420 lines
20 KiB
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420 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-27-overtures}{%
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\section{Chapter 27: Overtures}\label{chapter-27-overtures}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``You should listen to the devil on your shoulder, my friend. I
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had it nailed onto there for a reason.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Abominable, the Thrice-Struck
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\end{quote}
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It went like this: the opposition insisted they could not hold
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diplomatic talks while one of their own was being held up by the throat.
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In response, I somewhat politely cast aspersions on their grasp of
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matters such as reality and remembering who'd tried to kill me under
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truce banner \emph{literally moments ago}, then told them it'd be rather
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absurd to stand there in silence while the Grey Pilgrim went to fetch my
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teacher's unconscious body. I spoke the word `unconscious' with a heavy
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wink, because what was a little borderline necromancy between `friends'?
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Lord Yannu promptly told me talks couldn't be had without the Peregrine,
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who in turn suggested that his word was enough for me to order General
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Rumena to release his personal Heaven-endorsed attack hound. He would
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then join my conversation with Malanza and the other Levantine.
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``That's an interesting suggestion, Tariq,'' I smiled politely, showing
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a great deal of teeth. ``Especially since it implies I still hold your
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word to be of any worth at all.''
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``Mind your tongue, villain,'' the Lord of Alava hissed. ``To cast doubt
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on the honour of the Pilgrim's Blood is to insult the Dominion of Levant
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itself.''
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``Will the Grey Pilgrim be surrendering himself into my custody
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immediately, then?'' I pointedly asked. ``Honour might be at least in
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part satisfied by that.''
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There was a moment of pained silence, though from certain quarters
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there'd been understandably no surprise. After all, Princess Rozala had
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been in the tent when the treaties were first drafted and signed while
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the Grey Pilgrim had been an actual guarantor of the terms as well as
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part of them.
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``You overreach, Black Queen,'' Lord Yannu said. ``Such demands are
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beyond your ability to enforce, to say little of your right to them.''
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``My \emph{right}?'' I curtly repeated. ``Did they not tell you, Lord
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Yannu, that I have written treatises signed by both your Peregrine and
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the Prince of Iserre to this nature? Treatises including terms that
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placed the Pilgrim in the Kingdom of Callow's hands for a time as
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hostage, and that your honourable Peregrine instead fled my capital in
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the night last year? Oaths and promises were broken, and he's since
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shown no willingness to make reparations for this or even acknowledge it
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happened.''
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``There was greater need for me elsewhere,'' the Grey Pilgrim replied.
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``Duties whose call was keener than what had been arranged.''
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``The oaths were inconvenient, so you broke them,'' I translated with a
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beaming smile. ``But that's all right, because I'm just a villain after
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all. Charming.''
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``I would make amends, Black Queen,'' the Pilgrim offered.
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``Sure,'' I replied without hesitation, ``surrender yourself, right now.
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You'll be put to trial according to Callowan law and dealt with
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accordingly.''
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``I cannot do this,'' Tariq said, ``so long as you lead an army against
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the Grand Alliance.''
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``Ah,'' I mused. ``It was a platitude, then, and your word remains dust
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to me. Let us discard this notion of my putting faith in the promises of
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a man who does not afford anyone else the same courtesy and move on,
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shall we?''
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None of them liked that, but Malanza steered the conversation away from
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the fact that both she and the Pilgrim had already broken terms of a
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bargain made with me before they lost any more feathers. The
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arrangements ended up being kicked down the line: talks would end until
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I'd received the body and released the Saint, then resume with the Grey
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Pilgrim in attendance. A waste of time, in my eyes, so I turned my gaze
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on Princess Rozala instead.
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``I'm willing to bargain with you without them in attendance,'' I
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bluntly said. ``You strike me as the most trustworthy of the three, at
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the moment, though admittedly that doesn't mean all that much.''
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The Princess of Aequitan hesitated, while in the back of my mind I
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gauged her situation. There were more Dominion soldiers than Proceran
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ones in the western coalition army she was fighting with, so it wasn't a
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given that she had the most clout in whatever power-sharing arrangement
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made up that host's command. On the other hand, if she was here then it
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was with the First Prince's backing and this remained the Principate of
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Procer: she had legitimacy the other two did not, being foreigners.
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``We can speak,'' Princess Rozala said, ``while other matters are seen
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to.''
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The large Lord of Alava stirred, face openly displeased, but the
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princess raised a hand in appeasement.
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``I will not negotiate, or offer terms,'' the dark-haired woman said.
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``Only speak. Diplomacy can take place when all are in attendance.''
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The Grey Pilgrim spoke softly, in a language I did not know -- a
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Levantine tongue, most likely, since Lord Yannu seemed to have no
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trouble understanding it. They conferred softly, and I watched Princess
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Rozala from the corner of my eyes. She seemed as much in the dark about
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what was being said as I, and not particularly pleased about it.
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Adjutant leaned in closer.
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``Murcadan, I think,'' the orc whispered in Kharsum. ``Spoken mostly
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around the region of Alava city. I'm not surprised Rozala wouldn't know
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it, it's their least widespread tongue.''
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I slowly nodded. Might be true that the language had never seemed worth
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learning for the Princess of Aequitan. Although her principality was
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deep to the south of Procer and closer to the Dominion than any other
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foreign nation, Ceseo or Lunara would have been more useful picks if she
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meant to dabble in learning something of narrower use than tradertalk.
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Whatever the truth of it, the side conference between the Levantines did
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not take long. Quiet words were exchanged with Princess Rozala herself,
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and there must have been agreement as the Pilgrim sought my eyes once
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more and when denied that withdrew without another word. Lord Yannu
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inquired to the practical aspects of the trade, namely how the
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unconscious body would be carried, so I glanced meaningfully at Hakram.
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Adjutant moved to speak with the Levantine aristocrat, leaving Princess
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Rozala Malanza to speak with me alone. Well, not exactly: Komena drew
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her talons against my shoulder for a moment before lazily flapping away
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to perch herself on the shoulder of her favourite, General Rumena. The
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old drow showed no sign of tiring from holding up the Saint of Swords by
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the throat, and overall had seemed rather unimpressed by her glaring
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even before half of Sve Noc claimed its shoulder. The crow taking flight
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drew Malanza's attention to the one still on my shoulder, though she
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couldn't seem to gaze at Andronike directly.
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``I wouldn't recommending looking at either too close,'' I said.
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``Demons,'' Princess Rozala said, lips tightening into a line.
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Andronike let out loud gurgling caws that might have been taken as
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laughter, and certainly rang of mockery.
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``Sve Noc,'' I corrected. ``Or their attention, anyway. No summons
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these, Rozala Malanza, bound and bargained for. Though if that makes you
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fear them less, I'll count you a fool for it.''
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The Proceran princess studied me for a moment, dark eyes inscrutable.
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``What does it mean?'' she asked. ``Sve Noc.''
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``It means your learning is shallow, Rozala Malanza, while this world's
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roots run deep,'' Andronike spoke in perfect Chantant from my shoulder.
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``It will be amusing, to see how little of you the adjustment allows to
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remain. Already the cracks are showing, aren't they?''
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The Princess of Aequitan turned ghastly pale.
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``It will take more than brandy and poppy leaves for the digging to
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stop,'' the goddess on my shoulder laughed. ``Hands and picks and
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tireless flesh, pulling aside the --''
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``Andronike,'' I calmly said. ``Enough.''
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``The clever little things would turn on you in a heartbeat, my herald,
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if they believed they would triumph in that strife,'' she said. ``In
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their wanton arrogance they prance about, blind to their utter
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\emph{fragility}.''
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``Are we not all fragile, in your eyes?'' I retorted.
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``Some more than others,'' Andronike said, but left it at that.
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Wings spreading, the crow-goddess took flight and left me to face a
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shaken Princess of Aequitan. Her tanned visage had turned ashen, and a
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tremor was running down her arm. Not, I noted, the one that clutched the
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handle of her sword.
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``What is that \emph{thing}, Black Queen?'' Princess Rozala croaked.
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``Desperate measures made altar,'' I said. ``Apotheosis is not a gentle
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affair, and they were not gentle before it.''
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``Riddles,'' she accused.
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``I've given you truths,'' I shrugged. ``What you make of them, in the
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end, is not my concern. I am not your keeper, or for that matter your
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empire's.''
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That last sentence had blood returning to her face, and iron returned to
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her spine. I studied Rozala Malanza under the gentle light of the moon,
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waited as she put herself back together. It was absurd, I thought, to
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think of her as young when she was older than me. But she couldn't even
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be thirty, and it struck me that in different times she would have been
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considered much too young for the importance of the duties thrust upon
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her. As Hasenbach's commander in Iserre, she was arguably on par with
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the Iron Prince in authority within the ever-fluid military hierarchy of
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Procer. Perhaps even higher. \emph{Young and worn before her time}, I
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thought. \emph{The chorus of our age.}
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``Procer is on the verge of collapse,'' Princess Rozala told me.
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I hid my surprise at the fact that she'd outright admit that. The blood
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was in the water for anyone to see, and here in Iserre there were
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ingredients enough to cook the death of empire, but there was still life
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in the beast.
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``In different circumstances, I might have celebrated that,'' I frankly
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said. ``Not, however, today.''
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``You cannot afford for the lines up north to break, Black Queen,'' the
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princess told me, tone cool. ``Too many of the refugees south would die,
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the sheer amount of corpses to be raised would effectively make the Dead
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King unstoppable.''
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Gods, I \emph{wished}. Unstoppable was the prelude to some adolescent in
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colourful clothes bringing down the flying fortress, or inexplicably
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stabbing a villain's soul. Unfortunately, I doubted Neshamah would make
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any mistake so easily exploitable by the Heavens and their chosen.
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``I didn't come to Iserre to fight any of you,'' I pointed out. ``I'm
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extracting my forces.''
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``Do so,'' the princess said. ``You will not be hindered.''
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``Including the Legions of Terror,'' I flatly said.
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``That,'' Princess Rozala said, ``cannot be allowed to happen.''
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I already had a biting reply on the tip of my tongue when I forced
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myself to bite it instead, eyes narrowing as I looked closer at the
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dark-haired Arlesite. She wasn't being high-handed, I thought, or
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refusing to recognize the realities of her situation. There wasn't
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defiance or righteous anger on her face, only a sort of tired
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resignation. Rozala Malanza was essentially telling me, without outright
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speaking the word, that if the Legions left with my forces there would
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be dire consequences for the Principate.
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``How bad?'' I asked.
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``Bad,'' she replied, tone grim.
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``I can't give them to you,'' I frankly told her. ``I won't backstab an
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ally and it'd make a bloody mess for me besides.''
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``If you were to escape with them,'' Princess Rozala delicately said,
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``after being defeated, that would be a different story. Or so I am
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told.''
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My fingers tightened around my reins and Zombie whinnied.
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``That's not a small favour you're asking,'' I said. ``Or a harmless
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one.''
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It wasn't an exaggeration to say that a great deal of my legitimacy --
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insofar as I had any -- as the Queen of Callow came from my largely
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uninterrupted string of battlefield victories. I'd had political defeats
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aplenty, and strategic drubbings more than once, but even the worst of
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my days commanding an army could be argued to be at least draws. As the
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First Prince had once put it I was a warlord, and those only rules so
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long as they kept \emph{winning}. It'd also put me in a weaker position
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when pushing for the Liesse Accords, coming from the cold as an already
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beaten foe instead of a victor, and that was without even getting in the
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practical aspects of being `defeated'. Even if I were willing to waste
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soldiers over such theatre, which I honestly wasn't sure I was, this
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would be a risky business even if I trusted the opposition well. Which I
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did not. Malanza wasn't unreasonable, but a year ago she'd been invading
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my homeland and she'd never bothered to hide the despised me personally.
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That left the Levantines, which as long as the Pilgrim was around
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couldn't be trusted to do anything but what he `advised'. How could I be
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sure that halfway through the withdrawal of my forces they wouldn't try
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to turn the face victory into a real one?
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``I do not have room to negotiate, Black Queen,'' Princess Rozala
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murmured. ``I would prefer if I did, but what do I have to bargain with
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save doom and despair?''
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``I'd be taking on heavy risks,'' I reminded her. ``On the account of
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people who are still my enemies.''
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``There is a greater enemy still,'' she told me, eyes serious.
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``\emph{The} Enemy, and he comes for us all.''
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``I'm not unaware of that,'' I patiently said. ``It's not that I'm
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unwilling to avoid setting fire to what's left of Procer, Malanza. It's
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that I'm not convinced if I try to help you your fellows won't stick a
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knife in my back halfway through.''
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She grimaced.
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``I don't suppose,'' she said, ``that my word of honour as the Princess
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of Aequitan would mean anything to you.''
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``More than nothing,'' I finally said. ``But it only matters if you're
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in command of the army on the other side of this field, and I don't
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believe that's the case.''
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``I hold supreme command over all armies of the Principate in Iserre,''
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she said.
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``And the Levantines?''
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``This half their forces answers to Lord Yannu, for the most part,''
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Rozala said. ``We make plans by council.''
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``Then you can't speak for the army,'' I said, not unkindly. ``If the
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Grey Pilgrim asked the man to turn cannibal he actually might. Turning
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on a villain? That wouldn't even merit hesitation.''
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``You need to set aside your grudge against the Chosen, Foundling,'' the
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other woman told me. ``Though I understand he broke faith with you, it
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was a shallow betrayal.''
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``He disappeared to hunt down my mentor, whose soulless body I've just
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had to trade for,'' I flatly said. ``He'd didn't leave to take a nice
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stroll down a promenade, Malanza.''
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``The Carrion Lord killed thousand on the field, and dozens of thousands
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through the burning of them,'' the Princess of Aequitan spoke evenly.
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``I can only grieve the Peregrine did not simply slit the man's throat
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instead of resorting to such theatrics.''
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I could have argued this, truth be told. There was no denying Black was
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a monster, but he hadn't decided to torch his way through the Proceran
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heartlands for the pleasure of it on a sunny morning where he'd had
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nothing else planned. It'd been a calculated attack at the manpower and
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stability of an enemy nation who'd been in the process of invading my
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homeland and his. While I wouldn't defend his actions, or the validity
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of his methods even if they appeared to be working -- to everyone's loss
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-- he'd not committed that atrocity in a vacuum. It'd be a direct
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response to the Tenth Crusade, whose stated goal was the destruction of
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Praes. Black's policy had been to avoid war against Procer for decades
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before I'd known him, and it seemed rather rich of all these righteous
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folk to go out of their way declare war on one of the most infamous
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monsters of our age and then be appalled and surprised when he behaved
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monstrously. If you shoved your fingers in a brazier, at the very least
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you should expect to get burned. On the other hand, I was disinclined to
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defend an atrocity I didn't believe in and was currently screwing all of
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us over. Let her talk: if that was all she did, I had no issue with it.
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The talk was hardly undeserved.
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``My point is that he's not ever going to consider promises binding,
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Malanza,'' I said. ``Not if they get in the way of what he believes
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needs to be done.''
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``That is rather reassuring to me,'' the princess said. ``Considering
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he's one of the most decent men I've met.''
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``I'm not going to argue whether the Pilgrim's anything with you,'' I
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flatly said. ``But you can, at least, recognize why I'd hesitated to
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trust in him given his history of both breaking oaths and attempting to
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kill me.''
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``Make your peace with it,'' Princess Rozala said, rather unmoved.
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It occurred to me, then, that from the Princess of Aequitan's
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perspective I was angry over simply our battlefield encounters and the
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Pilgrim's escape from Liesse. She did not know that I'd good as begged
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the man to make any path but going to Keter feasible only to be turned
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down. Or that his wriggling into a role through the treaty after the
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Camps had essentially been an attempt to get me killed through a
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redemption story, after having spent that entire diplomatic conference
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trying to manoeuvre me into a story that'd get me either slain or
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sidelined. I wondered if she'd believe me, should I tell her. Likely
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not. Part of that I suspected only Named could truly understand, and
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then not even all of that rarefied breed. As for the rest, why would the
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Black Queen's word be taken for anything? No, I was simply expected to
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take the word of my fucking betters while everyone dragged my own
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through the mud. I pushed down the sharp flare of anger I felt at that.
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It would be of no use to me here.
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``There's more there than you know,'' I finally said. ``I am not
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unwilling to bargain with him, but trust him blindly when the stakes are
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so high? No.''
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``You would refuse without even giving reason?'' Malanza said.
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``Where'd you learn what would happen if the Legions were allowed to
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walk?'' I replied.
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She didn't answer. Yeah, we all had our little secrets. Might be the
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Augur, I figured, but other things as well. Tariq had Mercy whispering
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in his hear, it seemed, and I wouldn't write off the possibility that
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Tyrant had offered some sort of deal -- or made of threat -- either.
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``Trust is a funny thing, isn't?'' I murmured.
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I considered, for a moment, telling her about what was taking shape in
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Arcadia. It'd be a danger to her side as well, I figured, though not an
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immediate one. I knew I \emph{should} tell her, because if it came out
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later that I had known a catastrophe was forming there and said nothing
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there would a price to pay in many ways. But there'd been hellgates, in
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that broken place. And what I believed might have been High Arcana. It
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was possible for it to be the work of the Dead King, who had been known
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to use both these things, but that wasn't where the shape of this story
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-- Masego missing, Liesse disappeared, everything coming to a head in
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Iserre -- was leading. If I told any of the crusaders that knowledge
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would make it to the Grey Pilgrim. And more dangerously to the Saint of
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Swords, who I'd just humiliated and used as coin in a bargain, who I'd
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have to release before too long lest this situation be turned on me. If
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Laurence de Montfort learned that the Hierophant was meddling with these
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kinds of forces, she'd have a pretext to kill him. And I did not doubt
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for a single fucking moment that she'd try. Would she succeed? I
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honestly wasn't sure.
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But I was certain I wasn't willing to gamble with Masego's life, so I
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kept my mouth shut.
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``There's no point in holding talks over this, is there?'' I finally
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said. ``Not unless you're willing to offer me hostages and other forms
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of safeguard, which you won't be.''
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``You know the appearances of that would make it impossible,'' Princess
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Rozala calmly replied.
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``Then we appear to have nothing left to speak about,'' I said. ``I'll
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be marching my armies out of Iserre, Malanza.''
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I met her eyes, smiling ruefully.
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``I'd suggest you get yours out of my way, for all our sakes.''
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