442 lines
21 KiB
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442 lines
21 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-86-it-pours}{%
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\chapter{It Pours}\label{chapter-86-it-pours}}
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\epigraph{``The cruelty of a dilemma is not only in the choice itself; it
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lies also in the truth it reveals to you about yourself through the
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making of that choice.''}{King Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand}
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Akua Sahelian and Masego the Hierophant were, undeniably, two of the
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finest mages ever produced by the Wasteland. One had been taught the old
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sorceries of Wolof since she could remember and taken to them with
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dreadful skill, the other had been apprenticed since he could speak to a
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warlock who'd dissected the corpses of gods. Their deeds were many and
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renowned, and their reputations were such as to make men shiver in the
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dark of night. They'd also used a godsdamned \emph{bathtub} as the
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vessel of water for their scrying ritual. I'd excuse Masego in this,
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since he was usually more concerned with practicalities than appearance,
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but Akua would earn no such mercy from me. The same woman who'd
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campaigned with multiple enchanted ceremonial armours was now trying to
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pretend it'd never occurred to him there might be some slight indignity
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to this, an innocent look on her face. Yeah, I wasn't buying that. I
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spared some of my glare for Hakram, the filthy traitor who must have
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been willingly complicit in this, and at least he had the good grace to
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look abashed.
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I didn't have nearly as much time to spend on designing petty vengeances
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as I used to, but they weren't getting away with this unpunished. And I
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wasn't above delegating my pettiness these days, anyway. A council
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consisting of Robber, Indrani and Vivienne ought to be capable of coming
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up with a suitably vindictive reprisal.
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I limped up to the side of the copper bathtub, discretely surrounded by
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carved and inscribed wardstones stabilizing it against the strenuous
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effects of long-distance scrying, and the faint amusement I'd felt at
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the absurdity of having to speak with my officers through a bathing
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implement died. On the surface of the waters I saw Juniper, and what I
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read there was not promising. She looked exhausted, the thick skin
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around her eyes touched with muted grey, and beyond that she looked
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\emph{angry}. The kind of low festering anger that stayed in your belly,
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kept simmering there by your own impotence to do anything about its
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cause.
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``Juniper,'' I said. ``I'd say it's a pleasure to see you, but it seems
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that would be premature. Report, Marshal.''
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``Warlord,'' she gravely replied, dipping her head to the side.
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It bared her neck, if only slightly, which implied much greater
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deference by orc standards than inclining your head in agreement. I'd
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noticed Juniper tended to fall back into orc mannerisms when she was
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unsettled, abandoning the more human affectations that she'd picked up
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in the War College. That was not a promising sign, not that any part of
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this had been hinting at my night getting any better.
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``Time is difficult to gauge accurately in the Twilight Ways,'' she
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began, ``but around what we believe to be fifteen hours ago the
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Legions-in-Exile under Marshal Grem abandoned the march towards Arans
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and changed direction.''
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\emph{Fifteen hours}, I considered with a frown. Aligning the timelines,
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and allowing for a degree of imprecision, that around the time the
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conference's first formal session had been held. Hakram stirred, having
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approached my side without my realizing. Consciously, anyway. It wasn't
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like he'd been silent, more that his presence at my side hardly
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warranted particular notice. I glanced at him and nodded, tacitly
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allowing him to ask the question he wanted to.
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``And was reason given for that decision, or even the destination
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itself?'' Adjutant asked.
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Juniper grimaced.
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``That is complicated to answer,'' she admitted. ``Both the Army and the
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Legions were breaking camp, when it happened, and it was not immediately
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clear what was happening. The messengers I sent were given the answer
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that this changed march was at the order of the Carrion Lord, which I
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did not believe.''
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My eyes narrowed. All other things aside, Black shouldn't have a way to
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contact his people while they were out in the Ways: I'd not put Akua
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\emph{and} Masego on the ritual so they could reminisce together about
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the bad old days. Here in Salia he shouldn't have the calibre of mages
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to accomplish something like that, much less without the Observatory to
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use. Which meant he would have had to give secret orders before coming
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with me to Salia, which was\ldots{} dubious. I wasn't going to blindly
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trust the man, even if I loved him, but it would be ludicrous for him to
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turn on me at this juncture. The moment I ceased extending my protection
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to him the Procerans would slip a noose around his neck, if they were
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feeling \emph{kind}, and while maybe I could see him taking calculated
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risks if he were still partnered with Malicia he'd just burned that
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bridge in front of the rulers of most the continent. No, Juniper had
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been right to be skeptical.
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``I sough to speak personally with Marshal Grem,'' Juniper gravelled,
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``but was turned away. The rank and file of the exiles were taken by
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surprise, my queen, but not worried. Staff Tribune Aisha Bishara
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approached officers she worked closely with during the campaigns and
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learned that the Legions were returning to Praes.''
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\emph{Fuck}, I thought. That wouldn't be a secret order from Black, he
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had to know that his soldiers were exhausted and undersupplied.
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Beginning a campaign to take Praes before rest and refit would be
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madness, the Legions-in-Exile had been out in enemy territory for almost
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a year now.
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``Someone got to One-Eye,'' I said. ``Either he's dead and being
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impersonated, or someone has hooks in him.''
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``Marshal Grem has a great deal of prestige among the troops,'' Hakram
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quietly said, ``but not so much that such a decision would be
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uncontested. Marshal Ranker might be dead, but there are still Conquest
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generals. General Mok for the Fifth and Yawa Foehammer for the
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Twelfth.''
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Both were decorated veterans of the invasion of Callow, from what I
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knew, though General Yawa had been a lesser officer then -- she'd been
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raised to general after Afolabi Magoro died at the Doom and rebuilt the
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Twelfth from the wreckage of that legions. Neither were anywhere as
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famous or beloved as the One-Eye, but among their own soldiers their
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word would carry a lot of weight. If both accused the Marshal of being
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compromised, people would listen. Juniper grunted in agreement.
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``That was my thought as well, and so I pushed again for a face-to-face
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meeting,'' the orc said. ``Which is when it was made clear to me that
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the entire upper echelon of the exiles knew of this order.''
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My brow rose.
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``All of them?'' Hakram slowly said.
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``Marshal Grem, all generals and most the legates,'' Juniper said.
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``There was no arguing with that, my queen. The only way I could
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feasibly prevent them from leaving was putting the top officers of the
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exiles under arrest.''
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``That would have led to a pitched battle,'' I grimly said.
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While bonds were tight between Black's army and mine, given the common
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wars fought and the common descendance from the Reforms and the College,
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the Legions-in-Exile were not mine. They'd not sworn to me, nor ever
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intended to. My marshal ordering their highest commanders all imprisoned
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would have been seen as an attempt to bring them into the fold by force,
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which would have gone\ldots{} poorly, to say the least. The Army of
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Callow would probably have won that fight, between superior numbers and
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whatever was affecting the Legion officers, but it would have been a
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bloody business all around and there was no guarantee my barebones mage
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lines would have been able to fix whatever had been done to the generals
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afterwards. Juniper wouldn't have had much of a choice, when it came
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down to it.
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``It was the right call to let them leave,'' I said.
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``Thank you,'' Juniper said, dipping her head forward.
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Been worried about my reaction to that, then. Fair enough.
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``Hellhounds, remind me,'' Adjutant said. ``General Birne, Ranker's
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replacement. He's got a golden stripe, doesn't he?''
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The honour granted those who'd fought with distinction at the Fields of
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Streges, as I recalled.
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``And a silver cord from the Siege of Summerholm,'' Juniper said, tone
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approving. ``You caught on quick. It wasn't me that noticed, Deadhand.
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General Bagram's got a stripe too, and they're old friends.''
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My eyes flicked between the two of them questioningly, for clearly I'd
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missed something along the way.
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``The golden stripes are considered the highest of the personal honours
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granted during the Conquest,'' Hakram said. ``Because only forty-three
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were granted, and-``
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``All by Dread Empress Malicia's own hand,'' Akua finished from behind
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us.
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I glanced at her, and the implication sunk in. She'd once told me that
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her family considered any spy left alone with the Empress to be
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compromised. Yet Malicia had outmanoeuvred High Lady Tasia Sahelian, in
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the end, destroyed her completely. Even that stark a warning might have
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been underestimating what the Empress was capable of.
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``Marshal Grem is certain to have spoken with the Empress in person at
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least once,'' I said. ``And I imagine the same would hold true for any
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general and quite a few of the high-ranking officers that participated
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in the Conquest.''
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And whatever it was she'd done, it was possible for it to affect every
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single one of those individuals. Shit. That was a fucking disaster.
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There was no such thing as flawless mind control, especially not from a
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distance, but even simple planted orders could do a lot of damage.
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Especially if they were sown generously across the entire old guard of
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the Legions, which tended to be both the finest commanders we had and my
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father's most ardent supporters. \emph{I'd believe it too, if I was a
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legionary and the One-Eye told me his orders came from Black}, I
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thought. After all those years of friendship and loyalty, why doubt it?
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``Within an hour of realizing this, I removed the army from the Twilight
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Ways,'' Juniper said. ``And ordered every officer who has ever set foot
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in the Tower or been in the presence of the Empress to be placed under
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arrest.''
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And Gods, both of those decisions had been the right call once more but
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looking at the scope of the mess I felt like smashing the fucking
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bathtub in front of me. Not all our College-taught officers would fall
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under those conditions, but most our Praesi highborn and distinguished
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veterans would. Which meant all my best and seasoned commanders. We
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wouldn't be without officers, since so much of the army was Callowan
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now, but essentially all the veteran officers we'd taken from the
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legions cannibalized after the Folly and kicked up the ranks would have
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to be removed from the chain of command. Without knowing exactly what it
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was the Empress had done, how it worked and what it could do, we just
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couldn't take the risk of leaving them in place. Including Juniper
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herself, for all that she was still the one giving me a report.
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Everything she'd just told me would have to be confirmed second-hand by
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someone not in doubt, for a start, and it'd be a mess to manage that
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considering most of her general staff was likely to be on the
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compromised list as well.
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Dread Empress Malicia had not so much as swung as sword and she'd
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effectively crippled the Army of Callow. That, more than anything else,
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told me I was not wrong to believe this to be her work. How many people
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alive would be capable of a blow that vicious?
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``Who's in command, at the moment?'' I asked.
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``Grandmaster Talbot has legate-equivalent rank and technical
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seniority,'' Juniper said. ``Yet most Praesi soldiery balks at his
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command. Legate Tendai is the other candidate, but while she has years
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under her belt as a frontline officer she is fresh to higher command.
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For now the two are keeping the peace in accord but tensions are
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rising.''
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\emph{Thank the Gods for the Reforms}, I feelingly thought. How many
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other armies on the continent would be able to weather so much of the
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upper ranks being put under arrest this well? That measures meant to
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prevent decapitation of leadership by heroes were working almost as well
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against a villain's work was a nice touch of irony.
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``Has there been any sign of enthrallment in any of our people?'' I
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asked.
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``None that I know of,'' Juniper said. ``Though I am no longer being
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kept informed, my queen.''
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``There won't be,'' Akua said.
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I turned to face her, sharply gesturing for elaboration.
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``Unlike with the Legions-in-Exile, the Empress cannot suborn the Army
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of Callow outright,'' the shade elaborated. ``Which means the greatest
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gain she can derive of any enthrallment sown in your ranks is delay,
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keeping your soldiers out of action for as long as she can.''
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``Making a third of my officer corps commit suicide would achieve
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that,'' I pointed out.
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``It would cripple your army, it is true, but also flush out her hidden
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hands,'' Akua said, shaking her head. ``Better to leave the ship
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infested, and you aware of that. Then either you must send valuable
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assets to investigate the trouble or go yourself. Either way, a great
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deal of your might is tied down for weeks. Possibly even months. And
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should it look like you have a solution, well, it is not too late then
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to order the killings you described.''
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My lips thinned. Yeah, that sounded about right. Either I went myself
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with Sve Noc at my back, which given the distance and what needed to be
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done in Salia still would complicate everything, or I sent both Akua and
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Masego together to be safe -- which lost me a great deal of knowledge
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and power at hand I might need for other tasks. And the moment it looked
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like I might turn things around, I had no doubt that just like Akua had
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said the Empress would twist the knife once more. If not earlier, the
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moment she learned through her spies that whoever went had entered the
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Twilight Ways. \emph{Fuck}.
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``Thank you for your report, Marshal,'' I crisply said, then grimaced.
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``You acted correctly in every regard, Juniper. This isn't on you, we
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were just had by the Empress. We'll dig our way back to daylight.''
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``We always do, Catherine,'' the Hellhound said, but she sounded so very
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tired.
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I gestured for Masego to end the ritual, not willing to look at her in
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this state any longer, then breathed out as Juniper's image on the water
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vanished.
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``Akua,'' I said. ``How high are the odds that the Empress can just snap
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her fingers and have them all commit suicide?''
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``I am not certain,'' she admitted. ``This is not mere sorcery, dearest.
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A Name is involved, and so there are deeper considerations. In
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principle, such mastery of others can either be fine or numerous -- as
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it is with Speaking, where one may have an entire crowd kneel once or
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enchant an individual intricately.''
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``Even at the peak of my Name, I wouldn't have been able to order that
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many people to kill themselves,'' I said. ``Maybe two, three at most?
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For simpler stuff fear and thunder carries it through, but\ldots{}''
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``If we could Speak entire hosts to death, what need would we have of
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hosts at all?'' Akua smiled. ``Yes. In truth you were only the Squire,
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while Malicia is Dread Empress and a great one besides, but I took doubt
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that even should this be borne of an aspect she could so easily take
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lives. Especially if the commands were seeded. Having such a decree
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lying in one's mind for years would lead to severe disorders of the
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mind, besides.''
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``Unless that mind is prepared for that particular purpose, and
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accordingly conditioned with enchantments and alchemy,'' Masego cut in.
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``As the Sentinels are said to be.''
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Akua conceded with a nod.
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``Without a story at her back, I do not believe it is within the power
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of the Empress to order deaths,'' she said. ``Though lesser beguilements
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would be well within her grasp, and in their own way just as dangerous.
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I am greatly surprised by the skill displayed in the manipulation of the
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commanders of the Legions-in-Exile, I confess.''
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``I'm not,'' Vivienne said. ``Not considering what you said about
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stories. It was around fifteen hours ago this all started, the Hellhound
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said. Give or take a bit, that's when the Carrion Lord declared
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rebellion against the Tower.''
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I closed my eyes and let out a soft curse.
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``And that makes an empress calling her subjects to heel,'' I said.
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``Considering most who climb the Tower have an aspect related to
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authority, she would have had the wind at her back when she pulled that
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trigger.''
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``It would be more complex a matter when it comes to those among the
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Army of Callow,'' Akua noted. ``Though some of them were once sworn to
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her, they are now sworn to you instead.''
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``Creation likes clarity,'' I agreed. ``But that'll serve to weaken, not
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protect or prevent.''
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Neither of which I was all that sure I could do, when it came down to
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it. Distance was the element of dismay here, the more I thought about
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it. Those under my charge that needed help were far, and there was no
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guarantee that by the time they were reached they would still be in a
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state to be helped. Possibly I could leave behind someone under an
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illusion to impersonate me and hope that Malicia didn't catch on, but
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given the way it'd be impossible to keep that deception going for too
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long it'd be rolling the dice to try that. Assuming them Empress didn't
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catch on immediately, which give how deeply the Eyes had apparently
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infiltrated Salia I could hardly be sure of. Sending Masego and Akua
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would hardly be any subtler, even if I made an effort to suppress
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knowledge of it, and at the end of the day I had to admit that whatever
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my decision was there was nothing I could do. Save perhaps doing
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nothing, which I expected was exactly what the Empress would prefer of
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me: days passing in indecision, paralyzed by the risks in committing to
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anything.
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For the first time since I'd returned from the Everdark I'd been caught
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entirely flatfooted, and the impotent anger I'd earlier glimpsed in
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Juniper was finding a mirror in me. I'd forgotten how much I hated this.
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How much I hated her. There were reasons to kill the Empress that were
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personal to me, like the death of people I had cared for, and practical
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ones as well. And then there was this, the ugly sinking feeling in my
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stomach and how much I despised that she could do that to me. Still even
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now, after all I had learned and wrought. Because she was patient and
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cold-blooded and everything I was not. Gods, the Dead King could still
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scare me in a way few things could but the only foe who had ever made
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feel like an arrogant child was the Dread Empress of Praes. The woman
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atop the tower who had, again and again, made me bleed without my ever
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landing a blow on her in return.
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``Fuck,'' I cursed. ``All right. I'll see if I can find a way out of
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this mess. Meanwhile, Hakram, speak with Talbot and this Legate Tendai.
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I want Juniper's report confirmed point by point, and word of everything
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that's happened since.''
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``As you say,'' Adjutant replied. ``The Army will still need a
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commanding officer, Catherine. The Hellhound made it clear the current
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situation is untenable.''
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I'd be able to take care of it, if I went, but if I wasn't sure I could
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afford to leave Vivienne here to finish the negotiations without me. She
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had the judgement to see it through, sure, but cleverness was not what
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had brought the opposition to the table. They'd taken a seat because
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they were desperate and scared of me, and though the former still held
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they simply would not be afraid of Vivs the way they were of me. Which
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would mean squabbles I wouldn't have to deal with, heroes not being as
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leery of meddling and a hundred other little messes we could ill-afford.
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On the other hand, if it was not I who went then there was only one
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high-ranking officer who could fill the shoes.
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``It will have to be General Abigail,'' I said. ``At least until the
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hooks can be dug out of our people's heads. I'll speak to her myself.
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Vivienne, I need you to prepare an escort for her when she's sent out.
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At least two full cohorts. I'll need to consult with-''
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Black, I realized in this moment still likely knew nothing of this.
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Shit. I was not looking forward to that conversation at all.
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``- with Black,'' I grimaced. ``And soon. Akua, Zeze, can the scrying
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ritual be done again without the both of you?''
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``It can be done by our mage lines, Catherine,'' Masego reminded me.
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``They are on Creation again, all this ritual commotion was
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unnecessary.''
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``Right,'' I said, mildly embarrassed at having forgot. ``Good, then I
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have jobs for you. Hierophant, I need options to purge the mind of my
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officers from the Empress' influence.''
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He opened his mouth, but I raised a hand to interrupt.
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``I have a dozen things I need to be doing right now, and I'd not
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remember all the details if you simply told me anyway,'' I said. ``Write
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it down for me, Zeze. Prepare all you can, so I can put it to council
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when everyone is there.''
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``I suppose I have nothing more pressing at the moment,'' he said.
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``Thanks,'' I honestly replied. ``I appreciate it.''
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``And I, my heart?'' Akua smiled.
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``You're with me,'' I said. ``Black will get snippy about you being
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there, but when it comes to Praesi politics you're my expert. We'll head
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there now, I don't doubt that with the agitation in our camp Scribe
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already woke him up.''
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I clapped Hakram's shoulder, nodded at Masego and managed to take
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exactly one step towards the door before it was thrown open.
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``There you are,'' Archer said, face serious. ``We have a situation,
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Cat. Chunks of the League's people are moving.''
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``Moving where?'' I frowned.
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``By the looks of it? Here,'' she flatly said.
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It was a good thing I knew my way around more than a few languages,
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these days, because loudly cursing in only one would not have been
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\emph{nearly} enough.
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