374 lines
19 KiB
TeX
374 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-83-a-mould-unbroken}{%
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\chapter{A Mould Unbroken}\label{chapter-83-a-mould-unbroken}}
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\epigraph{``Diplomacy is half lies and half courtesies, which is to say it
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is entirely lies.''}{King Alistair Fairfax, the Fox}
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The Tyrant of Helike had seemingly decided to strike with his surprises
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hard and early, which I could appreciate. It'd save us time, since
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admittedly anything discussed before `surprise, the Dead King is here!'
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was likely to fall by the wayside. I'd half-expected him to wait until
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we were halfway through a particularly complex discussion before
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dropping that into our laps, actually, since Kairos Theodosian was
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rarely one to avoid heaping insults upon injury. Murmurs spread through
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the room at the Tyrant daring to speak so boldly in the wake of the
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First Prince, though I'd seen to it that the people that mattered would
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already be in the know.
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``Shut your cripple mouth and sit down, boy,'' Lady Itima of Vaccei
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snarled out. ``It's a fucking outrage you even have a seat in this
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hall.''
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Hasenbach had implied to me that while Itima of the Brigand's Blood was
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-- rather ironically, given the legendary hatred of her line for
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foreigners in general and Procerans in particular -- her steadiest ally
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among the Blood she was also very much out to get the Tyrant's head on a
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plate for his actions during the adventure that birthed the Twilight
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Ways, as well as a handful of prior betrayals. The redeeming aspect of
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that was that unlike most Levantines the Lady of Vaccei was not
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insistent on having that head taken on a battlefield or by honour duel.
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A knife in the dark or poison in the cup would do just as well, for the
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Vengeful Brigand's brutal pragmatism in aging war against the Proceran
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occupation had trickled down to his descendants.
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``The Dominion of Levant objects to this departure from the agreed-upon
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order of affairs,'' Lord Yannu Marave calmly translated in more polite
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terms.
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``Look at the other two Blood,'' Vivienne murmured.
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I followed her own gaze and found the faces of my old buddy Razin and
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Lady Aquiline utterly calm. I knew precious little about Aquiline Osena,
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but I'd watched Razin Tanja come apart at the seams in the shadow of
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Sarcella. I liked to think I had a good grasp on the man, and he was not
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all that skilled a liar or dissembler -- if anything he a rawness to him
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I found almost refreshing compared to the practiced masks of near every
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other aristocrat I knew. He would have been embarrassed by Lady Itima's
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outburst, if it had come as a surprise to him. Which meant it wasn't. I
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let out a small noise of approval at Vivs for that, I might not have
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caught if not for her sharp gaze. She was getting to be a fair hand at
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these games, which boded well for the years to come.
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Itima Ifriqui's flare of temper had been planned, it seemed, though I
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could only wonder as to why. Reinforcing the knowledge that Kairos was
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hated abroad to the rest of the League? It might even be a simple matter
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of herding him towards a particular response, though that would mean the
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true hand behind this was the First Prince. This was her preferred
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battlefield, not mine.
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``Friends, allies, companions,'' the Tyrant of Helike enthusiastically
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said. ``How could I dare to defy such ironclad law as the order of
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affairs? No, I speak now so that an oversight might be corrected.''
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``Get on with it, Tyrant,'' I called out. ``There's only so long of you
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orating at your own navel I'm willing to suffer.''
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``\emph{Catherine},'' the odd-eyed villain cried, sending me a wounded
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look.
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From the corner of my eye I saw Princess Rozala's lips twitch in
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suppressed amusement. It would have been impolitic to wink, I supposed,
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and besides I had a policy.
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``And what oversight might that be, Lord Tyrant?'' Cordelia Hasenbach
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calmly asked.
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``Why, there are yet delegates to arrive and be seated,'' Kairos
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Theodosian grinned.
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The First Prince of Procer elegantly extended her arm, palm up, and a
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dark-haired attendant offered her a small ceremonial baton of sculpted
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alder. Though carved from one piece, it'd been made to look like it was
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a bundle of small twigs tied together by a string. One twig for each
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principality, symbolizing that each twig alone was fragile but the
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bundle was stronger than the sum of its parts. It'd been a common
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imagery in Procer until the Liturgical Wars, during which it fell out of
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favour, and had been around long enough for a few verses back home to
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have been written about it. Even as Cordelia Hasenbach knocked the baton
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against the surface of her table I hummed the tune to \emph{Two Dozen
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Snakes A Knot Do Make}, Vivienne at my side going rigid to avoid showing
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reaction.
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``And though Billy King did step on them,'' Black quietly hummed, lips
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twitching, ``they hardly even-''
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Of course Black would know the words, I amusedly thought. He'd ruled
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Callow for twenty years and unless he'd done so without ever setting
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foot in a tavern he probably knew most the old songs.
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``-noooooticed,'' I could not help but finish, swallowing a grin.
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Vivienne had joined her voice to the sound as well, though discreetly.
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Even in a Legion haunt like the Rat's Nest they'd sung that regularly,
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legionaries being rather fond of the imagery of anyone stepping hard on
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the proverbial knot of snakes west of the Whitecaps.
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``Your people do have a singular talent for putting mockery to a tune,''
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the Carrion Lord fondly said.
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Our shared mirth had not gone unnoticed by the rest of the hall, a few
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other delegates eyeing us curiously. It was rather pitiful that between
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three former Named not a single one of us could properly hold a tune but
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aside from that I claimed no regrets. Yet Black's uncharacteristic
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levity, I suspected, might just be the result of seeking diversions to
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distract frim his worries about a matter I'd warned him of. While we
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whispered in our corner the First Prince had begun out first gambit of
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the day. At the knocking of the baton the attendants were set abuzz like
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a swarm of bees, the gates to the back of the League delegations' left
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and right opening. Down both avenues a small but beautiful desk was
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carried, and behind the desks a single seat each. Kairos's good eye
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narrowed for the fraction of a moment as he took in the second desk
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before his face eased into a delighted smile. It'd stayed long enough
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for me to catch his surprise, though.
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\emph{Come now, Kairos}, I thought. \emph{You might as well have told me
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outright.} \emph{I know how Malicia works, there's no way she'd ever
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trust one of her lords to negotiate with the likes of you. Even if they
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were not treacherous and courting you support to overthrow her, they'd
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be always a step behind you in any talks.} Which meant the old
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body-taking trick of Dread Emperor Nefarious would have been put to good
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use. It was a small leap from there to figuring out it was rather likely
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that Malicia's host body might have accompanied him in his campaign, or
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meant to be another surprise attendance at this conference -- after all,
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Black's presence here meant that in principle the Dread Empire of Praes
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was allowed to attend. It'd been a risk to bring out the two desks from
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the start since this was speculation and not certainty, but the First
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Prince had argued we lost precious little from being wrong while
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inflicting sharper uncertainty should we be correct. I'd still been
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against it, but Cordelia's instincts had seemingly paid off if the
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Tyrant's surprise was not mere playacting.
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Now he had to wonder how deeply we'd seen through him and if my alliance
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with the First Prince might not be closer knit than he'd assumed. The
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painted desks were set to the sides of the League's delegations,
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slightly behind their leading table. A subtle slight, that, implying
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inferior status. Cordelia was apparently not above venting her
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displeasure through small details, which I found rather endearing. It
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added a touch of humanity to the ice-cold and masterfully controlled
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princess I'd been treating with, a woman who'd use even her own grief
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and shame as tools to get her way without batting an eye.
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``How very gracious of you, First Prince,'' the Tyrant laughed.
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``Without further ado, I then present-''
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Black tensed. If I'd now known the man I might not have noticed, for he
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had not moved a hair, but his eyes gained an edge of razor-sharp
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attention that'd not been there before.
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``His Majesty Trismegistus of Keter, the Dead King!''
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It was almost amusing the way the older of the Atalante preachers went
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white as a sheet when the other one rose to his feet. Sorcery coursed
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down the body of the impostor in thick rivulets, revealing beneath an
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illusion the same skeletal puppet of polished ivory bones and long
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purple cloths I had met with last night. I'd been wondering if it'd be
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the same, or if he had another host form to ride hidden away somewhere
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in the city. The tall dead thing stood before the desk set out for him,
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and the room erupted in whispers. Some scribes even cried out in fear,
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as if they'd been told the Gods Below had come up to see to them
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personally. It was a different sort of fear they had for the Hidden
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Horror, here in Procer. Even in the south he was not so much a legend as
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a sword hanging above everyone's head: after decades of it not falling
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down you could tell yourself it never would, and even forget about it.
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But every time you happened to look up, you were made to remember that
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safety was just the tale your parents told you as a child so you'd sleep
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well. Callow knew the Tower's shadow like its own breath and blood, but
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it could not be denied that the Principate knew the Crown of the Dead's
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almost as intimately.
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It was not all fear, though. Lady Aquiline looked like she was itching
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to draw a blade, and her fellow Blood all had measuring stares. I
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glanced at the princes' table, and my respect for them rose a notch when
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I saw only cold disdain on those faces. The luxuriantly mustachioed
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Renato of Salamans took in the Dead King's clothes with a look that
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could only be called scornful, and Ariel of Arans leaned to the side and
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idly spoke to Princess Rozala in a low voice. As for Rozala Malanza, her
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dark eyes stared at the Dead King unblinkingly. The burning intensity of
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the hatred I saw in there gave me pause, for I'd seen hatreds great and
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small in my time and that one was neither shallow nor passing. As for
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the First Prince herself, her face was a cold and regal mask framed by
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golden curls, offering only icy loathing.
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Parts of the League's delegation -- Atalante, Nicae -- were dismayed by
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the sudden revelation, but others largely indifferent. Delos and
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Bellerophon's delegates were respectively keeping notes and looking
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rather lost, while the Penthesians seemed more cautious than alarmed.
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Yet it was the Firstborn whose reaction had me savagely grinning.
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General Rumena, silver-blue eyes staring straight at the King of Death,
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clenched its fingers into a fist and struck against the table once.
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``Prav ruvan,'' the Tomb-Maker said.
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\emph{First claim}, it meant. A statement, but also the beginning of
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something more. Mighty Jindrich laughed, the sound scything through the
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room filled with murmurs, and struck at its table as well.
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``First claim,'' Jindrich also said. ``For this I offer three spears of
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finest obsidian, and the Secret of Shells.''
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Mighty Soln jeered.
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``Cheapskate. First claim,'' it said. ``A finely made \emph{bureau} of
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wood, and the Secrets of Shaping and Sight.''
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The only word of that not in Crepuscular was in Chantant, \emph{bureau},
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for the drow were wildly appreciative of the Proceran style of elaborate
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wooden desks and in deference to that appreciation had been very
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particular about using the `proper' term for it. And so, as the rest of
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the hall handled the surprise of the Dead King's presence, the proud
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Mighty of the Empire Ever Dark held their bidding war over which of them
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would have the privilege to first attempt to kill the Dead King on the
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field and take his Night. The Tyrant cleared his throat, and I felt
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Black tense again.
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``And, naturally, Her Imperial Majesty, Dread Empress Malicia of
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Praes!''
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He sounded, I thought, like a merchant hawking wares at the market.
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Murmurs bloomed anew as one of the translators from the League rose to
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her feet. I noted with faint amusement that Malicia's host-body had
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chosen to be seated close to the aisle. I supposed the revelation would
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have lost some of its gravitas if she'd had to politely ask the other
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League translators to pull forward their chairs so she could stride out
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with the right sort of presence. The illusion laid there was rather
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simpler than the one that'd revealed the Dead King: a young Soninke
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woman was revealed, but one of broadly similar height and body shape as
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the feigned translator. Bright runes were visible, carved directly into
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the skin and looking halfway between mutilation and tattoos. The
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Empress' puppet made way to her pulpit with a fluid grace that was all
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Malicia, impressively conveyed halfway across the continent and to a
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body not all that like her own save in the dark tone of the skin.
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Whatever amusement I'd savoured while pondering the practicalities of
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that theatrical reveal went up in smoke when I turned my gaze to Black.
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He was looking at Malicia's puppet with the naked desperation of a
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drowning man, eyes roaming her form almost obsessively. It took me a
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moment to understand why. My father was looking for a hint, any hint at
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all, that this might not truly be Dread Empress Malicia. That it could
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be a trick or some sort of fake. My fingers clenched as I watched him
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watch her stand before her desk and he was forced to admit there was no
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such thing. Something died in those pale green eyes, at that moment, and
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I realized Scribe had been right. Even now, even after the betrayals and
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the lies and the mistakes, he'd still intended on finding a way for the
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Empress to live. And when Amadeus of the Green Stretch grasped the
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truth, truly came to look in the eye, that he was about to be robbed
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that recourse? A light went out in his gaze that I suspected none still
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living could bring back.
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Something flickered across his pale face, a weighing of choices, and
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then something like disgust. In the heartbeat that followed, he pushed
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back his chair and rose to his feet.
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``Alaya,'' Amadeus said in Kharsum, voice only barely clinging to calm,
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``this is a very grave mistake.''
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Sigil-marked and burning with hollow fire, the puppet that Malicia rode
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turned empty eyes to Black. Considering, until she spoke.
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``Unless oaths were sworn to the crown of Callow, the correct placement
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for the Empire's delegation is behind me,'' the Empress replied in Lower
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Miezan.
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``This is \emph{madness},'' Black hissed, still in Kharsum. ``Dark Days
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protocols and alliances with Keter will not take us through the storm,
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Alaya. I have secured other means, if you would simply let me-''
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The eyes of nearly the entire hall were on the two of them. I wondered
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how many people could even speak Kharsum, here. It was not even all that
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common in Praes, much less Callow, and so I doubted even the Procerans
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had a translator for the main orc dialect. I hid a wince at my teacher's
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mistake a moment before he bit his tongue over it, but it was too late.
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``Let you?'' the Empress softly replied. ``Am I then to hide in your
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shade like a child and let the rules of power to be decided in this
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ostentatious scrap heap of a city? I think not.''
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Something like a twitch of pain marred the puppet's face.
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``Stand behind me,'' the Empress ordered, asked, pleaded. ``The game can
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still be won, Amadeus. I yet know how.''
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I bit my tongue, knowing from experience that my stepping between those
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two ancient monsters had ever only earned the disapproval of both, and
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followed across the face of the green-eyed man the war between the
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Carrion Lord and Amadeus of the Green Stretch. One had followed and
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trusted Dread Empress Malicia for most of his life, murdered and
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sacrificed and bled to see the order they'd built together stand. Yet of
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the two that creatures was the one that'd turn on the Empress. Not
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easily, or without cause, but turn on her it would. If the gears turned
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and the verdict churned out was that victory demanded the blood of his
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dearest friend, the steel would be whet red once more.
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The other, though, was that part of Black that had seen a barren
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wasteland of empire and wanted to mend it. That'd made a family of a
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young mage hunted by the most powerful practitioner in the empire,
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offered friendship to a woman whose curse had devoured her life and
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charmed the likes of the Ranger and the Assassin through the strange
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mixture of devotion and black-hearted ruthlessness. The same boy who'd
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struck a friendship with a tavern girl long before either of them ever
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saw the Tower's hulking shape on the horizon.
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It was the part of him I loved, if not the one I'd taken lessons from.
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And I thought it might just be the part of him that, right now, was
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murmuring in the back of his mind about one last leap of faith.
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Murmuring that by abandoning Malicia now all the darkest fears -- and
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Gods, how could she not fear when it'd been armies led by Black and
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loyal to him above all else that saw her rise to the throne? -- would be
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confirmed by his own hesitation, his own weakness. Guilt and love and
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the chains of a loyalty that had been well-worn long before my birth. I
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was my father's daughter, and so this I understood.
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As he'd no doubt understood, when for the heraldry of the \emph{noble}
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house of Foundling I chose not some glorious beast or some fearsome
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weapon. I did not even choose to ape the dignity of the Fairfaxes and
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the Albans by stealing their arms so I might better suckle at the love
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they'd earned among my people. I'd chosen a silver balance, set on the
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stark bleak blackness of the man who'd taught me, and on it I'd weighed
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a crown and sword. Right and might. Principle and necessity.
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The wants of the woman, as Akua had once told me, and the needs of the
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queen.
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The thing was, that as much as we -- Malicia, Black, myself -- were
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pretending this was a war, it wasn't. It was the inexorable sound of a
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noose being pulled tight, the song of an arrow before it tore flesh. It
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was the march of the inevitable, because while I believed it was Amadeus
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of the Green Stretch that both the Empress and I cared for, that boy was
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just who he'd been born to be. The Carrion Lord, the Black Knight, the
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cold-eyed and stead-handed killer that broke armies and conquered
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nations? That was who he'd chosen to be. And so, inch by inch, the
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inevitable one. Those hungry, callous cogs of steel ground up the boy
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that'd been and the girl he'd loved.
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And when the steel came free of the last parts with a wet squelch, the
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Carrion Lord breathed out shallowly.
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``It was never a game, Alaya,'' he gently said. ``It is a mould, and it
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will be \emph{broken}.''
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They shared a long glance, in a hall where the great and powerful of an
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entire continent had gathered to speak and yet not a single whisper
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could be heard -- only utter, oppressive silence. What he was going to
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say now, I'd predicted. I'd told Cordelia what he would say, what would
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drive him to it, with a degree of exactness that now chilled me. Dark
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hair flecked with grey, back straight as an arrow, the Carrion Lord
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turned to address the hall with eerie calm.
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``I address now all who would lend ear, mighty of Calernia come to this
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hall,'' the green-eyed man said, in perfect Chantant.
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Translators hurriedly whispered as he spoke, for those who did not speak
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the tongue.
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``The so-called Dread Empress Malicia I hereby denounce as unfit to
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reign and having lost the favour of the Gods Below through carelessness
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and misrule,'' the Carrion Lord said. ``I claim the Tower as Dread
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Emperor of Praes, and ask for the recognition of the delegates to speak
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in its name.''
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Sometimes, I thought, it was an ugly thing to be right.
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