one was
|
|
standing on its shoulders, and I suspected another one on its own. I
|
|
withdrew my staff with a sigh, letting the dress's hem drop. So the
|
|
Tyrant wanted to have a talk, looked like.
|
|
|
|
``Stay here,'' I ordered my knights. ``It shouldn't be long.''
|
|
|
|
I dismounted, landing on the stone with a wince, and paused before
|
|
entering. I grabbed a bottle from the crate, and then a few bundles of
|
|
wakeleaf, and only then went to treat with Kairos Theodosian.
|
|
|
|
I had a feeling I'd need them.
|