458 lines
20 KiB
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458 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-63-draft}{%
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\section{Chapter 63: Draft}\label{chapter-63-draft}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Rebel prisoners, Black Knight? Ah, you must mean the fresh orc
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rations.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Foul I, the Frugal
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\end{quote}
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Under moonlight Ivah of the Losara sat at my side, wielding ink and
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parchment, and made record of oaths.
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We begun with the Zoitsa, for they were the reason of my coming as well
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as the first attempt to make old stones into a fledgling temple. I had
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given this crucible of acclamation the shape of their singing-rites, and
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that aspect they embraced with relish. It was not merely oaths that were
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offered to the many waiting ears of the Zoitsa Sigil but verses crafted
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with deft hands and heady cadence. The first pledges were mundane,
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enemies that would be defeated and protections that would be ensured.
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One ispe then hazarded the pledge of sharing the sigil's Night with all
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Zoitsa, and though the oath was met with shocked and disapproving
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silence, the words had broken the levee. It was not merely prudent, if
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well-spoken, promises that were made but instead ambitions unveiled. A
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jawor spoke of raising a city where no pale light would ever reach for
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the Zoitsa to live in, another of arming even every dzulu with coats of
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steel and shining blades. The rylleh, older hand and the subtler games
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of sigils, let others come forward to gauge the sigil's wants before
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speaking their own oaths.
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The same drow that'd not presumed to speak to me before now swore to
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swell the ranks of the Zoitsa so it would become one of the great
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sigils, while the ambitious one who'd invited me to pass judgement
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instead swore that the Night of every Zoitsa to die in the wars would be
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passed to a dzulu proving themselves worthy. I felt through the Night
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the last oath earned the most approval, at least until the fourth
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rylleh, the one who had not even stood forward to lay claim to the sigil
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until now, spoke its own pledge-
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\emph{``host of empire will we be,}
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\emph{servants first to right}
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\emph{if Zoitsa bend the knee}
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\emph{let it be only to Night''}
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The Night thrummed with approval, and not only from those drow who bore
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the colours of the Zoitsa. Morovoy was the name of the rylleh that had
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made the oath, and it had been clever in its shaping. The verses of it
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made it clear that for its span of nine years it would have the sigil
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suborn its own ambitions to the needs of the reborn Empire Ever Dark,
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serving as army and obeying the orders of leaders appointed by the
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Night. The other Firstborn had sought to earn acclaim through pretty
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ambitions and heady boasts, but Morovoy's pledge instead harkened back
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to the old dream: a nation of drow, proud and mighty under darkened sky.
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It was opening the door to any who wanted to bare blade for that
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purpose, at least for a span of nine years, and in offering such
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selfless oath was making all the pledges of those that'd spoken before
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it seem\ldots{} base. Almost petty. When tokens were set down to match
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oaths, Morovoy earned more than half those cast and more than double of
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its closest rival. I sent Ivah to bestow the Night I had shaped into a
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sigil, after that chosen oath was written down, and so the first
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crucible of the nigh was passed.
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The hurdle, after that, was that those already holding sigils need take
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oaths of their own. It'd taken hours to gather fifty thousand drown and
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even longer to clear room for them all to stand, so I'd had time to do
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more than ponder the shape of the reformation I wanted to offer. I'd
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made arrangements as well, quietly reaching out to those in the Southern
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Expedition that were most beholden to me. It was why the Losara had not
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stirred, when I set them apart from the rest of the kind and charged
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them to never rise too high nor fall too low. It was why though many of
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the sigil-holders were taken by surprise by the changing tides, not all
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were. In the silence that followed the ascension of Morovoy, Mighty
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Jindrich strode forward. The same hard-headed, choleric warrior that
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Rumena and I had taken to using as a battering ram whenever we needed
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something dead or broken. It was feckless and brutal, though prone to
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forgiving those that amused it. Yet its faith in Sve Noc was deep and
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militant, and it thought nothing of making oath if it was the will of
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the Night. And so Mighty Jindrich stood before tens of thousands of its
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kind, white-toothed and red-handed, and it sang a pledge-
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\emph{``to be the point of the spear}
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\emph{ever furthest from the rear;}
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\emph{to battle under veil of night}
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\emph{and the glare of palest light;}
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\emph{hear me: nine years' spread}
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\emph{a hundred victories tread!''}
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I'd expected the Jindrich Sigil to flinch at the pledge, of fighting as
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the vanguard wherever fight was to be found and to forge a hundred
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victories in nine years, but that was not what I felt from them. Oh, far
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form it. They were burning with the kind of hard pride that would have
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any people but the Firstborn howling. In the Jindrich, their faces
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painted azure and white with the jagged fang-like wings of their
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sigil-symbol, I found boiling blood and a thirst for blood. The took
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after their sigil-holder, and other drow listened to such an oath with
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envy -- oh, some would leave the sigil, but there would be twice as many
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petitioning for entry. One after another, the sigil-holders who had once
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been of my Peerage followed suit. Mighty Soln's pledge to found a cabal
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with any other sigil willing to help raise another Tvarigu in the heart
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of the Burning Lands had the crowd rippling in approval and a few feet
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stomping down, but when after it finished speaking Rumena stepped up
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fifty thousand drow went still as statues. The old drow laughed, softly,
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and offered the trace of a bow at the crows on my shoulder. It spoke
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simply, cadenced but with an implacability that was beyond boast-
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``\emph{before nine years have passed,}
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\emph{Keter's gates will lie broken}
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\emph{as trembles Death's holdfast.}''
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I breathed out sharply at the oath the general had just made. A
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heartbeat passed and the sheer wave of fervour that raged through the
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Night had me leaning against my staff for support. Drow raised their
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voices in an ululating cry, honouring the old monster who'd promised it
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would lead any following it to smash down the gates of the Crown of the
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Dead. The ancient creature closed its eyes, breathed the cool air of
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Procer's winter night, and smiled the smile of one who would cast their
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wroth against even gods. And still Ivah wrote, ink on parchment, for the
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Losara would keep records so long as there were records to be kept. I
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only left the Firstborn two hours before dawn, having granted delay to
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those few sigil-holders who had no oath yet to pledge, but that number
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was few. Before dawn my Lord of Silent Steps would have begun
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transcribing its records to a book whose pages would be the one of the
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greatest things I had ever made.
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Whether it would be a great triumph or disaster, only time would tell.
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---
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Hakram and I found our way back through the dark, passing legionaries on
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watch and the odd still-lit tent, but it was a surprise to find that my
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own was lit up with sprites and magelights. My feet slowed as I heard
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laughter from inside, glimpsing two silhouettes -- one on a bed, the
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other seated by its side. A man and woman, I thought, and though the
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words were indistinct Indrani's voice was a familiar drawl.
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``I can hear what they're saying,'' Adjutant murmured, the offer
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implicit.
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I'd be able to as well, if I drew on the Night. Instead I breathed out
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slowly and shook my head.
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``Leave them to it,'' I said.
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The orc's eyes moved to me, unreadable.
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``They have their own matters to settle,'' I said. ``And if I'm
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there\ldots{}''
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``The war follows you,'' Hakram completed, clicking his fangs.
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I shrugged, affecting nonchalance, though I held out little hope so
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shallow a deception would not be seen through by my Adjutant.
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``Hells, Hakram,'' I said, ``I might as well \emph{be} the war, to those
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two. No, let them have a night without red on the horizon and talk of
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plans.''
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``It doesn't have to be that way,'' he gently told me.
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I thought of Vivienne, scared she would be cast out and left out in the
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wilds, and the way I'd used that fear to bring her a little closer to
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the woman I needed her to be. Not lightly, not without qualms, not for
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selfish reasons. But I'd still done it.
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``It does,'' I disagreed.
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There might come a day where that was no longer the case, but until the
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continent no longer teetered on the brink then the queen's needs were
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more important than the woman's wants. I clapped Hakram's shoulder, and
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together we went to find somewhere else for me to sleep.
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---
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I woke up with Morning Bell, still tired but knowing there was too much
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on my plate to be able to justify sleeping any longer. Adjutant, already
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awake, passed along that both Masego and Indrani were still sleeping in
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so instead I broke fast with Juniper and Vivienne. The Hellhound had
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always been -- rather despicably so, in my opinion -- a morning person
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so while cheer was no more in the cards than usual she was still
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noticeably more animated than either myself or Vivienne. Who, I'd noted
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over the years, had never really gotten used to staying awake most of
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the day. Neither thieving nor heroics were always work to be done under
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the sun, at least not in an occupied Callow. So while Vivienne and I
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blearily drank our morning brews and poked at porridge, Juniper
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sprinkled bits of jerky into hers and dug in with relish as she began
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expounding on this Proceran book she'd found. Some history of the First
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League War penned by a prince of Lyonis she'd found a Lower Miezan
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translation of. The title -- one of those long, elaborate ones highborn
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Proceran scholars were so fond of -- she spoke scathingly of, but
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apparently it was a fascinating look at the events and much less drily
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written than most histories. Vivienne leaned towards me as the Hellhound
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told us all about how Helikean \emph{kataphraktoi} had actually begun as
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a tradition before Theodosius, contrary to popular belief.
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``This is torture,'' the heiress-designate to Callow murmured.
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``Just don't mention the Commentaries,'' I whispered back. ``It'd be
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like tossing meat at a wolf.''
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Usually it only got this way when we drank, though, so I was somewhat
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surprised. By now Aisha should have\ldots{} \emph{Ah}, I thought,
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looking at the empty seat where Staff Tribune Aisha Bishara would
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usually be seated. \emph{There's your trouble.} The living and breathing
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person that served as the better part of Juniper's social graces was
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missing, and so we were being subjected to the full Hellhound treatment.
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``Fascinating,'' I lied, just after a sentence. ``Where's Aisha, by the
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way?''
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``Liaising with the Legions-in-Exile,'' Juniper growled. ``We're taking
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full stock of the armies down to company size so we can adjust the
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doctrine for whatever battles are ahead.''
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Ah, and there was no one else in the Hellhound's general staff that'd
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get that done nearly as quickly or neatly as Aisha so there she went.
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She'd probably been absent form general staff meetings too, which would
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only make the Hellhound grumpier.
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``I'm sure it'll be done soon,'' I said.
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``It'd help if you could tell us where winter quarters will be,'' the
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orc bluntly said.
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``I'll see if I can get that settled today,'' I sighed, then sipped at
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my tea.
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The warmth of it seeped into me, and I glanced at the other Callowan at
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the table. As much out of need as out of mercy, I threw Vivienne a bone.
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``I'll need you to send a messenger to Arnaud Brogloise,'' I said.
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``Today will be convenient for the audience he requested. I'll be
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expecting you at that table, Lady Dartwick.''
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She nodded.
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``And the Dominion?'' she asked.
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I glanced at Juniper.
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``We're overdue a fireside evening, the lot of us,'' I said. ``I expect
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at some point during that evening the Pilgrim will swing by for a chat,
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if he's ready to talk.''
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``Tonight?'' the Hellhound asked. ``We've all got-''
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``Competent subordinates,'' I interrupted. ``We can afford a few hours
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by a fire, Juniper. If you believe your staff so incompetent that if you
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have a drink they'll be lost-''
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``I never said that,'' the Hellhound bristled.
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``Good,'' I smiled, ``then you can bring the aragh.''
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I hadn't had a taste of that since becoming mortal again and I was
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curious if my recollections from the old days were still accurate.
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``You baited me,'' Juniper growled.
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``Can't win them all, Marshal,'' I grinned, and toasted her with my
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steaming mug.
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Vivienne shot me an amused look before making her retreat, and a wise
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woman she was. This time, when Juniper began to talk about the logistics
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of the Army of Callow, the glint in her eye made it very clear the
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torture was entirely on purpose.
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---
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It was not until Noon Bell that I met with Arnaud Brogloise,
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plenipotentiary envoy for the First Prince of Procer. I'd been ready for
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talks earlier, but the other side had not. Apparently the Grand
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Alliance's camp was like an anthill that'd been just gotten a good kick
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now that scrying was restored to Iserre and Hasenbach's Order of the Red
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Lion could arrange talks with Salia. Not just Salia, though, likely most
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of the Alliance's signatories. No doubt the Blood wanted to speak with
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Levante and their Holy Seljun, if only to gain a veneer of lawfulness
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for whatever they'd get up to regardless of what their figurehead ruler
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wanted. Given the number of highborn of all stripes who'd want access to
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scrying and what must be a highly limited amount of mages that could use
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such sorcery -- as well as spell formulas a generation behind the
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Empire's, which meant the further two-way scrying went the more relays
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would be required and the more prone to failure the magic would be -- I
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wouldn't be surprised if they were working their practitioners to the
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edge of burning out. Still, at least the development meant I could rely
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on the former Prince of Cantal having freshly spoken with Hasenbach.
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This was the closest I'd get to speaking directly with the First Prince
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before getting to Salia, I suspected.
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This was not a formal negotiation, only a private audience, so I'd seen
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no need to overburden this with ceremony and entourages. On the side of
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the oaken table I'd claimed Hakram sat at my right and Vivienne at my
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left, while Arnaud Brogloise had brought with him only a pale redheaded
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scribe whose accessories seemed to indicate was meant to serve as both
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note-keeper and scholarly expert. The ink and quill made the first
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plain, while the veritable pile of tomes and scrolls he'd brought in
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with a legionary's help implied the second. I knew from experience that
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someone well-learned in where the writing you were looking for tended to
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shave hours off of discussions such as these, so I rather appreciated
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the expertise the Alamans had brought with him.
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``Your Majesty,'' Arnaud Brogloise greeted me. ``Lady Dartwick, Lord
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Adjutant.''
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I craned my neck back.
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``I'm unfamiliar with the proper address for a plenipotentiary envoy,''
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I admitted.
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``It is `lord envoy', though it is only a courtesy title,'' the
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middle-aged replied, smiling amicably. ``Yet if I may be bold?''
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My brow rose and I nodded permission.
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``It is my understanding that you are not partial to formalities,''
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Brogloise said. ``We could dispense with them, if you would allow it,
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and you could simply call me Arnaud.''
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I smiled back.
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``Did you know that I could hear heartbeats, back when I was Sovereign
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of Moonless Nights?'' I mildly said. ``If I pricked my ear, I could ever
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hear blood flowing in someone's veins. Smell their fear and anger.''
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His face expressed only confusion. He really was, I thought, one of the
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finest actors I'd ever seen. The Alamans might even be better at it than
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Akua, which was impressive in all the worst ways.
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``I'm aware I'll find about as much genuine emotion at the heart of you
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than I would in door hinge, my lord envoy,'' I said. ``So spare us both
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the affability.''
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The ruddy face slackened, moving towards blankness though not quite
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reaching it. To be entirely vacant would have been an effort as well,
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while this was simply the release of a pretence.
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``If you'd prefer, Your Majesty,'' he calmly said. ``Shall we attend the
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matters at hand?''
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``If you would,'' I agreed.
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``Her Most Serene Highness has, after consideration, decided to honour
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the Grey Pilgrim's non-binding promise of a peace conference,''
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Brogloise stated.
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\emph{How magnanimous of her}, I drily thought. I'd grown more
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diplomatic in my old age, so I refrained from rolling my eyes. Hasenbach
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might not be happy about Tariq agreeing in her name to anything, but she
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needed the truce and conference badly. Refusing to honour the Pilgrim's
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agreement with the Tyrant would have been cutting off her nose to spite
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her face, considering it'd set the League back on the warpath and
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mortally offend the Dominion.
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``And the guarantee of truce until the conference has ended?'' Vivienne
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asked.
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``Will be honoured in full,'' the Alamans agreed.
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``Including the Legions-in-Exile?'' Hakram asked.
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``So long as the Queen of Callow formally agrees to take responsibility
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for their actions while they remain on Proceran soil,'' Brogloise said.
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Mhm. So, Cordelia had recognized that at this point she didn't have the
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strength or influence to push the issue when it came to the Exile
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Legions. Making them my problem was a way to deal with it, since she
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knew by now I needed the goodwill of the Grand Alliance for the Accords
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and letting the Praesi loose anywhere in Procer was a good way to throw
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away every inch of progress I'd made there. Still, I'd take it.
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``Agreed,'' I said.
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The redhead scribe's quill scratched against parchment.
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``However,'' the former prince said, ``the Highest Assembly formally
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requests that the escaped prisoner of war Amadeus of the Green Stretch
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be turned over for trial.''
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``The Highest Assembly has been heard,'' I mildly said. ``Though I will
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caution that considering he never surrendered to the Principate and was
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tortured while in custody, by Callowan law you have no grounds for such
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a request.''
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``Indeed, this has been acknowledged,'' Arnaud Brogloise said, to my
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surprise.
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That, I thought, had been much too easy considering how despised Black
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was in these parts. Was Cordelia sparing him as a favour to me so she
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could call that favour in elsewhere? Shit, if it came to that I might
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actually have to agree.
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``However, as a Named military commander who carried out plans of mass
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murder of civilians he would be considered in \emph{egregious} breach of
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the Liesse Accords,'' the former prince said.
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Ah, I thought. And there it was.
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``Procer has not signed the Liesse Accords,'' I said.
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``It will, if you agree to apply them to the Black Knight,'' Arnaud
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Brogloise plainly said.
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The bluntness of it jolted me. He was actually serious, I realized, and
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he wasn't just speaking hot air: the powers Cordelia had invested in him
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meant he could sign agreements in her name in a legally binding manner.
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``It would be selective application of the articles, unless you also
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intend to pursue the trial of the Grey Pilgrim for the massacre of a
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port town and an entire half-legion of Praesi legionaries,'' Vivienne
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noted. ``Or of the Queen of Callow for the particulars of the Battle of
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the Camps.''
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``Guarantees can be made that this will not be the case,'' the envoy
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said.
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``You're missing the point,'' I flatly said. ``If the Accords are used
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from the very moment they're signed as a tool to pursue enmities,
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they'll not last the decade.''
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Hakram, at my right, was looking intently at our Alamans friend. He'd
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noticed something, then.
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``A matter to be discussed in more detail at a later date, then,''
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Brogloise said. ``The First Prince is offering to host the conference in
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Salia, Your Majesty, and seeks your opinion on the matter.''
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Adjutant moved a fraction, and so I stilled my tongue. I inclined my
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head towards him without looking.
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``In the eventuality this is agreed on, where does the First Prince
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suggest the Army of Callow and the Legions-in-Exile march on?'' Hakram
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asked.
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``Escort would be allowed up to four thousand for every ruler attending
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the conference,'' the envoy replied. ``Four hundred into the city
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itself.''
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``And the armies themselves?'' I asked.
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Arnaud Brogloise glanced at his scribe, who bowed at him then myself
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before rising to snatch a half-dozen scrolls from the pile. Maps, I
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realized, reading the letters on the seals.
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``In this matter,'' the former Prince of Cantal said, ``Her Most Serene
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Highness is willing to entertain your proposals.''
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I grinned. I'd been a while since I last had a good haggle, I mused, so
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this ought to get interesting.
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