438 lines
22 KiB
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438 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-all-ye-villains}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: All Ye Villains}\label{interlude-all-ye-villains}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-all-ye-villains}} \chaptermark{Interlude: All Ye Villains}
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\epigraph{``In studying our histories I have cast aside old mistakes,
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instead embracing fresh and interesting ones.''}{Dread Empress Atrocious, later devoured by man-eating tapirs}
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The games being played on this marble floor, Hakram thought, were no
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less deadly than any played axe in hand. Perhaps even deadlier, for an
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axe took one life at a time while here a streak of ink and a sharp
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phrase could kindle the death of thousands. Most of his kind despised
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the ways of the Tower's court: the poisons drunk and spoken, the
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colourful clothes worth a manse and the alliances that came and went
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faster than the tides. It was not that orcs knew nothing of treachery or
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cunning ways, for though the Adjutant had long left behind the Steppes
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he still remembered the spoken histories and there were betrayals
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aplenty in the tales. Some were spoken of as reverently as great deeds
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unsullied, for though the treachery was not in question neither was the
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greatness.
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Aslog Ironfoot's warbands turning on Warlord Gorm at the Battle of the
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Lights, bringing bloody end to Eldest Horde. Dagmar Hardteeth allying
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with the Queen of Okoro to murder their rivals by sorcery and surprise
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at the gathering of the thaw\emph{.} And lesser betrayals, too were
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spoken of, not worthy of legend. Not even a century ago the Blackspear
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Clan had broken alliance with the Howling Wolves at the incitement of
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the Painted Dogs, allowing warbands through their territory, and then
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ambushed the returning Dogs to take the spoils of the cattle-raids. No
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legend had come of this, no tale save that Blackspear blood flowed
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without honour. No, Hakram Deadhand did not believe the Clans to be made
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of finer stuff than the rest of Creation, for their history spoke
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otherwise time and time again.
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Yet his people disdained those who made sport of their own word, those
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who pretended to valour and honour while acting otherwise. And there was
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a sense of that, hanging around this great hall. Vivienne's words were
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ringing still, yet the harvest of surprise they reaped was meagre
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indeed. A few of the Tyrant's playthings, the Thalassocracy's man -- who
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like the nation he stood for was this day isolated and out of his
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depths, ship bound to currents unknown -- and those few scribes and
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translators too low in status to have warranted warning. The Dread
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Empress of Praes, wearing a mutilated and marked body like a coat,
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betrayed no surprise. Neither did the grinning devil known as Kairos
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Theodosian, or the utterly still corpse inhabited by the Dead King.
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It was the first of these that Hakram was most wary of. Malicia had lost
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the reins of much she once commanded, but the most dangerous part of the
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Empress had ever been her boldness and clever mind, neither of which had
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been taken from her. Catherine thought her half-spent a force, with
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jackals circling the Tower and her realm deeply wounded, and dangerous
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mostly in that way a desperate villain tended to be. The Adjutant was
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not so certain. The Empress had not even attempted to bring the Carrion
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Lord to her side, by scrying or sent agent, this he knew for a fact: as
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the Eyes had people in the Army of Callow, so did the Jacks have people
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among the Legions-in-Exile. And the Scribe would have forewarned them,
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if those eyes were fooled, for the Adjutant understood her in a way most
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frightful.
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He would act in similar manner, if Catherine was preparing to throw away
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her life and life's work.
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And so while the hall twisted and turned, twining around the already
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half-known revelation that the Grand Alliance had known of Ashur's
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unfaithfulness and behind the Thalassocracy's own back prepared answer
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of its own, Hakram Deadhand watched the Empress. Malicia was not beloved
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of his people as her right hand had been, still was, for unlike the
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Carrion Lord she had neither been warlord nor tireless defender. Yet she
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was respected, by the wise among the Clans, for having enacted the
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Reforms without needing to cram them down the throat of the High Lords
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by civil war as the Black Knight's iron-handed ways might well have
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required. She had been good the orcs in a way few of her predecessors
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could boast, and never given slight without reason nor meddled in the
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affairs of the Clans beyond the old rights of the Tower.
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Malicia had been a fair ruler to his people in most regards, Hakram
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thought, and looking upon the puppet-thing she now wore he could not
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bring himself to believe her to have gone the way of the Old Tyrants.
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The Empress had bought and paid for the Doom of Liesse, it could not be
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denied, yet meant to use is to serve the principles she had once writ in
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her treatise \emph{`The Death of the Age of Wonders'}. She'd since used
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only the blades of assassins, sharp intrigue and the sole doomsday
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weapon of the Warlock that was already known to Calernia. Still Water
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was a thing of terror, true, but it should not be forgot that in the
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eyes of most in this room that terror had already been laid at the
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Empress' feet.
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She lost little by using it, and gained form the use a great fleet as
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well as means to influence Ashur into leaving the Grand Alliance. It had
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not been a careless or desperate act, he thought. Which meant Malicia's
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keen edge had not faded, and nothing of the play taking place in this
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hall was a coincidence. Not even that raw thing that the Carrion Lord's
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voice had carried, when he good as begged for a reason not to turn on
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her. It'd be a damned cold thing, making that cut on purpose.
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But cold was oft the winner, in Wasteland games.
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``Catherine,'' the Adjutant whispered in Kharsum, leaning closer to her.
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``I think we are being had.''
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Tanned face set into a calm look as she studied the hall, his warlord
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slowly nodded.
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``There's no swing in them,'' the Black Queen murmured. ``This isn't
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their game. We misread them, Hakram.''
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As was often the case whenever Catherine's eyes narrowed and her twisty
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mind wandered down paths the rest of them could only dimly glimpse,
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Hakram was forced to take a moment to parse what she'd said. \emph{Not
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enough swing}. As in the opposition was not putting up a fight, and so
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without pause she had decided it meant they saw what was happening as
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not worth fighting over. It might be argued instead, Hakram knew, that
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Callow's entering of the Grand Alliance was good as certain, and so the
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opposition had not considered it something that could be fought. Yet the
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Adjutant's instincts sung in accord with his queen's, for one did not
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face the longest-reigning Dread Empress in the history of the Wasteland
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and the King of Death himself and received so little `swing', as his
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warlord had said.
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Vivienne sat down even as a clarification was requested by the current
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speaker for the League of Free Cities -- Basileus Leo Trakas once more
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-- as to the veracity of the statement made by Lady Dartwick.
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Confirmation from the First Prince and Lord Yannu Marave followed.
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``If they have no stake in this, then their victory lies not in a
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contested field,'' the Carrion Lord quietly said.
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``That would mean they're not looking to get anything out of this
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conference,'' Vivienne said, her Kharsum still a little ragged even
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though they regularly practiced together. ``So why are they even here?''
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Catherine's hand half-reached to the pockets sown within her cloak,
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before she remembered it would be unseemly for her to light her pipe
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before so many eminent rulers. She forced it back down and let out an
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annoyed hiss through her teeth. Odds were, Hakram fondly thought, that
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she did not even realize how around greenskins she tended to mimic their
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manners. That particular manner of hissing couldn't properly be done
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without goblin teeth, for unlike theirs human teeth had no gaps when put
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together, but more than once Adjutant had seen goblins shoot her almost
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awestruck looks when she did it before them. There was a reason half the
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goblins in the Army of Callow considered her to be a Matron in human
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flesh, and contrary to what Indrani kept insinuating it wasn't the
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height. Well, not only the height.
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``Where else are they going to get a gathering like this?'' Catherine
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said. ``What happens in the conference is as dust to them, I bet. But
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they've got an audience with the powerful of most Calernia here, don't
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they? They're hear for the ears, not the tongues.''
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Utter silence seized the room, sudden and oppressive. Half the hall was
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watching the same thing, and Adjutant followed their gaze. The Dead King
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he saw, had moved for the very first time since his body sat. His skull
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had turned to gaze at Catherine, hollow sockets empty and unblinking.
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The slightest of tremors was going through the skeletal thing, Adjutant
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saw, and for a moment he did not understand. Then he did, and his blood
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went cold.
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The Dead King was looking at Catherine Foundling, and shaking as he
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\emph{laughed}.
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---
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The Enemy was laughing.
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Cordelia Hasenbach was not one to boast of bravery, for hers were not
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the gifts of courage on the field, yet neither did she consider herself
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to be faint of heart. And yet the sight of the Hidden Horror's silent
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tremors of amusement sent a shiver up her spine. That the monster was
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gazing unerringly at the Black Queen as he did only made it eerier. The
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blonde princess did not allow it to reach her face, or seep in her eyes,
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instead thinking of Hannoven. Of the city broken once more, walls torn
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down and her kinsmen slaughtered to the last. Cordelia thought of the
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brave men and women who'd died on those walls, keeping dawn from failing
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just a little while longer, and when cold wroth roared through her veins
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she fed it the fear. Composure returned to her, for that anger was an
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old friend, and finally she gestured for the page standing behind her
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table to step forward. At her side, Agnes suddenly stirred.
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``Magon Hadast was killed,'' the Augur said.
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Agnes, she saw, was staring at the Carrion Lord. The page passed
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Cordelia a sealed scroll, bearing scarlet wax stamped with the heraldry
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of the Order of the Red Lion. She set it down and turned a sharp gaze on
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her cousin.
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``Is he dead now,'' Cordelia whispered, ``or is he going to die?''
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Agnes blinked sleepily, a look of utter frustration flickering across
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her face. It took her a moment to speak again, as if she had to piece
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together once more when and where she was.
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``Soon,'' the Augur said. ``Many branches but always he dies. The spider
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waited until he was too deep in the web to turn back. There is nothing
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anyone can do. Too quick. All the paths are dead ends.''
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She hesitated, scowling.
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``They are learning,'' she admitted.
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The spider, Cordelia thought. There were some who called the Scribe the
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Webweaver, in the Wasteland, yet the Augur had used the word before to
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mean another. The Assassin, who more than once had tried to take her own
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life and that of people dear to her. Had this been the order of the
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Carrion Lord, then? The other villain was said to answer to him alone.
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Ashur had made bargain with Malicia, and so Magon Hadast was to die? It
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would sow chaos, Cordelia admitted to herself, until the old man's
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successor consolidated power. The heir that'd been groomed before had
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died at Thalassina and now only distant relatives remained, none of
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which would be a deft hand a navigating the Thalassocracy's labyrinth of
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committees and bureaucracy. It was still unacceptable, if it was truly
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the Carrion Lord's order.
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Magon Hadast had long been her ally, and for his defection now she
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blamed him not as the Grand Alliance had failed him before he it. He
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might yet return, besides, given time enough for it. To have him so
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casually ordered slain was a foul thing, though no less than should be
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expected form a rabid animal like the Carrion Lord.
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``Darkness looms, Cordelia,'' Agnes murmured. ``Tarry not in opening the
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scroll.''
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Lips tightening in sudden wariness, the First Prince reached for the
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parchment and broke the seal. She unfurled the scroll and her eyes moved
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carefully across the contents. This was not a direct report but instead
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the welding of several, from across broad swaths of Procer. Three names
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in particular caught her eye: Prince Otto Reitzenberg, Prince Gaspard
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Langevin and Princess Beatrice Volignac. The ranking commanders on the
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three northern fronts of the Principate, at least in principle. Prince
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Otto's words were coming from the Morgentor, the last fortress held in
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Twilight's Pass, and though he cautioned of the Enemy possibly laying a
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trap Gaspard of Cleves and Beatrice of Hainaut were both seeing the same
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thing. And like Prince Otto they'd followed the dead carefully. Cordelia
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turned to the awaiting page.
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``One whose authority was the scroll sent?'' she curtly asked.
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``Anselme of Beaudry, Your Highness,'' the man quietly replied.
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A telling detail. Anselme of Beaudry was the ranking officer of the
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Order of the Red Lion in Salia, and Cordelia had chosen him for that
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office in large part because his cautious and meticulous nature. He
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would not have sent such a scroll without first making certain there had
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been no misunderstanding or sudden change. The First Prince quietly
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thanked and dismissed the page, mind racing, before glancing
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meaningfully at one her closest attendant. The young woman approached
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discreetly.
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``Have word passed to the Callowan and Levantine delegations that I will
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put forward an extraordinary motion for immediate recess and I would
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request they support it,'' Cordelia said. ``There is urgent need for a
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private discussion between us.''
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Cordelia allowed time for the messages to be passed, through Razin Tanja
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for the Dominion and the heiress to the Barony of Harrow for Callow.
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When the First Prince of Procer asked for immediate recess soon after,
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the vote in favour was unanimous. The Enemy's gazed moved towards her as
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it deigned to vote for the first time that day, silently raising a hand
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in approval.
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The Dead King had yet to speak even once, and some part of Cordelia
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Hasenbach felt blind dread at that realization.
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---
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Half an hour of recess had been voted on, and Hakram found himself part
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of the handful of guests invited into a nearby parlour by the First
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Prince. The Blood were likely to be brought in as well, he guessed, for
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whatever it was that Cordelia Hasenbach had learned it seemed to concern
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all signatories of the Grand Alliance. The Carrion Lord's presence along
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with Catherine, Vivienne and himself was a reality all involved politely
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refrained from looking in the eye, as the man was deeply despised in
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Procer and might well have been excluded from such talks if not for the
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Queen of Callow's influence. It was an almost amusing turn, that after
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early years of relying of the Black Knight's power and influence it was
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not the same man who was relying on his former pupil's instead.
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There was an almost feverish energy to Cordelia Hasenbach, Adjutant saw
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when they entered the parlour. Though she was composed as ever, she was
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standing instead of seated and looking at her gave the sense she had a
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burning urge to pace that only manners were keeping at bay. Catherine
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limped in ahead, eyes considering as she took in the sight of the full
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roster of the Blood as well Princess Rozala. Liveried servants offered
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refreshments that all refused, and Hakram noted with exasperated
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amusement that his warlord's eyes were lingering a little longer than
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necessary on Rozala Malanza. Half the Blood too, though he was surprised
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that among the men she seemed to prefer the almost orcish frame of Yannu
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Marave to Razin Tanja's, who was much closer in age.
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As she was less than discreet he wondered if offence might accidentally
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been given, but if he was reading the expression correctly Lady Aquiline
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Osena looked more flattered than anything else by the roving eye. He met
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Vivienne's eyes in shared aggravation behind Catherine's back, though he
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figured at least they should be pleased she'd not been undressing the
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First Prince of Procer with her eyes. That might go over poorly, he
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thought. As the others advanced and went to stand with the other nobles
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Hakram remained at the back near the threshold, where he could watch
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from a distance. A set of eyes removed from the thick of it was often
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more useful than another wagging tongue, he'd found, and he'd always
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disliked wandering into arguments without first taking the measure of
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all that was being said.
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``Thank you all for coming,'' Cordelia Hasenbach gravely said. ``And for
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your trust in aiding my motion.''
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``You seem to have received news,'' Lady Itima Ifriqui said, rather
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bluntly.
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``I have,'' the First Prince agreed. ``I have received reports from all
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three northern fronts against Keter, and they all speak to the same
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truth: the dead are retreating.''
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Exclamations of surprise from many here followed, though not Hakram
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Deadhand or the queen that had chosen him as much as he had chosen her.
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Catherine Foundling's hand went inside her cloak and Adjutant, Name
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tugging at his feet, was moving before she could even begin stuffing the
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pipe with a satchel of wakeleaf. He struck a match a heartbeat before
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she extended her pipe, lighting it neatly, and was offered a thankful
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flash of pearly teeth before stepping back. The nerve of the Lord of
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Silent Steps, that it'd think itself fit to step in between the ordained
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cogs of fate with its little moving tricks. You didn't need to move
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swift as an arrow to see too things, just leave at the right time moving
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to the right pace.
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``Does the Hidden Horror seek to hold the northern shores against us?''
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Lady Aquiline frowned. ``It hardly seems necessary, given his
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advantages.''
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``It will allow us time to bring our armies to bear, regardless,'' Lady
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Itima said. ``A blunder, this.''
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Catherine blew out an acrid stream of smoke that had Lord Yannu
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wrinkling his nose in distaste at the smell.
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``No,'' the Black Queen said, ``it wasn't. We just got knifed in broad
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daylight, make no mistake about that.''
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It amused Hakram a great deal that though several of the great nobles
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here suppressed distasted as the spoken `us', not a single one of them
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denied it. It seemed that his warlord's usefulness had at last
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outstripped the distaste these \emph{righteous} folks had for the colour
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of her cloak.
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``You believe this to be a scheme,'' Cordelia Hasenbach said, then
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sharply nodded. ``I agree. This is a poor decision by the eye of a
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general, which means it was made by another.''
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``They're going to offer us a truce out there,'' Catherine said, jabbing
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a thumb towards the wall.
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The wrong one, Hakram drily noted, if she meant to point towards the
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hall.
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``They?'' Lord Yannu calmly asked.
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``This is, if not outright the plan of Dread Empress Malicia, at least
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in part her notion,'' the Carrion Lord tiredly said. ``This sort of
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manoeuvre is her very signature: weakening the opposition then posing
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great incentive to keep a truce that allows her to further work on
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dismantling her enemies without the direct use of force.''
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First Prince Cordelia would not doubt be the first of that western lot
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to grasp what exactly it had meant, when the Hidden Horror had extended
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Catherine an offer to sign the Liesse Accords last night. The
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implications of it, in the long term.
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``We have no reason to accept this truce even if it offered,'' Razin
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Tanja flatly said. ``We war against Keter to the end, and Dread Empress
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Malicia makes herself enemy to all that live through alliance with it.''
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Vivienne Dartwick had spent years in the shade of one of the great
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villains of their age and yet more in the service of another, so it was
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no surprise she caught on quick.
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``If the decision was made solely in this room, you would be right,''
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Vivienne grimly said.
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``They will be seeding rumours of the offer of truce even as we speak,''
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Cordelia Hasenbach told them all. ``In Salia and everywhere they can,
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which given the reach of the Dread Empire and the Tyrant of Helike is
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far and wide.''
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Her lips thinned.
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``There will be riots if we push for prosecuting a war against the Dead
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King in the face of offered peace while the north is months away from
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collapse,'' the First Prince said. ``Mayhaps even rebellion.''
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``The odds are strong that the Empress will declare a treaty of mutual
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protection with Keter,'' Lord Amadeus calmly said. ``The Dead King ought
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to agree, as otherwise there would be free hand to settle his sole
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reliable ally.''
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``Why should we pursue if the Hidden Horror retreats to his lands?''
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Lord Yannu Marave bluntly asked. ``Is that not the victory we sought to
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achieve?''
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The King of Death had not even yet spoken, Adjutant darkly thought, and
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already he was drawing blood among the Grand Alliance's ranks.
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``You would call \emph{this} victory?'' Razin Tanja scathingly replied.
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``Keter coming and going as it pleases, massacring any who oppose it?''
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``Are we then to send armies to die in the Kingdom of the Dead for the
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sake of your boyish swagger?'' Lord Yannu harshly retorted.
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``Better honourable death than a coward's disgrace,'' Lady Aquiline
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sneered.
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``This is what he wants,'' Princess Rozala said, voice cutting through
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the rising noise. ``Chaos among our ranks. It is why he is marching
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north instead of south, because if he does not we are a \emph{threat}.''
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``Well said,'' First Prince Cordelia calmly added. ``Make no mistake, my
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friends, the Enemy cares nothing for peace. He has only ever known
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truce, and ever broken it when suited him.''
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``We have yet to speak of the League,'' Lady Itima said. ``The Tyrant
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offers aid to their wicked lot and sows chaos in his own ranks. It is
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madness, and I would not let a hound gone sick lounge at my threshold
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for long.''
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``That is the nature of Kairos Theodosian,'' Catherine said. ``He will
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set fires until either the world is ash or he is.''
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She had not spoken loudly, but it commanded the attention of all in the
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parlour. She blew out another stream of smoke, visibly savouring the
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leaf.
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``Can't set fires if there's nothing left, though,'' she idly continued.
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``And that's what happens if the Dead King wins. So I'd suggest we all
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save ourselves some trouble and invite the Tyrant of Helike in here.''
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She grinned.
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``I'm rather curious how long it'll take him to sell out the King of
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Death, this time.''
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