427 lines
21 KiB
TeX
427 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-80-descant}{%
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\section{Chapter 80: Descant}\label{chapter-80-descant}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``My dear High Lords, there is nothing to fear. We might be losing
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the war against Callow yet there is an obvious remedy to this: this
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morning, I declared war on Ashur. I will be surrendering unconditionally
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as soon as they acknowledge this, which ought to take care of our
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Callowan troubles.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Irritant I, the Oddly Successful
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\end{quote}
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The scent was cloying, heavy against the roof of my mouth before I even
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stepped into the room.
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The incense was the heaviest of the tastes, but there were subtler
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scents threaded along: sage and cedar, as well as the faint bloom of
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flowers. The burners from which it all came were spread around the room
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haphazardly, tended to by chittering gargoyles, and the glow cast by the
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glass lanterns hanging from the ceiling played shadows along the thick
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trails of scented smoke rising up. Kairos Theodosian lounged on a seat
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that was little more than a large bowl of bronze filled with thick red
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cushions, though as always he'd found a way to have it incrusted with
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jewels and covered with sculpted bas-reliefs. The Tyrant of Helike
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greeted me with an indolently raised hand, his brocaded robes of gold
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and scarlet folded with careful precision so that they would almost hide
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the length of his arm prone to trembling. Though he'd been thin and
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sickly for as long as I'd known him, Kairos' narrow face seemed to have
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shed the last of its softness: his brown curls hung low on a forehead
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whose skin looked pulled taut over bone. His good eye, the brown one,
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moved around lazily as if it could not quite focus on anything. The
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other one, the red of fresh blood and always wetly shining, almost
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seemed to have grown. As if the crimson had grown to devour more of the
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Tyrant's face as the rest of him pulled back.
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``Welcome, friend,'' Kairos Theodosian cheerfully greeted me, throwing
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in an exaggerated wink. ``Welcome to my humble shop. You'll not regret
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visiting, for our prices are princely and our merchandise most
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definitely acquired through at least partially legal means. Probably.''
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The cheerfulness was nothing new, from this one, but for once it did not
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entirely succeed at covering something had grown\ldots{} feverish in the
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villain. I'd thought more than once that the Tyrant's position would
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collapse if he was dealt a grave enough defeat, but now I was wondering
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if perhaps defeat might not cause in him troubles rather more visceral.
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My staff rasped against the wooden floorboard as I limped in, and I
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found a seat awaiting me on my side side of the low table between us.
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Mine was less a nest of cushions and more along the lines of my
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favourite seat, the one I'd had creatively acquired from Arcadia.
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Padded, with heavy armrests. On the low table the sight of a strange
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game being toyed with caught my eye: three bowls filled with differing
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numbers of smooth pebbles had been put down, as well as a handful more
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on the surface of the table itself. Kairos had been moving a few around
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as I entered. The game did feel vaguely familiar to my eye, though it
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clearly wasn't mancala. Not enough seeds or pits for them to be sown in.
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``Tired of shatranj?'' I asked.
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``I grew curious, after reading the treatise,'' Kairos mused. ``It is a
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game meant for three, in truth, but trying my hand at the play was
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interesting regardless. He's a barren little thing, your Adjutant, but
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I'll not deny he is brilliant in his own way.''
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Ah, was that were that was from? I'd seen Hakram fiddling with the game
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once or twice, for it was of his own making, and Robber had once told me
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the orc had been doing so since before he first came to the War College.
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I mostly remembered being vaguely irritated that the pot of stones
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everybody could steal from was called `Callow', accurate as it was to
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the game's implicit metaphor.
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``Tower-raising, isn't it?'' I frowned. ``I didn't know he'd finished
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the treatise, much less made it public.''
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``It has become rather popular at your royal court, I am told,'' the
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Tyrant said. ``And has even come somewhat in fashion as a curiosity in
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Ater.''
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I eased myself into my seat unceremoniously. Amusing as Kairos' petty
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schemes could be on occasion, passing amusements hardly made up for the
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nuisance he was in so many ways. I wouldn't pick a fight with him
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without a good reason, of course: so far he'd not aimed his plots at
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Callow itself, only at my soldiers in Iserre. Yet neither would I forget
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he'd made bargains with the Dead King and the Bard, in full knowledge of
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what they might lead to for this continent.
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``What do you want, Tyrant?'' I asked. ``I haven't got all night.''
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``That's hardly a way to talk to a shopkeeper,'' the ruling king of
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Helike solemnly told me. ``I'd be well within my rights to raise my
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prices for such disrespect.''
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I broke the wax over the bottle in my hand and took a sniff at the
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contents. It did smell like genuine Vale summer wine, to my surprise. A
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swallow confirmed as much.
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``You just called my right hand a barren little thing,'' I said. ``And
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likely meant it, given the curse of truth laid on your tongue. I have
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limited patience for your games, and other business to see to tonight.
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Speak or I'll leave and wash my hands of this.''
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``You're free to go, if that is what you truly wish,'' the Tyrant
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shrugged, red eye pulsing.
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It might be safer to do so, I thought. With no one to speak to and a
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continent of close doors facing him, there were not many ways for the
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Tyrant of Helike to slither his was back into a story that'd keep him
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from sinking into a swamp of his own making. Speaking with the people of
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most influence in Salia might do the trick, though, or at least allow
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him opportunity through talking to cajole the winds of fate back to his
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sail. From that perspective, the best decision here was to rise and
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leave without another word. On the other hand, that also left Kairos
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Theodosian with precious little to lose. Vivienne had warned me he was
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unlikely to have emptied his quiver quite yet, and it could be argued
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that villains were often at their most dangerous just before they were
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defeated. And he'd let slip some of what he was up to, I suspected. Not
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carelessly but instead carefully, like a fisherman baiting a hook. And
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to get his foot back in the game the Tyrant would not hesitate to toss
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me some secrets of worth coming at the expense of his many enemies. Some
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of which were also mine, as it happened.
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I sighed and caught sight of a gargoyle carrying a tray with cups --
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only one which was empty -- and gesture for it to approach. It did and I
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snatched the empty silver cup before holding it out, reaching into the
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Night to fashion a tendril of darkness that poured from the bottle into
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it. More discretely, as my theatrical gesture distracted those in the
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room, a very thin tendril of darkness crept into the filled cup and
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stole a single drop before withdrawing. It didn't look like water,
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instead like some sort of herbal potion, and though tasting it myself
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would tell me little I had people in my service who knew much of
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herbalism and alchemy.
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``I'll buy the wine and the leaf,'' I said. ``So long as it's not
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poisoned, and the price isn't ridiculous.''
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``I never found out how much any of it cost,'' Kairos admitted. ``A
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hundred royals?''
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That was Helike gold coinage, if I remembered correctly. There were
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several currencies floating around the Free Cities, and Helike's was not
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considered to be one of the more reliable.
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``I'll offer you a whatever's in my tunic pockets right and now,'' I
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offered instead. ``As well as one sentence that is more or less a
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compliment.''
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He leaned forward.
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``\emph{Intriguing},'' the Tyrant enthused. ``You have a bargain,
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Catherine Foundling.''
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I surrendered the treasures hidden away in my tunic: a handful of
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half-chewed oats I'd forced Zombie to spit out after catching her
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indulging, a few pinewood matches and a soiled tablecloth from the
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palace I'd used to wipe my mail clean earlier.
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``Your tunic's colour matches the cushions, which makes you look
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significantly less scrawny from a distance,'' I added.
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``It \emph{does}, doesn't it?'' Kairos replied, sounding deeply pleased.
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``That is what I was going for.''
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He gestured for one of the gargoyles to waddle forward and handed it my
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end of the bargain.
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``Feed the oats to Hakram,'' he instructed.
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My brow rose questioningly as the gargoyle whined in protest then
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scampered away after gathering everything up.
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``Hakram is the name of my trusty war steed,'' the Tyrant revealed. ``It
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was a most wonderful gift, Catherine, my thanks. I've taught her to
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bully the gargoyles and it has been most diverting.''
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Oh Gods, he was talking about the goat wasn't he? I'd not expected him
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to actually keep her.
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``It was,'' I hesitated, then valiantly rallied, ``my pleasure?''
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He picked up the cup I'd stolen a drop from and sipped from it after
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dismissing the gargoyle, then leaned back more comfortably into his
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cushions.
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``Would you like to talk about the Dead King?'' Kairos Theodosian
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casually asked.
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``Sure,'' I replied. ``Heard he's up in Keter. Good manners, maybe a
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little heavy on the devouring of all living things. Keeps a good table,
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though.''
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``So I've heard,'' the Tyrant amiably said. ``He also intends to send an
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envoy to the formal talks tomorrow, I'm told.''
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My fingers clenched, and I forced them to loosen before taking a sip of
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wine.
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``He intimated as much in Liesse-Before-Twilight,'' I said. ``Dare I ask
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where you heard it from?''
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``The Dead King,'' Kairos smiled. ``And his envoy, which he intends to
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send to the formal talks tomorrow.''
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``You're hosting the Hidden Horror's diplomats,'' I flatly said.
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``Diplomat, singular,'' the Tyrant corrected. ``Tough you are in essence
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correct. I was prevailed upon to bring the envoy to Salia and introduce
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them.''
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``You must realize that's twice now you've provided aid to Keter,'' I
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grimly said. ``Your bridges are not so much burned as turned to smoke.''
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``I imagine our friend in Keter would have found a way regardless,'' the
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Tyrant mused, sipping at his cup. ``This is hardly a deep
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collaboration.''
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``You've repeatedly made pacts with the Dead King, and now serve as
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facilitator for his diplomacy,'' I said. ``Kairos, that has
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\emph{consequences.} It's one thing to play princes against each other
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or to make a red ruin of the League for your schemes. Villainous, true,
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but it stays within certain boundaries. What's happening up north,
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though, is a higher order of war. The consequences of defeat there
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are\ldots{} severe is too light a word, really.''
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``You seem certain there will be a war,'' Kairos said, sounding amused.
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``As if it were inevitable, written in the stars.''
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``At this late hour, it effectively is,'' I bluntly said. ``There is no
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offer he can make that will change things. The Grand Alliance will
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gather and sweep him back into the Crown of the Dead.''
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``Or he'll leave when faced with such an unprecedented coalition,'' the
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Tyrant said. ``For he is not an utter fool.''
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``Then we reclaim the Kingdom of the Dead without loss of life and begin
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to siege the Serenity,'' I shrugged. ``It is not too disadvantageous an
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outcome.''
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``You misunderstand me,'' he said. ``His armies retreat, and as they do
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several millennia of the worst rituals Calernia has ever seen are
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unleashed on the lot of you. And then your shaky alliance, stripped of
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its common foe, must face the brewing horrors you ignored as your eyes
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remained fixed on the north.''
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``So we should take his peace, should we?'' I scathingly said. ``Pass
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the torch to those yet to come and hope they take care of it for us?
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That's how we got into this mess in the first place. It'll be ugly work,
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closing the door on him, I'll not deny that. And costly in ways I
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suspect will resound for generations. But someone will have to pay that
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price, sooner or later, and it's cowardice of the worst sort to pass the
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duty down the line our of petty fear.''
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``And it is mere pleasant coincidence,'' Kairos mused, ``that a great
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shared cataclysmic war would lay deep foundations for your Accords. Your
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own Arch-heretic of the North -- the King of Death, the peerless Named
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that suffers the yoke of no laws even in death -- crucified over a sea
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of corpses so that the story of your rules enforced becomes as whisper
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passed from mother to child across the lands.''
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The accusation rang true because he wasn't entirely wrong. The Liesse
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Accords being signed and then promptly yielding the end of the Kingdom
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of the Dead would be the strongest possible mortar to build with.
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Undeniable proof that even the greatest of monsters could not stand
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alone against the rest of us when heroes and villains kept to terms. The
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thought had lurked in the back of my mind for some time now, it was
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true. On the other hand, unlike what he was implying I was not
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\emph{eager} for the horrors that war would bring. Marching on the Crown
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of the Dead and the creature that ruled it was not something to be
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lightly considered no matter what advantages it might bring.
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``Mock as you will, you offer no other path,'' I said. ``You never do,
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Kairos. And still I am a little disappointed, because I figured that no
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matter how deep in the old madness you went you'd at least grasp the
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consequences of Keter claiming victory in this.''
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``You speak as if the Dead King could truly win,'' he said, cocking his
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head to the side. ``As if this confluence was not a carefully arranged
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affair, a trap laid by subtle hands.''
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``I'd be much more willing to listen to hard talk about the Intercessor
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from you if you'd not make a damned bargain with her yourself,'' I
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harshly said. ``Your actions have not matched the distaste you
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profess.''
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``Of those that collaborated with the Bard on that night I am not the
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one that wounded your side deepest,'' Kairos mildly said, ``though you
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know it not.''
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``You lie, Tyrant,'' I sighed. ``Even speaking only truths, you lie. And
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if you had something that'd cut deep when plainly said you would have
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spoken it plainly.''
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That made it two secrets he'd dangled in front of me now. He'd implied
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there were disasters brewing elsewhere, earlier, and there were only so
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many places that could be the case. Ashur was still blockaded by Nicaean
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fleets, last I heard, and it was possible for it to be turned into a
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cradle of madness through desperation. Yet I knew Malicia to have
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schemes afoot, and she stood the more likely culprit: the Tower's
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arsenal of horrors had not been unleashed in many years, but it might
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yet be if she felt there was nothing left to lose. So someone had worked
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with the Bard on the night that saw Twilight's birth, then, and I'd been
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wounded by it. Probably Saint, I decided. It'd explain why the Tyrant
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had not outright given a name: she was dead by my hand, that account
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already settled. All he had left was suspicion to sow while speaking
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exact truths.
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``We are pieces in an intricate game, Catherine,'' the Tyrant smiled.
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``One whose board was lain far before either of our births. Did you
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believe it coincidence, that the Principate would be so weak and
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isolated? Decades of civil war to bleed it dry, foes on all sides and
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then even a disastrous campaign to the east before the Dead King had
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first stirred. There have been but a few times in the history of Procer
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it has been so weak, and I'd wager none when the greatest heroes of the
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time were either far past their prime or far short of it.''
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``She's not a god, Kairos,'' I said. ``And neither is he, despite all
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his boasting. Even a continent like Calernia has so many moving parts
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it's impossible to manipulate it so precisely. They may have seen it
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coming, helped it along even, but this is not an elegant game of
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flawless immortals: this is two old monsters riding a tiger and hoping
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the other one is bucked first. You know they're not unbeatable. Hells,
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you handed the Bard a defeat yourself.''
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``So I did,'' the Tyrant conceded. ``Neither is invincible, Catherine, I
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agree. They are cleverer than that. Yet we approach the crescendo of
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their hatreds, the unmaking of the knot. And I suspect neither's lasting
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victory would be a pleasant ending.''
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``Help me, then,'' I said. ``Help the Grand Alliance. You've been
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gathering everyone's secrets, Kairos. The Intercessor's, the Dead King's
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and everyone else's. You could be the finger on the scales.''
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``I find it most amusing that your good intentions will haunt this world
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for centuries to come, if you truly win,'' the Tyrant grinned. ``Ah, the
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necessary villain. The hard woman making the hard decisions when trouble
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has come calling and all others are flinching from what simply
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\emph{must be done}. I wonder how many atrocities will be poured out of
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that mould in years to come simply because you scratched that groove
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deep enough onto the fabric of Creation.''
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I'd gotten about as much out of him as I would, I decided. All he was
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doing now was spreading the poison of suspicion, and I had no reason to
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indulge him I continuing to lend an ear.
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``Even as we speak,'' Kairos idly said, ``thousands are dying in agony
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to the far south.''
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``End the blockade of Ashur and the starvation will end with it,'' I
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flatly replied.
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``It already has ended,'' the Tyrant of Helike smiled, red eye burning
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like a red star. ``Tomorrow, Catherine, the Tower reminds the world it
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is yet to be feared. Magon Hadast will withdraw the Thalassocracy from
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the Grand Alliance.''
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I frowned.
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``She doesn't have the ships to scatter Nicae,'' I said. ``Or the
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calibre of mages to not need the ships.''
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``No,'' the Tyrant agreed, ``what she does have is many men who must
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drink water from barrels.''
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Poison? That seemed unlikely, even if it was one that took an absurdly
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long time to kill. It was possible to craft poisons that had no taste
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and would not visibly mar water but making one that also took months to
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kill -- the only way slipping that much poison onto so many ships
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unnoticed was even remotely feasible -- would be massively difficult and
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expensive. It'd also require the skills of the Empire's finest
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alchemists employed in concert, as well as exotic ingredients by the
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barge. Scribe would have noticed such movements, even if the Jacks were
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fooled. Kairos reached a shaking hand into his tunic and produced a
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small glass vial filled with a light gray powder, tossing it to me. I
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caught it, holding it up to the light. That was an alchemical powder,
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I'd bet rubies to piglets, but not one I recognized.
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``Poison?'' I asked.
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``In a sense,'' Kairos said. ``If inclined to poetry, I might call it
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the stillness of death.''
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Oh. \emph{Oh}. \emph{Oh shit.} Stillness, water? This was the same
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horror Akua had used to turn into wights the entire population of
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Liesse. One of the Warlock's old doomsday tricks, named \emph{Still
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Water}. Mere alchemy, almost impossible to detect as it accumulated in
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bodies. Until it was triggered by sorcery and slew all it'd contaminated
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before raising them as undead. If the water barrels on the Nicaean fleet
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had been tainted, there was no telling how much of it Malicia had
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instantly turned to her service with a mere snap of the fingers.
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\emph{She can't have done that before they even struck at Ashur}, I
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thought. \emph{No one's that far-sighted, not even the Empress.} Yet if
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the barrels had been tainted in the months since, that meant\ldots{}
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``That can't have passed by you,'' I said.
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``It did not,'' Kairos agreed.
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``And you didn't stop it?'' I frowned.
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``Why,'' the Tyrant of Helike grinned, ``that would rather defeat the
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purpose of helping her, wouldn't it?''
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My mind raced. While I was less than surprised Kairos would betray even
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the League he was currently leading to war, I saw little advantage for
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him in this. If Ashur was willing to fold and leave the Grand Alliance
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at Malicia's behest, it might have done the same at the League's. This
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did hurt Nicae, which was arguably still his strongest rival for power
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within the League, but there would have been less costly ways to achieve
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that. And in truth a great defeat might shake his own position even if
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it'd not been dealt to him, as the Hierarch's violent indifference
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towards such matters meant Tyrant was effectively setting the policy of
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the League of Free Cities at the moment. This\ldots{} didn't fit, I
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thought. The Tyrant of Helike might have been a true partisan of Below,
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but however deeply it was buried there was always a method to his
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madness. The ripples from this would be a blow to the Grand Alliance but
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not a crippling one, and a victory for Dread Empress Malicia but hardly
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a substantial one. And it'd weaken the League going into this peace
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conference. Kairos might have used all this as a mere vessel to get his
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hands on the White Knight, but it was unlike him to so utterly spoil one
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game in favour of another.
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``What do you \emph{want}, Kairos?'' I asked, honestly lost.
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The odd-eyed boy leaned forward, trembling hand touching the bowls
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filled with stones he'd not touched this entire conversation.
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``I'd like us to play a game, of course,'' Kairos Theodosian smiled.
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``Why else set out the stones?''
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