460 lines
23 KiB
TeX
460 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-concourse-i}{%
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\section{Interlude: Concourse I}\label{interlude-concourse-i}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``When a highborn is slain, look to who benefits and you will have
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learned what families the third party wants to incite strife between.''}
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-- Extract from `The Behaviours of Civil Conduct', by High Lady Mchumba
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Sahelian
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\end{quote}
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There was only one crowned head left south of Salia, and it was Princess
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Rozala Malanza of Aequitan.
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As a girl or, honesty compelled her to admit, as recently as a few years
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ago Rozala might have found such a prospect exciting. To wield such
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influence, to claim such authority, and with so few to check her! After
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her mother's disastrous bid for First Princess during the Great War and
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the ruin that had befallen the Malanzas for it, Rozala had been forced
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to look in the eye the fact that if she did not take cover under
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another's wings her family mighty yet be toppled entirely and that odds
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were Aequitan would not know prominence against in her lifetime. And
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now, not even a decade later, Princess Rozala could be argued to be the
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second most powerful individual in Procer: she commanded a great host,
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had inherited the reins of a powerful bloc within the Highest Assembly
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and her reputation as both general and noblewoman had reached heights
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she'd never before thought possible. And yet, as dawn inched ever closer
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the Princess of Aequitan found it all felt hollow. For all the power and
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influence that had been gathered to her name, Rozala Malanza found that
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the sum of what she could do in the face of death was look up at the sky
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and pray.
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Pray that the Peregrine and the Regicide lived up to their legends, that
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the Rogue Sorcerer proved worthy of one day having such tales matched to
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his name. That the Tyrant's schemes would be turned against the Crown of
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the Dead and, most of all, that the Black Queen would make as
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terrifyingly potent an ally as she had been an enemy. They'd all danced
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to the sounds of Catherine Foundling's tune, this winter, found the
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calm-faced villain always one step ahead\emph{. Let the Hidden Horror
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taste of that, for once}, Princess Rozala thought. \emph{Let every
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promise that has been made under cover of night come true, and great
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vengeance be visited upon the King of Death.} Rozala Malanza ruled lands
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large and wealthy, commanded soldiers in the dozens of thousands and
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held power of life and death over a dozen times that -- and so, left to
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stand stewing in her own inability to do more than hope, she pondered
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her growing mislike of the Chosen and the Damned. Those colourful few,
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cloaked in power and mystery, who would bargain with the fate of nations
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and the pivots of history. Who left all others in the dust of their
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grandiose \emph{adventures}, be they great or small. What a hateful
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thing it was, to have your own life and death decided by the hands of
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others.
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She was not unaware of the irony inherent to a princess of the blood
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pondering such things. The touch of rue jostled her out of her thoughts
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enough that she heard the person approaching behind her, though she did
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not turn. Hair loose and going down her back, Rozala tightened the warm
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fur cloak around her body and kept looking at the night sky brought
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about by the blasphemous sorceries of the drow.
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``There have been another dozen,'' Louis Rohanon, once Prince of
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Creusens, told her.
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The Princess of Aequitan did not need to look to know he was exhausted
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beyond all words. Neither of them had slept in much, much too long --
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and there was only so far brandy and alchemical tonics could carry one
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past what one's body could tolerate.
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``Were they more coherent than the last?'' she asked.
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``In a manner of speaking,'' Louis sighed. ``It has become apparent that
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the\ldots{} visions all concern the same journey, but the Heavens were
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seemingly unconcerned with the order of the revelations. It is all
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rather haphazard.''
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Louis Rohanon had never been a particularly pious man, which was Rozala
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was less than surprised by his implicit criticism of the manner the Gods
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Above had granted their insights. No doubt if the Prince -- former now,
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she reminded herself -- of Creusens was a one of the Gods the visions
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would have been regularly arranged, in good order and with the proper
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seals affixed to bills of delivery. Less than surprised, yes, but
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perhaps a little amused. Not that she would show it. The mirth was
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short-lived, though.
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``And the initial vision,'' Rozala said. ``Has anything happened to cast
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it in doubt?''
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She looked at him from the corner of her eye and caught his face
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tightening.
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``No,'' Louis quietly admitted. ``It still returns at least once per lot
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of dreamers waking, and never once have we been told of anything taking
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place past it. It seems to have been the end of their journey.''
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The Princess of Aequitan closed her eyes. She'd not slept, so there'd
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been no opportunity to experience the dreams, but in the urgency after
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the first dreamers woke she'd had several of those blessed with the
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visions describe it to her in detail. It always seemed to centre around
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the same vivid parts: the Black Queen's scream of denial after she
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realized being tricked, the Grey Pilgrim taking up the blade of the
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fallen Saint of Swords and then the wizened hero's taking of his own
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life. All who'd dreamt the dream agreed that the Black Queen had tried
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to prevent the Peregrine's death, though words failed them when they
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tried to explain why. Yet it seemed undeniable, by now, that both the
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Regicide and the Grey Pilgrim were dead. The former, if one of the
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growingly reoccurring visions was to be believed, having been slain by
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Catherine Foundling herself.
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``Any word of the Dominion armies?'' she asked.
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``None of the Blood have returned from their seclusion,'' Louis said.
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``The senior captains still hold command, and our people in their camps
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confirm their rank and file are having similar dreams.''
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``It's the Blood that'll make decisions, not the captains or the
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soldiers,'' Princess Rozala said. ``Keep sending envoys, Louis. We can't
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afford for the battle to resume.''
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``Dawn will bludgeon the drow hard,'' the former Prince of Creusens
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carefully said. ``And will arrive soon. If a victory is to be seized by
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surprise, it would be in the coming hour.''
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``Tell me, Louis,'' the dark-haired princess flatly said, ``even if we
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slew every last soldier of the Army of Callow without losing a man, what
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do you believe will happen when the Black Queen returns?''
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``She's already raised one army of the dead,'' Louis said, though he
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shivered. ``How many times could she truly do such a thing?''
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And shiver he should, for Malanza had been told the same tale as he and
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it had clenched her guts to hear it. An ancient king of Callow stolen
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from the Dead King's grasp and hundreds of thousands of furious wraiths
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summoned to deliver his wrath? Such a thing could break an army fresh
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and dug-in, if well-used, and Rozala Malanza's host was tired and spread
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out. For all that the Black Queen had come to favour subtler tricks than
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those she'd plied at the Battle of the Camps, it would not to do forget
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for a moment that they were facing a woman capable of slaying thousands
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with snap of her fingers.
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``Regardless, this is not a gamble we can even begin to consider with
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the League still on the field,'' Rozala reminded him. ``They may have
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withdrawn but they are not so far as that.''
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The disparate armies of the League of Free Cities had, as of an hour
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past, begun to retreat. They'd put perhaps a mile between themselves and
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the other two great hosts on the plains, their great combined camp
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turning into a labyrinth of mayhem before it'd even been fully raised.
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Rozala had ordered envoys sent there, to probe for intentions and
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information, but so far all had been turned away outside the camp and
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the few spies she'd tried to slip in had been shot and hung from poles
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as a warning. She'd not even tried to get anyone inside the Army of
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Callow's camp, well aware that Wasteland sorceries would make
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infiltration more than merely difficult, but at least there her envoys
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had been received by Lady Vivienne Dartwick. Who was now, it seemed,
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heiress to the throne of Callow. Lady Dartwick had been courteous but
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dclined Princess Rozala's offer of sending a contingent of priests from
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the House of Light to see to her wounded, likely suspecting the
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additional intent of gleaning the state of her camp through it. At least
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the venture had confirmed that some of her soldiers were touched by the
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dreams too, as well as confirming that the `priests' of the heretical
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House Insurgent were truly capable of healing. Which would not be a
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pleasant to hear for some of the priesthood in Salia, Rozala suspected.
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Last she'd heard from the capital, lines against Callow had been
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hardening amongst the House of Light.
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``As you say, Princess Rozala,'' Louis relied, inclining his head.
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She grimaced, for until a few hours ago though she had been his leader
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they had also been peers: and while the former still held true, the
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latter did not. They would have to become used to that. Rozala tried to
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conceive of a sentence that could mend the gap she could feel growing
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between them, but sentiment had never been her knack and she struggled
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over the words until the entire debate was made moot. A messenger
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approached, though Rozala did not recognize her face and she was being
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escorted by a pair of Aequitan soldiers. The messenger bowed low, and
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only began to speak when Rozala gave her leave.
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``Your Grace,'' the woman said, her faint Alamans accent still
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discernible. ``You have been summoned to stand before the First Prince.
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The Order of the Red Lion has found the restrictions on scrying lifted
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at last.''
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Louis' face darkened with both anger and embarrassment.
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``It was ordered that any successful contact with Salia be reported
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immediately,'' he sharply said. ``How is it that I am only now hearing
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of this?''
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``You ordered everyone under your command to do so,'' the messenger
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politely agreed. ``Yet I am here on behalf of Her Most Serene Highness'
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plenipotentiary envoy Arnaud Brogloise, who answers only to the First
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Prince and the Highest Assembly.''
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So Cordelia Hasenbach had hidden an entire set of messengers and scryers
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right under her nose, Rozala darkly thought. Likely among the army of
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the former Prince of Cantal, who until so recently she'd believed one of
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her most eager supporters. The Princess of Aequitan grit her teeth at
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the memory of Arnaud's treachery revealed in the bloodiest of ways,
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though now was not the time to settle that account.
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``As always, I am at the disposal of the First Prince,'' Rozala replied
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flatly. ``Guide the way, messenger.''
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Louis was left with instructions to have someone inform her the moment
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there was movement from the Levantines, no matter who it was she was
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speaking with at the time. The dark-haired princess followed the
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messenger into the camp of the Cantal army, though she was not so
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foolish as to do so without a company of trustworthy Aequitan soldiers
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escorting her. She was well aware that the First Prince would find it
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much more difficult to take her head after the dust had settled and her
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star rose in the eyes of commons and royalty alike, and while Rozala was
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not certain it was in Hasenbach's nature to so bluntly snuff out a rival
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these were dark days for all. Fear could do strange things to a woman:
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sometimes it could urge her to greatness, but it could just as easily
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spur her to the basest of instincts. Yet Rozala and her escort were not
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surrounded and slaughtered but instead guided to the former Prince of
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Cantal's private pavilion where the man himself awaited. Along with a
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handful of wizards who took their leave when dismissed, and a basin of
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water large enough it could have been used as a bath. Arnaud Brogloise
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rose from his seat when she entered, as the fresh disparity in their
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ranks required, and personally introduced her.
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``Her Grace Rozala Malanza, Princess of Aequitan and supreme commander
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of the southern armies,'' he briskly said.
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Cordelia Hasenbach's cool blue eyes, framed by those perfect golden
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tresses, were already studying her through the waters and so Rozala
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offered the proper bow.
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``Your Highness,'' she said. ``As I was summoned, I came.''
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``For that promptness I thank you, and again for the services you
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rendered the Principate on this campaign,'' the First Prince said. ``You
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may consider me informed or recent developments in Iserre, for the
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purpose of this conversation.''
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``So I shall,'' Rozala replied, resisting the urge to glance at
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Brogloise. ``May I then inquire, Your Highness, as to what the purpose
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of this conversation is? While I have matters to bring up before you,
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your messenger implied\ldots{} pressing need.''
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It was as close as she could come to chiding the First Prince for
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summoning her so abruptly, and the message should be twice as loudly
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heard for the way Rozala had kept to the courtesies while Hasenbach very
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clearly had not.
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``As of a quarter hour ago, we have confirmed that the Dead King has
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withdrawn on all fronts,'' the First Prince said.
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Rozala's eyes widened in surprise.
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``Furthermore, while my cousin finds it difficult to see through either
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the Hidden Horror or the Black Queen, she has confirmed that a truce of
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more than one month and less than six was bought, though not at what
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price.''
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I did not escape the dark-haired princess' attention that Catherine
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Foundling had been mentioned in this, though for now she could only
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speculate as to why.
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``You believe this is the doing of the Queen in Callow?'' Princess
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Rozala asked.
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Hasenbach sighed.
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``Queen \emph{of} Callow,'' she finally said. ``Best we grow used to
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that, Your Grace, for it seems bargains will have to be struck. The
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Augur had gleaned that the truce is related to the Black Queen, though
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little more than that. Given the consequences of hostilities resuming,
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we cannot afford to take risks with Queen Catherine's life -- or,
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indeed, to risk provoking her at all for at least a month.''
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A pause saw the First Prince's tone grow heavy and solemn.
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``In that spirit, Princess Rozala Malanza, as commander of the
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Principate's southern armies I charge you with the preservation of Queen
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Catherine Foundling's life and the safeguard of her armies and
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associates. Should the Dominion strike at her, you are to take any
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measures short of open war with Levant to prevent conflict reigniting
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between Callow and the Grand Alliance.''
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Rozala sharply breathed in. Open war, the First Prince had said. Which
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was implicit endorsement of assassinating Dominion commanders over
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allowing the Black Queen to be put at risk. If it ever came out that
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Cordelia Hasenbach had given such an order, the Grand Alliance might
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very well splinter. The First Prince, Rozala thought, had just handed
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her a knife to put to her throat in years to come. The Princess of
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Aequitan would never like the cold-eyed woman ruling over Procer, she
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knew that. There was too much bad blood.
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Yet there were times where she could not help but admire the other
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woman, in spite of all the rest.
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``I understand, Your Highness,'' the dark-haired princess said.
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``I believe you do, Princess Rozala,'' the First Prince of Procer evenly
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replied. ``Whatever comes, the Principate must survive. Do as you must,
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and know you have the full weight of my authority behind you.''
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The water in the basin rippled and in the heartbeat that followed
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Cordelia Hasenbach's silhouette disappeared, leaving behind only tepid
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liquid. While the First Prince had been within her rights to take her
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leave so abruptly, it surprised Rozala that a woman known so far and
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wide for her diplomatic talents would so carelessly offer discourtesy
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twice on the same night. Then it occurred to her that with the audience
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having come to an end so swiftly she'd never had opportunity to bring up
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the petitions passed on to her. The dark-haired Arlesite turned to
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Arnaud Brogloise, who still stood in silence. His dark eyes had not
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ceased studying either of the princesses as they spoke, though at least
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he'd not bothered to put on the pretence of being a blustering fool
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again. In Cleves the middle-aged former prince had put on some muscle,
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adding it to his pudgy frame, but Rozala had never found him to have
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much of a presence -- on occasion a sort of buffoonish swagger, but
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nothing to give her pause. Yet now his girth seemed less laughable, his
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ruddy face no longer a fool's visage, and the Princess of Aequitan
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realized odds were he was physically stronger than he. It was somewhat
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unsettling to know that, now that she'd seen Arnaud Brogloise open the
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throat of royalty without batting an eye.
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``You are still her envoy, I take it,'' Princess Rozala said.
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She was princess and he not: no longer was courtesy owed.
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``I am to begin negotiations with the Queen of Callow when she
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returns,'' the older man acknowledged. ``I've already spoken with her
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right hand, to interesting result.''
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``Lady Dartwick?'' Rozala asked, surprised.
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``Hakram Deadhand, the Adjutant,'' the Alamans corrected. ``He lacks
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formal title save for his Damnation, but wields the influence
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nonetheless.''
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An orc, holding power in Callow? It had been one thing when the
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Wasteland still held sway over these lands, but it seemed rather odd
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that one of that land's ancient enemies would have such authority within
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its borders now.
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``And what did the Deadhand have to say?'' the Princess of Aequitan
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asked.
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``A great deal, on the subject of accords,'' Arnaud replied, lips
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strangely quirking. ``I have a great deal of reading ahead of me.''
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``More than you believe,'' Rozala said. ``I have petitions to pass on to
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the First Prince. As you've demonstrated a knack for reaching her, they
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will be placed in your hands. Delaying would be ill-advised, Arnaud.''
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The man let out a breath that straddled the line between a sigh and a
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chuckle.
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``You have something to say?'' the princess flatly said.
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``I would not speak out of turn, Your Grace,'' he said. ``Yet I wonder
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-- these petitions, would they be the designated succession for the
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abdications of the night?''
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They were, though Rozala did not immediately say so. Thought it was
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little more than a formality, save if accusations of treason and other
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great crimes were to be made, the designated succession for a
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principality of Procer was to be submitted to the Highest Assembly.
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There'd only been a handful of refusals throughout the entire history of
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Procer, usually when villainy or civil war had split the realm asunder.
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Why would such a matter amuse Arnaud? Certainly the amount of crowns to
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be approved was unusually high, perhaps even without precedent,
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but\ldots{} The Princess of Aequitan's blood ran cold.
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``Send for the wizards, Brogloise,'' she said. ``I will put the matter
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to the First Prince myself.''
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``I will change nothing,'' he replied. ``An extraordinary session of the
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Highest Assembly was called. In times of troubles the wisdom of our
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predecessors is once again needed, and so the Guillermont Decree has
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been restored.''
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It took a moment for Rozala to place it. Not the name of Guillermont,
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for that she could hardly ignore: it was the name of royal house that
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had ruled Aequitan before the Malanzas rose to prominence and set them
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aside. The decree in particular, though, came from the First Princess
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Éloïse Guillermont -- best known for ending the Principate's occupation
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of Callow. Before she'd been First Prince she'd been a sitter of the
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Highest Assembly, and her election to the office of First Princess had
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been\ldots{} contentious. The politics of the time had been complicated,
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as they often were in Procer -- Guillermont had been the leader of a
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bloc among the Assembly that held no lands in Callow and so considered
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the taxes levied to keep armies standing there an utter waste -- but the
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broad lines had been that Procer in those days had been split between
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the royalty that wished withdrawal and those that wished to tighten
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Procer's grip. Princess Éloïse had risen to power by seizing an
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opportunity after Callowan rebels had slain five princes in their beds
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in Laure, gathering her allies in the Assembly and passing her eponymous
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decree before succession could be arranged. It was an obscure procedural
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measure that specified no \emph{assermenté} -- that pretentious Alamans
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term for proxy -- could be used to present one's name for confirmation
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of succession. The would-be ruler had to attend in person. In practice,
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that'd meant that the designated heirs and heiresses of the slain royals
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had been forced to leave their seats in the Assembly empty for more than
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a year as they remained in Callow trying to keep their holdings from
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collapsing. Those empty seats had allowed the Princess of Aequitan to
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swing the balance of votes in her favour by enough of a margin she was
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elected First Princess and ordered the withdrawal from Callow, changing
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the path of history.
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Yet that had been a mere procedural trick, one that First Princess
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Éloïse herself had been easily persuaded into rescinding when she'd
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ascended to the office. What Rozala was beginning to piece together was
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a different beast entirely. Seven crowns had been abdicated, this night.
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That meant that almost a third of the Highest Assembly, which held
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twenty-four seats, had been silenced: proxies could not vote when there
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was no ruling prince or princess stood behind them, for they were the
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voice of that ruler and had no formal decisional power of their own.
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That left seventeen votes, then, for the foreseeable futures. The
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Lycaonese principalities made four. Salia itself, the demesne of the
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First Prince, held a vote as well. Prince Frederic of Brus and
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Hasenbach's other two foremost loyalists in Salamans and Tenerife were
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well known to have instructed their \emph{assermentés} to follow
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Hasenbach in all things, which meant eight votes. Prince Beatrice of
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Hainaut's lands were being defended by Lycaonese armies, which likely
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made for nine and with Prince Gaspard in Cleves being heavily dependent
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on southern supplies for his defending armies that made ten out of
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seventeen. A clear majority that would vote however Cordelia Hasenbach
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wanted it to. And it would not be broken in the coming months, for the
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First Prince would be able to put her chosen candidates on the abdicated
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|
thrones long before any possible designated heir presented themselves in
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Salia. After all, the only mages who knew the secrets of scrying in
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Iserre were in Hasenbach's service, and no rider could ride quicker than
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sorcery.
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``She has made herself the queen of Procer,'' Rozala croaked, ``in
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everything but name.''
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``On doom's approach,'' Arnaud Brogloise said, ``law must fall silent.''
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|
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``And you would enable this?'' Princess Rozala hissed. ``You were a
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prince, Arnaud. You understand what is at stake: the Assembly can be
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|
led, but it must never be \emph{commanded}. That way lies tyranny.''
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|
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|
``Oh, we'll survive a spot of tyranny,'' he replied. ``Yet we might not
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|
survive Keter without it.''
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|
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|
``What did she give, to make of you such a loyal hound?'' the Princess
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|
of Aequitan hissed. ``What manner of ugly bargain was made?''
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|
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|
``She let her kin die and her home burn, to better our chances of
|
|
victory,'' Arnaud said. ``Loyalty is a child's sentiment, Your Grace. I
|
|
heed Her Highness's decrees because she had proved willing to sacrifice
|
|
whatever is necessary for Procer to survive.''
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|
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|
The scathing reply on the tip of Rozala's tongue had to be swallowed,
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|
for another entered the pavilion. It was, the princess saw, one of her
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|
own officers.
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|
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|
``Captain Matias?'' she asked, tone harsh.
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|
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|
``Your Grace,'' the soldier said, bowing. ``Louis Rohanon has sent word:
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|
the armies of the Dominion are gathering.''
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|
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|
Cursing, Princess Rozala Malanza thought, would not help in the
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|
slightest. Yet she still blasphemed several times, before sending for
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|
enough soldiers to give those damned Levantine madmen pause before they
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|
got everyone killed.
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