689 lines
35 KiB
TeX
689 lines
35 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{prologue}{%
|
|
\section{Prologue}\label{prologue}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{quote}
|
|
\emph{``A horse and fall was all it took}
|
|
|
|
\emph{For every last to take the hook}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Now the kitchen's full of cooks,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{And the pot it is boiling}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Crown of this, crown of that}
|
|
|
|
\emph{They all chase after the hat}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Princess said she has a right}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Princess said it'd be a fight}
|
|
|
|
\emph{So princesses are all aflight,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{And the pot it is boiling}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Crown of this, crown of that}
|
|
|
|
\emph{They all chase after the hat}
|
|
|
|
\emph{The wheel spins us all around}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Up and north, south and down}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Ebb or flow, we'll still drown,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{And the pot it is boiling}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Crown of this, crown of that}
|
|
|
|
\emph{All of this for a hat,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{While the pot it is boiling.''}
|
|
|
|
-``Too Many Cooks'', a Proceran folk song written and grown popular
|
|
during the civil war
|
|
\end{quote}
|
|
|
|
The wolves were at the gate.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer, Prince of Rhenia and
|
|
Princess of Salia, Warden of the same West that was currently burning to
|
|
the ground, did not wonder when it had all gone wrong. She was not an
|
|
unintelligent woman, and so believed she'd already identified the point
|
|
of failure with accuracy: the moment where she'd assumed Keter would
|
|
remain quiescent. She hadn't, though, not truly. Cordelia had believed
|
|
there might be an increase in raids coming from the Kingdom of the Dead,
|
|
perhaps a tentative incursion into the Alamans lakelands. That was the
|
|
very reason she'd forced through the Highest Assembly the very unpopular
|
|
taxes that had funded the restoration of all major fortresses north of
|
|
Brabant, that she'd taken only a meager portion of the armies of the
|
|
lakeside Alamans principalities and her Lycaonese kinsmen. There would
|
|
be burning, she'd thought, there would be bleeding. But the borders
|
|
would hold until the grim business of pacifying the east was done and
|
|
full attention could be turned to the evil that lay behind the walls of
|
|
Keter. In a word, she had assumed the Hidden Horror was a fool.
|
|
|
|
There was a young man at her Salian court by the name of Gabriel, a
|
|
commoner who'd had the benefit of an education in letters by the House
|
|
of Light. He had, several years ago, penned an interesting treatise
|
|
called \emph{Fulcrums of History}. A repudiation of sorts to the looming
|
|
presence of \emph{On Rule} over Proceran politics at the highest rung.
|
|
It argued, rather eloquently, that disaster came to empires by an
|
|
accumulation of smaller factors that drained the life out of them
|
|
instead of through failures of will or cleverness, as the author of
|
|
\emph{On Rule} had argued. It had been, Cordelia felt, an attempt to
|
|
explain the resounding brutality of the civil war by a scholar who had
|
|
been born in its aftermath. It had concluded by arguing that the
|
|
solution to such degradation was `an injection of fresh vitality', in
|
|
this case personified by Cordelia herself leading the traditionally
|
|
aloof Lycaonese south to force an end to the wars. The conclusion was
|
|
not as well written as the rest, and largely flattery directed at her in
|
|
hope of an appointment. He had obtained it, though the flattery had not
|
|
been the reason. Anyone displaying the sharp insight of the earlier
|
|
chapters could and should be used by her administration.
|
|
|
|
She thought of that treatise, sometimes. To apply the logic behind it to
|
|
her current situation, for there had been a clear accumulation of
|
|
factors over the last few years. Strength and coin spent influencing
|
|
foreign wars in Callow and the League. Erosion of her authority over the
|
|
Tenth Crusade, by both Proceran factionalism and the prominent role of
|
|
the Chosen, followed by the bruising strategic defeats of the Battle of
|
|
the Camps and the assault on Red Flower Vales. Once the cracks were
|
|
there, they had only broadened. Tensions within the Great Alliance grew.
|
|
The Levantines had been less than eager to defend the heartlands of the
|
|
Principate, even against Wasteland legions. A trail of burnt cities and
|
|
granaries from Bayeux to Iserre had been the consequence of that,
|
|
further weakening her standing within the very alliance she had
|
|
assembled. Further disaster struck at Thalassina, with the Warlock
|
|
obliterating the better part of the Ashuran war fleets along with the
|
|
city he'd come to defend. Worse, the Chosen had now decided to buck
|
|
worldy authority entirely: the Saint of Swords had openly admitted
|
|
Procer was to be the pyre birthing her \emph{better world}, and now the
|
|
Grey Pilgrim had refused her order to immediately slay the Black Knight
|
|
instead of capturing him.
|
|
|
|
The heroes could no longer be relied on. They would, from now, oscillate
|
|
between being useful but uncontrolled battlefield assets and major
|
|
strategic liabilities. The rulers of Dominion of Levant, her nominal
|
|
allies and comrades-in-arms, were now attempting to twist her arms for
|
|
better concessions after a war they were currently \emph{losing}. Magon
|
|
Hadast and the Thalassocracy of Ashur, her sole remaining solid ally,
|
|
had been inflicted two vicious setbacks in a row. The disaster at
|
|
Thalassina could have been recovered from, but the League of Free Cities
|
|
had smelled the blood in the air and finally sallied out. The League's
|
|
fleet -- essentially the Nicaean fleet with what few ships the other
|
|
seaside cities could spare -- had torched the last war ships of Ashur
|
|
and sacked the city behind them. The Thalassocracy had effectively been
|
|
evicted from the sea, and in a matter of months the blockade around its
|
|
island would start causing major food shortages. There was a very real
|
|
possibility that Ashur would have to capitulate within the year, else it
|
|
would simply wither on the vine. Worse, the Hierarch had sent out armies
|
|
as well, the full muster of the League. Still, had even a losing battle
|
|
been given by her southern army down in Tenerife, the situation would
|
|
have been salvageable.
|
|
|
|
Instead her entire net of spies in the League had somehow missed that
|
|
the entire host had gone into the Waning Woods, only managing to warn
|
|
her the army had disappeared off the surface of Creation a week before
|
|
it reappeared on the outskirts of the Principality of Iserre. Cordelia
|
|
did not consider herself to be faint of heart, yet she almost shivered
|
|
at the notion of taking an army through that murderous patch of trees.
|
|
How much of their army had they lost, passing through? A tenth, a
|
|
quarter? Half? There was not a single creature of flower in the Waning
|
|
Woods that was not violently hostile to the existence of humans on
|
|
Creation. Regardless of the\ldots{} practicalities involved there,
|
|
however, the southern Principate had now turned into a strategic
|
|
nightmare. The First Prince was no great general but even she could see
|
|
as much. The twenty-thousand strong army she'd stationed in Tenerife to
|
|
avoid this very outcome was now marching north in all haste, but the map
|
|
splayed in front of Cordelia betrayed a stark situation. Were the
|
|
Alliance forces not staggered, not dispersed, they would have held the
|
|
advantage. Instead it was bloody chaos.
|
|
|
|
The surviving Legions of Terror, bereft of the Carrion Lord but still
|
|
under the command of the infamous Marshal Grem One-Eye, had fled into
|
|
northern Iserre. Their supply situation, her generals assured her, would
|
|
soon turn dangerous: they were marching through lands they'd already
|
|
thoroughly pillaged on their way south. They were still around eighteen
|
|
thousand hardened veterans, including a dragon, led by one of the finest
|
|
military officers of the age. Behind them, split in two staggered
|
|
armies, eighty thousand Levantines were in hot pursuit. If reunited,
|
|
Cordelia believed they could crush the Praesi. But they were not, with a
|
|
few weeks of distance between them and no way to join up without
|
|
allowing the Legions to slip the noose. Behind the armies of the
|
|
Dominion, the host of the League followed. Reports on their numbers
|
|
fluctuated with every message: fifty thousand, forty, more than a
|
|
hundred. A brave Iserran outrider had come close enough to find out some
|
|
of the `soldiers' were actually scarecrows held up by gargoyles, which
|
|
had the reek of the Tyrant's scheming. Far behind all these, her
|
|
southern army of twenty thousand was exhausting its soldiers to collapse
|
|
trying to arrive in time. The situation in the region was not impossible
|
|
to salvage, but the dangers were obvious.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia was unwilling to gamble the fate of the Principate on such
|
|
odds, and so she had taken action: she'd ordered general conscription in
|
|
Salia. The bottom of the barrel was being scraped raw, but she'd put
|
|
together twenty thousand levies. Had she further enforced the decree, or
|
|
even broadened it to neighbouring principalities, she could have easily
|
|
tripled that amount. There was, unfortunately, no point in doing so.
|
|
There were no armaments for the conscripts to use, and dwarven
|
|
representatives had flatly refused any further sale without even
|
|
bothering to explain why. Giving reasons to humans was, presumably,
|
|
beneath their dignity. This entire debacle had the ugly reek of
|
|
Catherine Foundling's meddling about it. If there was one saving grace
|
|
to this entire debacle, it was that the Highest Assembly had finally
|
|
understood how close to the edge the Principate had come: without even
|
|
need for her prompting, the personal armies of every single royal not
|
|
already at war had been sent to reinforce her levies. It would still be
|
|
a month before the last arrived, but her twenty thousand would swell to
|
|
forty and gain a bevy of princes and princesses along with badly needed
|
|
professional officers. Strategic considerations now dictated that the
|
|
moment this army was readied it was so be sent by ship down to the coast
|
|
of Iserre, where it could reinforce the Levantines against the Praesi
|
|
and link up with the others field armies before giving battle to the
|
|
invading League of Free Cities. Cordelia had that very command drafted
|
|
on parchment and staring back at her from the surface of her bureau,
|
|
awaiting only her signature. The fair-haired woman watched her inkwell
|
|
for a long, silent moment. She did not reach for the quill, instead
|
|
rising to her feet.
|
|
|
|
The wolves were at the gate, but not only in war-torn Iserre. \emph{Woe,
|
|
Cordelia. Woe to the north and to the south.} Agnes' words were branded
|
|
into her mind, the constant reminder that if she made even a single
|
|
mistake the Principate would end. The First Prince of Procer tread
|
|
softly until she stood by the tall glass panes of her personal solar, a
|
|
magnificent view of Salia spread out below her. Frost touched the glass,
|
|
and the city as well. First snow had already come, though it had melted
|
|
quickly enough under the sun. The next fall would remain a little
|
|
longer, and so it would continue until a thorough blanket of pale was
|
|
draped over the capital. Fingers larger than was considered fashionable
|
|
in a courtier, much less royalty, pressed against the cold glass. A
|
|
taste of the north, a taste of home. Rhenia would be as much ice as
|
|
stone, by now, fresh sets of fortifications being made out of a mixture
|
|
of frost and gravel. The winds at night would be so loud they'd drown
|
|
out even the howling of the packs roving the mountains. Her lips
|
|
tightened, her throat closed up. Pressed against her heart, beneath the
|
|
Rhenian blue dress she wore, was the last letter her kinsman Friedrich
|
|
Papenheim would ever write her. She'd had to excuse herself, when she
|
|
first read it. It would not do to weep in front of even her most
|
|
trusted.
|
|
|
|
``I should not,'' she whispered against the window, her breath blooming
|
|
in fog.
|
|
|
|
She did it anyway, once more. Trembling fingers claimed the parchment
|
|
and she looked upon Friedrich's rough scrawl of a calligraphy. He'd
|
|
never thought much of letters, not that many of her people did, and the
|
|
words were as rough as the man had been.
|
|
|
|
\emph{The dead are coming.}
|
|
|
|
\emph{I sent the young south. We will hold as long we can.}
|
|
|
|
\emph{I am sorry. I cannot do more.}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Dawn is in your hands, Cordelia.}
|
|
|
|
\emph{We will meet again come the last summer.}
|
|
|
|
Her eyes burned with tears she did not allow herself to shed. Hannoven
|
|
had fallen before she ever received the letter, the man who wrote it
|
|
dead and ash. She'd loved Friedrich, she thought in the same way she
|
|
still loved her uncle. Trust and comfort and bonds of blood sacred to
|
|
them both. He could have been the heir to Hannoven, had Uncle Klaus not
|
|
named her that, and a lesser man would have resented her for it. She
|
|
still remembered when she'd been fourteen, the announcement fresh, and
|
|
she'd met him for the first time since. He'd smiled, rough hands
|
|
pressing a bracelet into her palm. Not a single dark glance, not a
|
|
single harsh word. Only a slip of leather with ratling teeth affixed,
|
|
all carved with old Lycaonese blessings. \emph{For luck}, he'd smiled.
|
|
In the years since then, Cordelia had bought and been gifted some of the
|
|
finest jewelry in Procer. On all of Calernia, truly speaking. And still,
|
|
under the dress at her coronation as First Prince of Procer, ratling
|
|
teeth had dug into her wrist. Gold, gold could be found everywhere in
|
|
the world. Freely given affection could not. The First Prince of Procer
|
|
wiped her eyes, grateful she'd already done away with her cosmetics for
|
|
the day. The letter was slid back against her heart, weighing more than
|
|
parchment ever should.
|
|
|
|
Across the rest of Lycaonese lands, cities and towns and villages would
|
|
empty. The old and the young would flee into the mountains, and the rest
|
|
of her people would prepare for war. Ploughshares beat into swords,
|
|
cutlery melted into spears. Tables would be hacked up for wooden shields
|
|
and lovingly tended-to mail come down from mantles. The Enemy was coming
|
|
and her people would march to meet it at the passes, as they had
|
|
unflinchingly since the days the word \emph{Lycaonese} first meant
|
|
something. Cordelia fingers curled angrily against the glass.
|
|
Impotently. They could not stand alone. They were brave and they were
|
|
strong and they were more than anyone had the right to ask of them, but
|
|
they could not stand alone against the endless hordes of the Dead King.
|
|
They needed reinforcements, they needed the south to raise its banners
|
|
and come stand with them. And it was her duty to see to that, wasn't it?
|
|
There had never been a First Prince of Lycaonese birth before her, and
|
|
there might never be again. The Dead King had come to wage full war on
|
|
the Principate of Procer for the first time since its founding, and only
|
|
now did while a Hasenbach sat the throne. She owed it to her blood, to
|
|
her home, to her honour to abandon all this southern madness and march
|
|
north to stand against the horror that would devour all the world.
|
|
|
|
``And I am going to fail you,'' she whispered brokenly.
|
|
|
|
Because victory south meant taking all that remained of the Grand
|
|
Alliance to fight the Dead King. Because the Chosen had held Cleves
|
|
until Princess Malanza's army arrived to reinforce them and the
|
|
principality still stood. Because Hainaut's coast was swarming with the
|
|
dead, but she had ordered her uncle to take it back instead of returning
|
|
to fight for his own home. \emph{And mine}. She'd met the eyes of man
|
|
who'd been father to her since she was a girl, and told him that if he
|
|
disobeyed her orders and marched his soldiers home instead she would
|
|
have to order him seized for treason. There would be no coming back from
|
|
that, she knew. She'd seen the lay of it in his face. But in the end,
|
|
all four principalities of her people could be taken by the Enemy
|
|
without much greater cost than soldiers and mines. If the Kingdom of the
|
|
Dead broke into the heartlands of Procer, its already ravaged farmlands,
|
|
the entire realm would starve through winter. Hunger would kill a
|
|
hundredfold the work of soldiers. \emph{Because even alone, you will
|
|
stand long enough to save the rest of Procer and the Alamans will not.}
|
|
She was abandoning everything she had ever loved for the sake of people
|
|
who still called her a savage behind her back. Who mere months ago had
|
|
been plotting to destroy her.
|
|
|
|
``Because we must,'' Cordelia bitterly said.
|
|
|
|
Using the words of the line whose duty she was failing to justify that
|
|
very failure. She was damned, just as the hard-eyed warlord in Callow
|
|
had warned she would be. \emph{Let me be damned, then}, she thought. The
|
|
wolves were at the gate, gathering in ravening packs. Summer friends and
|
|
bitter foes, a procession of the viperous and the apathetic. Heroes who
|
|
would bring salvation with a torch, villains cloaked in murder and
|
|
madness. Let them all come, baying for the end of Procer. If she had to
|
|
war against all the world to save her people, she would. The Warden of
|
|
the West walked to her desk, dipped the quill and signed the fucking
|
|
order. Before it even dried she had another scroll unfolded, her
|
|
feathered quill dancing across. \emph{Dredge it out}, she wrote.
|
|
\emph{Prepare it. Fire against fire.} The Augur had found a path
|
|
through, narrow as it was, and it began with a corpse that was not a
|
|
corpse beneath the waters of the lake at the heart of Procer. The
|
|
Ashurans, it was said, had called on a masked and hallowed presence at
|
|
the Battle of Thalassina. Cordelia Hasenbach would call on a lot worse
|
|
if she had to.
|
|
|
|
Dawn was in her hands, and she would not let it fail.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Empire was dying a slow, messy death.
|
|
|
|
Alchemical concoctions had allowed Malicia to resist the call of sleep
|
|
beyond what even her Name would allow, though she knew there would
|
|
eventually be a price to pay for that. It was still necessary, for rare
|
|
was the hour that must not be spent dragging her wayward realm back from
|
|
the suicide it was so utterly intent on committing. It was grim,
|
|
thankless work, moreso now than ever before: two blows had come in quick
|
|
succession, and as a result her authority was thinning. Thalassina had,
|
|
to her still raw grief, been the first. The woman named Alaya had wept
|
|
over the loss of her old friend, when she'd heard the news. Wekesa had
|
|
been dear to her in a way that very few people had ever matched or
|
|
surpassed -- only one, if she was to be honest with herself -- and to
|
|
lose him over what should have been such a simple matter\ldots{} But
|
|
while the Dread Empress of Praes could afford most luxuries known to
|
|
Creation, time to mourn was not one of them. Not when Warlock's last
|
|
blaze of vengeful glory had wiped out a city of nearly one hundred and
|
|
fifty thousand people, along with her realm's largest and most
|
|
prosperous sea port.
|
|
|
|
There were survivors, a meager thirty thousand or so. Whatever Wekesa
|
|
had used affected them, for within a day of fleeing the city ruins
|
|
they'd begun to wildly mutate. Eyes and cysts growing over skin, teeth
|
|
turning to stone, even a case of hair turning into straw. Malicia
|
|
ordered a quarantine for the refugees, uncertain if the affliction would
|
|
spread, but it turned out pointless. Every last one of them was dead
|
|
within a week, seemingly cooked from the inside by the fading remnants
|
|
of Wekesa's sorcery left inside them.
|
|
|
|
As far as her agents had been able to determine, there had been only a
|
|
single survivor to that catastrophe: the Hierophant. Young Masego had
|
|
been observed to walk out of the wreckage in ash-covered robes, and her
|
|
attempts to contact the boy had not gone well. The first messengers
|
|
she'd sent on foot, and once they came within a hundred yards of him
|
|
their heads had simply \emph{caved in}. She'd ordered scrying rituals,
|
|
after that. Of the ten mages she'd used, only one had survived the
|
|
backlash. Healers managed to stop the screaming before the vocal chords
|
|
gave, though there would be no salvaging the eyes that had rotten and
|
|
fallen out from their sockets. That survivor had babbled about a `sea of
|
|
death', not coherent enough for a more comprehensive report, and bitten
|
|
through her tongue before the night was out. Necromancy had revealed the
|
|
dead woman's soul to be even more damaged than the corpse, which worried
|
|
Malicia a great deal. Even Warlock at his peak had resorted to rituals
|
|
and specialized tools to tinker with souls. His son evidently need not,
|
|
and was shambling his way back to Callow through unknown means: he would
|
|
frequently disappear for a few days at a time before her agents caught
|
|
sight of him again, moving too quickly for it to be purely on foot.
|
|
|
|
There was going to be a reckoning in that, and the best she could hope
|
|
for was that it would be Ashur that'd bear the cost of it.
|
|
|
|
Thalassina alone would have been a crisis. High Lord Idriss had been one
|
|
of her closest political allies for decades, the wealth of his holdings
|
|
and his remarkable breadth of indebted of great use in keeping the
|
|
influence of Tasia Sahelian and the Truebloods at bay. Malicia had never
|
|
counted the man a friend, but she had respected him and made good use of
|
|
his ambitions. In the wake of the dissolution of the Truebloods and the
|
|
marginalization of Wolof, whose latest High Lord she had bound to her
|
|
too deeply for anything but complete subservience, she'd been preparing
|
|
to set him up as the natural rival to the Moderates led by High Lady
|
|
Abreha of Aksum. Competition over court appointments would have neatly
|
|
neutered both of them and kept them busy while Malicia set to laying the
|
|
groundwork for what the Empire was to become. Instead Idriss was gone,
|
|
along with most of Thalassina, and Abreha Mirembe was now the second
|
|
most powerful individual in Praes. The sack of Nok and the destruction
|
|
of the only other seaport of the Wasteland had dealt crippling blows to
|
|
Malicia's prestige, which had already been steadily eroding under the
|
|
constant Ashuran coastal raids.
|
|
|
|
From Wekesa's death, she had inherited the stuff or rebellion: the
|
|
Thalassocracy was no longer raiding, which allowed household troops and
|
|
legions to withdraw, and doubts were now being raised as to her ability
|
|
to successfully defend Praes. If not for her treaty with the Dead King,
|
|
there would have been a coup attempt by now. As it was, overwhelming
|
|
pressure was mounting at court for High Lady Abreha to be named her
|
|
Chancellor. If she did not swiftly act to suppress dissent, the
|
|
situation would grow out of control. Her most direct tool in this should
|
|
have been the Legions of Terror, of course, but as things stood Malicia
|
|
knew they could not be used. Sitting calmly in her seat at the table
|
|
where the Dark Council was usually held, the Dread Empress of Praes
|
|
watched the kneeling Soninke mage before her and idly tapped a finger
|
|
against the wooden table's surface. Ime stood at her side, her
|
|
spymistress a shadow silent and still.
|
|
|
|
``It is confirmed, Your Most Dreadful Majesty,'' the young man said.
|
|
``Foramen has fallen.''
|
|
|
|
``Of that much I was aware,'' Malicia sharply replied.
|
|
``\emph{Elaborate}.''
|
|
|
|
``As of two days ago, a goblin army of imprecise size -- at least ten
|
|
thousand, less than fifty -- attacked the city after sending a vanguard
|
|
of infiltrators over what we now believe to be at least a month,'' the
|
|
imperial mage hastily said. ``They attacked under cover of night, after
|
|
having slain the watchmen on duty and opening the gates. The city was
|
|
fully occupied by morning, after which the goblins seized control of the
|
|
city wards and cut off our ability to scry.''
|
|
|
|
Not a single bit of news that Ime had not already brought her as of the
|
|
morning the city was occupied. She truly had been too lax on the
|
|
contingent of messenger mages directly sworn to the Tower, she thought.
|
|
While their primary duty was to serve as couriers for orders, they'd
|
|
also been granted funds to acquire and pass on local information from
|
|
wherever they were posted. A way to keep a finger on the pulse of the
|
|
Empire without ever leaving Ater. Yet if the best they could offer her
|
|
was what half of Praes knew two days after Malicia learned of it,
|
|
perhaps their funding needed to be reassessed.
|
|
|
|
``Do you have anything else to report?'' the Empress mildly added.
|
|
|
|
The young mage hesitated.
|
|
|
|
``Rumours have begun to spread in Okoro and Kahtan that these foreign
|
|
attacks are being used as a veiled knife by Your Most Dreadful Majesty
|
|
to eliminate the High Lords entirely,'' he finally said. ``Our branch
|
|
officers in these cities believe the whispers are too widespread to be
|
|
of natural provenance.''
|
|
|
|
Malicia's eyes narrowed the slightest bit. That was, in fact, fresh
|
|
news. Perhaps mere discipline would suffice, then.
|
|
|
|
``You are dismissed,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
The Imperial mage rose only to bow, and retreated from the room
|
|
backwards with his eyes fixed on the floor. The Sentinels quietly closed
|
|
the door behind him, and the Empress leaned back against her seat.
|
|
|
|
``Abreha prepares for a serious challenge, it seems,'' Malicia said
|
|
after a moment.
|
|
|
|
Ime finally stirred to movement, sliding into the seat at her left.
|
|
|
|
``It was inevitable the moment Thalassina happened,'' the spymistress
|
|
said. ``Foramen just handed her the opportunity on a silver platter.''
|
|
|
|
They both knew why the rumours being spread were much more dangerous
|
|
than they seemed at first glance. Ime's agents had obtained greater
|
|
detail of what had taken place in Foramen after it fell. High Lady Amina
|
|
Banu had been skinned alive along with every other member of her line in
|
|
the city before being drawn and quartered before the eyes of the entire
|
|
city. Revenge for Dread Emperor Nihilis fashioning a leather cloak out
|
|
from the hide of the matrons that refused to surrender when he crushed
|
|
the Fourth Goblin Rebellion, or so they claimed. As the leaders of every
|
|
single goblin rebellion in the last six hundred years had committed a
|
|
variation of the same empty atrocity, Malicia could note that there had
|
|
been a great deal more revenge taken than injury done. Unfortunately,
|
|
the Banu of Foramen and the Kebdana of Thalassina had both been
|
|
effectively ended as a bloodline. Oh, some distant relatives could be
|
|
rustled up -- the Banu in particular had been a tribe before a line, and
|
|
were famously more a family thicket than tree -- but that thorough an
|
|
extermination would end them as political entities for generations. More
|
|
than that, for the Kebdana. Foramen could be taken back, but it was
|
|
dubious that Thalassina could ever be rebuilt given the toxicity of the
|
|
former city's emplacement.
|
|
|
|
Two High Lord lines centuries old destroyed in the span of a year. High
|
|
Lady Abreha would find many willing ears, when she cast Malicia in the
|
|
role of one trying to exterminate the highest rung of Wasteland
|
|
aristocracy.
|
|
|
|
``She needs to die,'' the Empress said. ``And quickly.''
|
|
|
|
``The Eyes are already exploring possible avenues,'' Ime replied without
|
|
missing a beat. ``Though she was a viciously paranoid old bat
|
|
\emph{before} taking a swing at the Tower, so the odds are not in our
|
|
favour.''
|
|
|
|
Malicia closed her eyes, mind unfolding. Angles, angles, there were
|
|
always angles. The knife that took the killing blow need not be hers.
|
|
|
|
``Her agents at court,'' she said slowly. ``Have they been preparing
|
|
petition?''
|
|
|
|
``We've confirmed four,'' Ime said. ``I believe the one requesting that
|
|
she be formally summoned to the Tower to answer for tax irregularities
|
|
is the one she'll truly back.''
|
|
|
|
Casting herself as being attacked by the throne while ensuring she was
|
|
in Ater to gather support. Not the most inspired of opening moves, but
|
|
then Abreha had always preferred boldness to elegance.
|
|
|
|
``Have our people change the text for one of the red herrings just
|
|
before presentation,'' Malicia ordered, opening her eyes. ``High Lady
|
|
Abreha will request a formal mandate and court title, for the sake of
|
|
stabilizing Praes in the midst of war.''
|
|
|
|
``Overreach would give us an excuse to swat her around,'' the
|
|
spymistress reluctantly agreed.
|
|
|
|
``Swat?'' Malicia smiled. ``Nothing of the sort, Ime. How does one kill
|
|
a lion without a spear?''
|
|
|
|
Her spymistress simply raised an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``Throw a cut of meat,'' the Dread Empress of Praes said, ``halfway
|
|
between it and a bear.''
|
|
|
|
She drummer her fingers thoughtfully against the table.
|
|
|
|
``We will grant this petition, for we have great trust in the loyalty of
|
|
dearest Abreha,'' she lightly continued. ``As the Blessed Isle is still
|
|
formally an Imperial territory, granting governorship over it is my
|
|
right. Given the unfortunate refugee situation, it is evident there is
|
|
great need of a stabilizing influence there.''
|
|
|
|
Ime let out a low whistle.
|
|
|
|
``That gets her household troops at the Callowan border,'' she noted.
|
|
``And nobody else will want to get tangled up there, so support will
|
|
cool down. The reaction in Laure is the real danger.''
|
|
|
|
``Have the regency informed that its protest over Praesi refugee
|
|
incursions were duly noted, and I have appointed a governor to remedy
|
|
the situation,'' Malicia said. ``Of course, High Lady Abreha's mandate
|
|
ends at the border. Should she provoke the Kingdom of Callow, it is not
|
|
on the behalf of the Tower and any punishment doled out by the regency
|
|
would not be taken as an act of war between our realms.''
|
|
|
|
``Should such a provocation be arranged?'' Ime asked, raising an
|
|
eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``Prepare one,'' the Empress said. ``I will not pull the trigger unless
|
|
it is made necessary.''
|
|
|
|
There was a beat of silence.
|
|
|
|
``My Empress,'' the spymistress finally said.
|
|
|
|
``You have doubts,'' Malicia noted.
|
|
|
|
``Callow just slapped us across the face,'' Ime reminded her. ``There
|
|
was a signed royal decree recognizing the independence of the
|
|
`Confederation of the Grey Eyries' before the city had even fallen.''
|
|
|
|
With Catherine's own signature, which the Empress suspected had by now
|
|
been used more often by Hakram Deadhand than the woman herself.
|
|
|
|
``The Matrons must have reached out to them months ago. And it's only a
|
|
matter of time until barges carrying munitions and goblin steel start
|
|
sailing across the Wasaliti to equip the Army of Callow. They're
|
|
effectively funding a rebellion against the Tower, though Gods only know
|
|
how they got a loan from the dwarves.''
|
|
|
|
``Given Catherine's continued absence, I imagine an amount of brutal
|
|
murder was involved,'' the Empress drily said. ``Though that is
|
|
ultimately irrelevant. The Legions of Terror will move to blockade
|
|
Foramen. Neither munitions, steel nor gold will flow. The bargain will
|
|
remain entirely ink.''
|
|
|
|
``We're in no shape to fight against Callow,'' Ime quietly said. ``We
|
|
are divided, bloodied and beset with a goblin rebellion.''
|
|
|
|
``Callow is in no shape to fight against us,'' Malicia replied, and
|
|
raised a hand before her spymistress could object. ``Marshal Juniper has
|
|
raised a significant army, but it cannot move east. If the Black Queen
|
|
still somehow seeks alignment with the ailing Grand Alliance, it must
|
|
participate in the campaign against the Dead King. If she seeks to kill
|
|
Cordelia's grand design instead, it will fall on Salia instead and
|
|
decapitate the Principate by surprise. Both offensives would be of great
|
|
scale, and she has neither the manpower nor the resources to engage in
|
|
war on two fronts.''
|
|
|
|
Silence reigned for a moment after the mild tirade, the other woman
|
|
refraining from contradicting her. Ime -- Lindimi Sahelian, once, before
|
|
she'd cast that name aside -- was aging. No amount of potions, rituals
|
|
or cosmetics could truly hide it anymore. Her skin was wrinkling, her
|
|
body losing its spryness. Even a branch Sahelian could expect to live a
|
|
few decades longer than the average Praesi, but time would catch up
|
|
eventually. Part of Malicia grieved that. Part of Malicia had to begin
|
|
considering a replacement. She read hesitation, on Ime's face. No, not
|
|
hesitation. \emph{Reluctance}. There were very few subjects where she
|
|
had not given her spymistress to speak her mind fully and openly. Not
|
|
even Lindimi's participation in the slaughter of Amadeus' kin when still
|
|
served the Heir was warded subject, though it was one to be approached
|
|
with care.
|
|
|
|
``Say it,'' Malicia ordered.
|
|
|
|
Ime's lips thinned.
|
|
|
|
``You have not spoken to the Black Queen face to face since Akua's
|
|
Folly,'' she slowly said. ``I do not think you truly grasp the woman
|
|
we're dealing with anymore.''
|
|
|
|
``A crown will not change her nature,'' the Empress said.
|
|
|
|
``What happened in Liesse did,'' Ime replied. ``She reminds me\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
Reluctance again.
|
|
|
|
``\ldots{} she reminds me of Nefarious,'' the spymistress finished
|
|
quietly. ``After the Wizard of the West broke his power. There's a
|
|
sickness in her, Malicia, and it has little kinship with reason.''
|
|
|
|
It had been many years, since Alaya had last thought of Dread Emperor
|
|
Nefarious. In a way, that'd been a deeper victory than simply killing
|
|
the wretched man -- she had grown \emph{beyond} him, the wounds and the
|
|
fear and the pain. She'd not hidden from remembrance of him, she'd
|
|
simply let him disappear into utter irrelevance.
|
|
|
|
``Winter can be predicted,'' Malicia said. ``Rooted as it is in what she
|
|
once was.''
|
|
|
|
``She's unstable,'' Ime flatly said. ``And I'm afraid of her. We all
|
|
should be. She threw a bloody lake at the crusaders, and that was her
|
|
being \emph{diplomatic}. If that pretence is discarded, what will we be
|
|
facing? You speak of armies, but I think of a mountain falling from the
|
|
sky above Ater. Of Okoro drowned by an ocean unleashed. She's not the
|
|
Carrion Lord's apprentice anymore, Malicia. She'd a vicious, angry thing
|
|
bearing a fairy court's worth of power and I deeply mislike the risk of
|
|
us making her feel cornered. She may yet come out with teeth and claw,
|
|
damning all else.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Where was this fear a year ago?} Yet the Empress knew the answer.
|
|
It had not yet come to fruit, because a year ago Wekesa had still been
|
|
alive and poorly inclined towards the Black Queen. How quickly slight
|
|
wounds had turned to mortal ones, Malicia thought. Procer was being
|
|
smothered by the armies of the dead, Ashur strangled by the fleets of
|
|
the League and the hosts of Levant were embroiled in the mess that had
|
|
been made of Iserre, headed for doom or crippling. All three nations
|
|
sworn to end her, bleeding out in broad daylight. And yet Praes was
|
|
dying as well, by wounds of its own making. The Matrons to the south,
|
|
High Lady Abreha to the north. Legions she held only by the barest of
|
|
leashes, one that could only be tugged by causing mutinous sentiment in
|
|
the aftermath, and with the coming of winter the Imperial granaries
|
|
would have to be opened lest there be food riots. The grain would run
|
|
out, eventually. And to the far west, someone had taken Amadeus from
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
She was alone. There was no one else that would -- that \emph{could} --
|
|
avoid disaster.
|
|
|
|
Left to scheme on their own, when the granaries ebbed low the High Lords
|
|
would begin musing war on Callow to acquire its own reserves. The
|
|
goblins would not end the border of their rebellion at Foramen unless
|
|
they were \emph{made} to. And the moment collapse seemed inevitable,
|
|
some clans of orcs would begin eyeing the weakened lands to the south of
|
|
the steppes for plunder as they had under the reign of her predecessor.
|
|
Some would stay loyal, but all that would accomplish was civil war among
|
|
the Clans. She had to avoid reaching the tipping point, whatever the
|
|
cost. For if she succeeded? If she asserted true control once more? Then
|
|
she had won this war, and all the wars that would follow. The Grand
|
|
Alliance would break. The League of Free Cities would either collapse
|
|
into squabbling or by trying to keep the Thalassocracy contained. And
|
|
Callow would have a choice: uneasy alliance with the Tower, or standing
|
|
alone against a Kingdom of the Dead that had just devoured most the
|
|
west. It always came down to survival, didn't it? Outlasting what you
|
|
could not beat.
|
|
|
|
``I am,'' Malicia said, ``the ruler of Praes.''
|
|
|
|
``So you are,'' Ime murmured.
|
|
|
|
``Let us teach them once more,'' Dread Empress Malicia, First of Her
|
|
Name, ``precisely what that \emph{means}.''
|
|
|
|
The Empire might be dying, but these lands were no stranger the walking
|
|
dead.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Somewhere in eastern Iserre, under a full moon, a flicker of flame
|
|
parted the night. It died quick enough, leaving behind only the
|
|
cherry-red end of a lit pipe. The young woman holding it breathed in
|
|
deep of smoke before blowing out a shoddy ring. Pearly white teeth were
|
|
bared under moonlight, afterwards.
|
|
|
|
``Let's try this again, shall we?'' Catherine Foundling said.
|
|
|
|
Behind her, streaming out of an ink-black gate, a sea of raised sigils
|
|
poured out in utter silence. Obsidian and iron, furs and mail, spears
|
|
and swords and things stranger still.
|
|
|
|
For the first time in many years, the Empire Ever Dark was at war with
|
|
something other than itself.
|