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402 lines
20 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-58-prolong}{%
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\section{Chapter 58: Prolong}\label{chapter-58-prolong}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``All are free, or none. Ye of this land, suffer no compromise in
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this.''}
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-- Inscription on the founding stele of Bellerophon
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\end{quote}
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My heart skipped a beat. Certainly, it was no deep secret that I had
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bound Akua Sahelian to the collar of the Mantle of Woe and there would
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be some who suspected the true nature of the `Advisor Kivule'. Still,
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none I'd not brought into the secret had ever spoken of it until now
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save for Kairos Theodosian. And the Tyrant could have bargained for that
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knowledge with the Dead King, who knew all of my deeds that Masego had
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known of, or even through the use of whatever aspect allowed him to be
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so sharply perceptive of the wants of others. Black, though? If he knew
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now it was either because officers of the Legions-in-Exile both knew and
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had passed it along since he woke, or because it'd been known to him
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before he was captured. Or maybe, I reluctantly thought, he'd just known
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me well enough from the start to tell where that story was headed.
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``Flowery language, that was,'' I carefully said. ``Perhaps a little
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lacking in precision.''
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His face had grown no easier to read, for all the purported insouciance
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he'd been carrying himself with since he woke.
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``Use them,'' Black said. ``Our madmen, our warlocks and sorcerers. Give
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them laws, give them coin and great undertakings to embrace. Else they
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find all these on their own.''
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I calmed, the slightest bit. It was still no small thing, he was
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speaking of -- Cardinal as neutral grounds for the Accords as well as
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the seat of the legion that'd enforce them by steel if need be would
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already be costly, but to make it a centre of sorcery as well? I was no
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great scholar of sorcery, but I'd had a close looks at the deep pockets
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required for the sort of research that Masego and his father had
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considered to be leading-edge. The costs to both found and fund a mage's
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school would be daunting, to say the last. He wasn't wrong about the
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virtues of keeping Praesi mages occupied, though, especially those who
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would have before then spent much of their years learning the
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intricacies of diabolism. The notion of even a hundred furious highborn
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Wasteland warlocks out in the world with little left to lose was the
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sort of thing disasters were made of. And quite possible Named, though
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I'd always known that dropping this large a stone in the pond would
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cause ripples. I'd counted on it, in truth. If instead of ruinous wars
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between Good and Evil I could instead make the crux of the conflict
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strife between Named that heeded their laws and did not? Then it became
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a war of Names, not nations, and Calernia avoided another coming of
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Akua's Folly.
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``Did you perhaps believe I meant the shade of Akua Sahelian?'' the
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green-eyed man casually asked, smile sudden and sharp.
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His sense of humour, it seemed, had not been gentled by the loss of his
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Name. I supposed that'd been a little too much to hope for.
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``Oh, it would please some of High Lords to have her placed in position
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of importance,'' he conceded. ``Yet when it comes to the Doom of Liesse,
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my advice will always remain the same: no matter how clever you believe
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your scheme to be, it isn't. Kill her now, in full and beyond anyone's
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mending.''
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``I have a purpose for her,'' I said.
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``And she for you, Catherine,'' he chided. ``It would hardly do to
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forget that. If a single victory was all it took to bind the highborn to
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one's cause, the Tower would not change rulers the way other lands
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change seasons.''
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``I know that,'' I said, a tad sharply. ``There's a lot you don't know,
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Black. \emph{Couldn't} know, because after I told you to get your shit
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together you instead decided to take a walk through the heartlands of
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Procer with a torch in hand.''
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``A calculated measure meant to ensure the Principate could not continue
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waging war as it had,'' he said. ``The morality of it I've no intention
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of debating, though I'll say that if the First Prince of Procer intends
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to use massed levies to fight wars then she marked her peasantry as a
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war asset by her own hand.''
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``You condemned hundreds of thousands to a slow death by starvation,'' I
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flatly said. ``Not innocents, perhaps, not all of them. But certainly
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non-combatants. There are manners in which waging war is acceptable,
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Black, and you used to know them. You didn't allow sacks during the
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Conquest, or any of the other myriad atrocities that followed the old
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Legions like a loyal dog.''
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``I set boundaries appropriate to the manner of outcome I desired,''
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Black calmly replied. ``As I did in the Principate. There can be no
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peace settlement with a crusade, Catherine. They end when one side is no
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longer capable of prosecuting the war. I took the most swift and
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plausible path to that ending.''
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``You also failed,'' I told him. ``Failed hard enough my Marshal had to
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commit Callow's armies to bailing out your own and I had to tangle with
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two of the most potent heroes alive to take back your soul after
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\emph{they'd fucking cut it out}.''
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I would have thought less of him, after, if he'd made the argument that
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the legions under Grem had bled not long before to defend the Red Flower
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Vales and so relief had been owed. It was true, and the debt that lay
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there was one of the reasons I'd not entire lost my temper at Juniper's
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adventurous western campaign. But it would have been, implicitly, an
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admission he'd expected someone to step in and save him. Coming from the
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man who'd taught me to pray at the altar of taking responsibility for
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one's actions, be they righteous or wicked, that would have been\ldots{}
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disappointing.
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``Indeed,'' he frankly admitted. ``I significantly miscalculated in both
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assessing the danger posed by the Grey Pilgrim and the lay of the
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strategies decided by Calernia's great powers. Marching the legions
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north towards the Stairway would have been the correct decision, in
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retrospective. Klaus Papenheim would have followed us and so arrived to
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bolster the defence of Hainaut in time to avoid losing the shores. The
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losses would still have been bloody for both him and Malanza's hosts,
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still leaving the First Prince in a vulnerable position but without
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having committed either my legions or your Army of Callow to the
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field.''
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The assessment was spoken clearly and concisely, like some chirurgeon
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slicing open the cadaver of a mistake one word at a time. At least he
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wasn't shying away from admitting he could blunder. And my own hands
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were not clean as driven snow here. Malicia might not have told him of
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her attempted dealings with Keter, but neither had I, so he'd made his
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decisions blind. And though the famine he'd wrought on the Principate
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was both a lasting shame and a lasting complication, it would have been
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dishonest to pretend I'd not also benefited from it. And from someone
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else doing it, too, so that my hands would not be stained by the deed.
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``Procer wouldn't be so willing to bargain with me now if you hadn't
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first broken their wealthiest and most fertile territories,'' I
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admitted. ``And I've reason to believe that the Grey Pilgrim went after
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you in particular to secure a hold on me.''
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He cocked his head to the side, sharp-boned face gone pensive.
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``Not a hostage,'' he decided. ``That would have carried\ldots{}
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considerable risks. Forcing a confrontation on his own terms, then.''
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I looked at him then, the mind at work behind the pale green eyes, and
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still saw the bones of the man who'd become the Carrion Lord. He'd lost
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a mould of power, when he'd lost his Name, but the substance of what
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made Amadeus of the Green Stretch dangerous remained. A fresh mould
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might yet be found, I thought, and if it was what came of it would not
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be gentle. His eyes finally flicked to staff in my hand.
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``Pattern of three,'' he deduced.
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I dipped my head, an acknowledgement that at least I suspected as much.
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``Congratulations are in order, then,'' Black said, to my surprise.
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``You have been marked the equal of one whose influence spans more than
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half of Calernia.''
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His lips twitched, but I'd learned to tell the difference between
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mockery and amusement with those and this was of the latter.
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``I have higher ambitions still,'' I admitted.
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``Indeed,'' he said. ``You are aware that there are some who will say
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the council you propose will be the true ruler of Calernia from the
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shadows. Especially if your proposed enforced succeed at attracting
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Named as well as funding a standing army.''
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``It's not going to be a campaign army like Juniper and Grem command,''
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I felt compelled to say. ``It'll be meant for battles and hitting
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cornered Names who gathered people to their banner. For large-scale
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warfare we'd call on the signatories.''
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``That will always be one of the weaknesses of your Accords,'' Black
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warned. ``You saw firsthand the shortcomings of a ruling council in
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Laure: voting blocks forming and personal interests coming to command
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the debates is inevitable. Forming a diplomatic council including an
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elected hero and villain to settle disputes will only aid so much, if
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every signatory's designated representative fights for their country's
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interests alone. Outside enmities and alliances will interfere with the
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diplomatic mechanisms functioning as intended.''
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``That's one of the reasons in need Praes to sign on and claim a seat,''
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I admitted. ``I'm not sure the League will sign on -- certainly not as
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long as the Hierarch lives, however long that'll last -- so without the
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Empire the signatories are essentially the Grand Alliance, Callow and
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the drow. It'll be too imbalanced.''
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``It is unlikely the Golden Bloom will deign to participate in such a
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treaty,'' he agreed. ``Or the Titanomachy, for that matter.''
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Which meant Levant and Ashur, historically close allies since the
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Dominion's founding, and Procer with all its wealth and influence
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radiating outwards. Callow and the Empire Ever Dark, as nations on the
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outskirts who must deal with Procer to have any significant trade
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presence, would inevitably end up on the outskirts of the Accords'
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council as well. If the Empire was a signatory, the game changed. Ashur
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would have commercial interests on the Praesi coast, and the Wasteland
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would be closely aligned with Callow's own interests as it would be its
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effective granary and strongest trade partner. If the west pulled
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together so would the east, and that'd prevent any bloc from commanding
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a strong majority in council. Which, considering that I'd set in law
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that such a council could call on signatories for war against a nation
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in breach of the Accords, was essential if I wanted them to actually
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function as intended. If the council in Cardinal became a way for an
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alliance of nations to force its influence at the expense of others, the
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Liesse Accords would inevitably collapse.
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``A roving band of Named enforcing your laws backed by an army will earn
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resistance in and of itself,'' Back said. ``Yet combined with your
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insistence that Named cannot rule or own property of more than a
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specific total worth -- which should be higher in general, by my
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reckoning, but significantly stricter on landholding in particular -- it
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may very well be taken as the villain Catherine Foundling attempting to
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claim rulership of Calernia from behind a veil of shared laws.''
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``I won't have any particular authority under the Accords,'' I pointed
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out. ``In Cardinal itself yes, but-``
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``But the Woe makes up a significant portion of living villains, you are
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a ruling queen with great resources at your disposal and undeniably the
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most famous Named of your generation,'' he calmly interrupted. ``It is
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near a certainty you will have a seat on that council as the
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representative for Below. That will be enough for rumours.''
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``Fine,'' I said. ``But on the other side of the table, odds are it'll
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be the Peregrine speaking for Above. The man commands a \emph{lot} of
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trust in the west, Black.''
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A moment passed.
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``It has a story's shape,'' he conceded, which was praise and
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condemnation both. ``That does not, however, change the truth that you
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would be risking war every time you tried to depose a popular ruler
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having come into a Name.''
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``It's necessary to avoid the worst Named can deal out,'' I insisted.
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``Sure, a Good King will usually improve things more than not. And a
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powerful Dread Empress binds Praes together for at least part of her
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reign, allowing for growth. But if they share a border, what would be
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skirmishing between mundane rulers becomes \emph{much} more prone to
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escalation -- and capable of escalating to vicious heights no one else
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could reach.''
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``A Good King being told to abdicate by a council mostly made up of
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foreigners will withdraw from the Accords and bitterly fight against any
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attempt to have its terms enforced upon him,'' Black said. ``The
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Dominion sees its Named as figures of religious reverence, at least
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those from the great lines. Even if the Pilgrim backs you, you'd be
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using to obtain compliance the very trait you seek to eradicate. A tower
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of shallow foundations, that. In Procer you might find agreement, for
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Named do not rule there, but where else?''
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``Named are under influence,'' I said. ``Below or Above's, it doesn't
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matter, the judgement will always be impaired. Sometimes that impairment
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leads to upright deeds but even then it still remains a thinning of
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their ability to make clear-headed choices.''
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``Will you also place law in the Accords forbidding the crowning of a
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drunk or an idiot?'' Amadeus asked. ``These, too, are impairments.''
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``You know that's not the same thing,'' I said.
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``I know you are attempting to dictate who can and cannot rule nations
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that are barely your allies if at all, nations you have not conquered or
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truly defeated, nation on which you are attempting to impose your
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personal belief in the face of centuries of culture speaking to other
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directions. And, most of all, this is directed at nations whose goodwill
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you need very badly for the Liesse Accord to exist as more than ink and
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fantasy,'' he said, tone never rising nor ebbing low. ``You are
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overstepping.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``You know we'd all be better off if we agreed on excluding Named from
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rule,'' I said. ``Gods, even just Praes getting rid of some of its-''
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``Until the Dread Empire itself desires the mending of that wound, no
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amount of treaties will change a thing,'' Black said, tone bland. ``That
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was made plain to me, in knowing and truth. It is not enough to be
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correct in \emph{principle}, Catherine. If you cannot offer a practical
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way to deliver on your beliefs, then they are wind. No one will agree on
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the Cardinal council having right to call signatories to war to depose a
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Named ruler, not even your own people once you've passed on the crown.
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It is best you make your peace with that early and prepare yourself to
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fight more salient battles.''
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He didn't suggest taking the articles out though, I noted. Ah, of course
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he wouldn't. Since in his eyes it'd never been something worth seriously
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attempting, scrapping it became an easy concession in a true
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negotiation. I wasn't convinced, honestly, that he was right. But I
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could at least consider him as a herald of the opposition I would face
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in days to come, and that meant at the very least some parts of this
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would have to be reconsidered. There was no point in making a toothless
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law, but one with too much bite might be even worse considering most of
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the signatories would have been recently at war with each other to one
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extent or another.
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``Such as?'' I asked.
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``Your academy,'' he said. ``True, without it the Accords die with you.
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If your rules of engagement are not carved into a pattern all must heed,
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they will fade the moment the strength behind them does. Yet you must
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address the inherent difficulties in gathering \emph{Named} and forcing
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lessons and laws upon them.''
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``I'm not making a War College, Black,'' I said. ``It won't be classes
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and lectures for both a fourteen-year-old Squire and a grizzled
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Unconquered Champion in their late thirties, that's doomed to failure.
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The main purpose of the that academy is to teach the Articles of Strife
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-- acceptable levels of violence against other Named and Nameless -- and
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set out rules of behaviour. I expect most will attend for a few months
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only and wander back out into the world. But they'll be wandering with
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the knowledge that seeding an undead plague in some village's well
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brings Named killers down on their head, that calling an angel down on a
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city will get your throat slit and that city quarantined. I can't
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control a continent's worth of Named, it'd be absurd to even try. But if
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I can teach them rules of engagement and get them to agree that those
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rules should be enforced? Then the Accords have already done half of
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what they were meant to.''
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``Short-sighted,'' Black said. ``Do you not realize the amount of
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influence Cardinal -- and by extension your academy -- will inevitably
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accrue? The Good King. The Dread Empress. The Tyrant of Helike. The Grey
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Pilgrim. What do all these have in commons?''
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``They are or can all be the head of their nation,'' I frowned.
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\emph{Oh}, I thought.
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``The crowns of most of Calernia will spend at least half a year
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studying abroad in Cardinal,'' I said. ``Shit.''
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He'd didn't need to expand on the point any further, my mind was already
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spinning. If I wanted the spending of months in a foreign city to be
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seen as more than an imposition on a sovereign or sovereign-to-be,
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Cardinal needed to provide more than just an education in the
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intricacies of the Accords. That much could be provided by tutors when
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it came down to it, and that meant no one had motivation to fund
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Cardinal's existence -- which meant the weakening of a heart to them,
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and that was a death knoll in the making.
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``Sorcerers,'' I said. ``We'll need every damned one we can get, and any
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grimoire we can get our hands on. Teachers and books as well, of every
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subject and stripe. League histories, Ashuran atlases, Proceran poems.
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It can't just be for Named, can it? It has to be \emph{the} school, so
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that when some angry kid with a sword and growing powers is offered a
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chance to study there it's an opportunity and not a chore. They have to
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\emph{want} to come.''
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``Oh, you'll get more than Named and Named-incipient if you succeed at
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that,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch smiled, thin and bladelike.
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``Gather such fine teachers, such deep knowledge, and you'll find even
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nobles sending their children there. Do you think any tutor in the
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Dominion could match the education you have spoken of? In Callow, in any
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city of the League? Highborn and diplomats and the ambitious seeking to
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become intimates of Named still in their rise: all these will knock at
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your door, demanding a place.''
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``That's\ldots{}'' I hesitated. ``It'll cost a fortune. And you don't
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even know where the city is to be raised.''
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``I am not a fool,'' my father said, sounding amused, ``so I do. You are
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still, deep in your bones, Callowan. You'll have it carved out of the
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Red Flower Vales, putting neutral grounds between yourself and Procer
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while also opening the gate to enriching trade.''
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I wondered how many more people had seen through that. It wasn't like
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it'd be a mistake to do that -- as Queen of Callow I could cede enough
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fields to support the city from my side, and given the way Procer would
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be gaining much from the Accord while losing less than anyone else
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getting an equivalent land grant on the other side of the Whitecaps
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shouldn't be impossible. It was at the centre of Calernia, too the
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crossroads of the west and the east. Still, it would have been a lie to
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say I'd not intended the location of it to be boon for Callow.
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``You'll be making the capital of a new age,'' Black said. ``And so you
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must reassess your negotiating stance accordingly, or see yourself
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outplayed. It will not be your backyard alone, Catherine. You are
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founding the royal court of Calernia itself.''
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And his lips were quirking as he spoke, like the world demanded that
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they turn into a smile regardless of his wants.
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``I need you to see it through,'' I admitted. ``I need you at that
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table, speaking for Praes and signing the Accords. Gods, I need you just
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to have someone I can speak to about these things.''
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Someone who, unlike Hakram and Vivienne, had desires sometimes estranged
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from my own. Who'd look at my schemes and see weaknesses I had not.
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``Help me,'' I asked. ``Help me to \emph{break} the Game of the Gods.''
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He looked away, at the hung parchments that laid out my fool's dream in
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ink and law.
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``A better world, is it?'' he pensively said.
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Pale green eyes narrowed, something cold at the heart of them. Like
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great cogs of steel, made to half yet stuttering back into movement.
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``It can be done,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch said. ``And if nothing
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else, it ought to be an interesting way to spend my twilight years.''
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