648 lines
30 KiB
TeX
648 lines
30 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-87-connive}{%
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\section{Chapter 87: Connive}\label{chapter-87-connive}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``An enemy will remember you long after your dearest friends
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forget your face. Consider this, when you choose yours.''}
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-- Argea Theodosian, Sacker of Cities, Tyrant of Helike
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\end{quote}
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Under the moon's light the outskirts of Salia were still a pale field of
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snow, but I almost started in surprise at the warmth of the breeze.
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Winter was dying, at last. At my right, Archer nonchalantly strolled
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forward as she strung her overlarge bow. I spared a moment to admire the
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deftness of her fingers as she did, and the strength of the arms hidden
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by mail and coat. At my left it was Akua Sahelian that tread the snow
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without leaving footsteps, so ethereally graceful she might as well have
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been gliding. Under the guise of Advisor Kivule she wore long black
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veils hiding her face, though the splendid black velour ballroom dress
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she'd decided to wear for out little walk provided insisted reminders
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she was one of the most attractive people I'd ever seen.
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``It's called a Segovian cut,'' Indrani idly provided.
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I tore away my gaze from the small slits in the dress' skirts that'd
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allowed glimpse of the smooth legs beneath. I did not reply, knowing
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from long experience that if I engaged it would be the verbal equivalent
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of leaping headfirst into quicksand. Akua had several veils over her
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face, and yet somehow I could still feel her smirking.
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``They wear those for dances they have, where the women spin and-''
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``We'll need to pass by my rooms so I can take my cloak,'' I
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interrupted, pretending I had no interest in her finishing that story.
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Segovian cut, was it? I'd have someone look into that, there might be
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one that'd fit Indrani lying around Salia. Although, I couldn't ask it
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of Adjutant. That would be\ldots{} uh. No, definitely not Hakram. And
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Hells, now that I thought about it, if I sent for anything like there'd
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be a report about it on the desk of the First Prince, the Empress and
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Gods forbid maybe even my father before the day was out. That made the
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whole notion a lot less enticing, although there might be other ways.
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Still, if it ended up that I had to call on the smugglers among the
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Jacks to get Indrani into a revealing dress without half the crowns on
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Calernia knowing of it I was going to find a tall cliff to leap down it.
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Even as Archer continued to heckle me I began to hobble towards my
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quarters, but quiet undercurrents in the Night warned me company was
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coming.
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My Lord of Silent Steps emerged of the darkness between two crowded
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houses, the purple and silver paint of the Losara Sigil so intrinsically
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part of Ivah nowadays that I could hardly recall what it looked like
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without. Ivah's presence was ever welcome, and once more it was bringing
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to me what I required before I even thought to ask. Arm extended, it
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offered me the Cloak of Woe.
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``Losara Queen,'' it greeted me.
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``Lord Ivah,'' I replied. ``My thanks.''
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I wrapped it around me, fingers rising to fasten the broach binding it
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closed under my throat, and the familiar weight of old mistakes and
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victories on my back was a reassuring thing. My hand had been filled by
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a sword, once. First of goblin steel, then of ice and shade, and after
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that of obsidian only once unsheathed. The dead yew staff that felt cool
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against my palm, somehow fitting it perfectly, was still a fresh choice:
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not one I had not fully embraced, for the consequences of it were not
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all known. The mantle on my back, though? It was like an old friend, and
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even just wearing it made me feel sharper in thought and deed.
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``Should I rouse the Mighty to war, First Under the Night?'' Ivah asked.
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``Steel-clad soldiers march on your camp.''
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``No,'' I easily replied. ``It will not come to that. The Mighty will
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have may wars to wage, in the coming nights. This need not be one of
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them.''
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Or even a war at all, if I could finagle that. I wasn't sure why the
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League of Free Cities would choose to lash out against me of all the
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rulers in Salia -- even if Malicia was the one pulling the strings, it
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hardly seemed a winning venture for her -- but I had no intention of
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allowing what was coming to develop into yet another front for Callow to
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fight a war on. I did not invite Ivah to accompany us out in the snows,
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and it did not presume to invite itself. The League's people were much
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further out than we were, since they'd left long before I even began to
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set out, but as I reached for the Night and let it empower my sight I
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saw they were hardly a single unified band. Out of the four thousand
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soldiers that the League of Free Cities had been allowed to bring, maybe
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two thousand were on the march. One thousand yet remained in their camp,
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across the distant field, and the rest was marching \emph{away}. South,
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although they were split into two groups and one must have left recently
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to still be so close to the League's town-camp.
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``Archer,'' I said. ``You followed their movements from the start,
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yes?''
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``You're wondering about the stagger,'' she said, sounding amused.
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``The two packs of deserters, yeah,'' I frowned. ``If the second wave
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was deserters who hesitated I'd not think of it twice, but they're
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moving in an orderly manner. Ranks, supply wagons.''
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``First group to walk out was Atalante,'' Indrani told me. ``Packed up
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their affairs, assembled their soldiers and diplomats and left without
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looking back.''
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Which was not entirely surprising, I thought. Atalante had no real
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allies in the League, at the moment. It'd been at odds with Delos before
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the Tyrant upended the apple cart and started a round of civil war, and
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from what I understood the closest city it'd had to an ally, Penthes,
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had only been interested in using the chaos to grab some of the eastern
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Delosi holdings. Now that there was no Hierarch to compel the city to
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war against the Grand Alliance, they were likely to head home to lick
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their wounds instead of linger on foreign fields. If I had to guess, I'd
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put coin on the second band being the Bellerophon soldiery, and the
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old-fashioned tight formations I could glimpse in the distance held up
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to that perspective. It made no sense they'd waited for so long to
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leave, though.
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``What happened with the Bellerophon delegation?'' I asked.
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``Mind you, I only saw from a distance,'' Indrani cautioned.
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``You can put an arrow in a wasp from a mile away, Indrani,'' Akua
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amusedly said.
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``Sure, but I could exactly hear what they were saying,'' Archer
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reminded us. ``Still, as far as I could tell the \emph{kanenas} tried to
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execute the general.''
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I saw no point in asking why, given that Bellerophon's laws had been
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written not even by a single raving lunatic but by a whole assembly of
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them, many of them violently opposed to each other in their ravings but
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every single one rabidly incensed by even the hint of foreign meddling
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in their common lunatic affairs. For all I knew, they'd wanted to
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executed him because he'd combed his hair the wrong way on the third day
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of the month. \emph{Tried}, though, was something worth asking about.
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``They defied the authority of their mage-inquisitor?'' I said. ``I'd
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never heard about one of them doing that before.''
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``The kanenas dropped dead all of a sudden,'' Archer replied, shaking
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her head. ``And then they spent a while arguing about that.''
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I shiver went up my spine, and against my will I glanced up at the night
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sky. At what might lay behind it, waiting. What had become of the
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Hierarch was not yet clear, I thought, but surely all that he was must
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be tied up in his struggle against Judgement? The mere notion of
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Anaxares the Diplomat having become some sort of watchful angel to the
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Republic of Bellerophon was enough to make me sick in the stomach. I
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shook my head and focused anew.
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``That doesn't explain why they're so far beyond Atalante,'' I finally
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said. ``Unless they argue for nearly ten hours.''
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``Funny story,'' Indrani grinned, mouth half-hidden by her scarf, ``they
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actually headed north first. Then they saw a road marker that said they
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were headed towards Salia and argued for an hour before turning south.''
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``And what's so funny about that?'' I said, brow rising.
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It was incompetence, but honestly a fairly mild one in nature. It wasn't
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unheard of for professional armies to need to catch their bearings, that
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this particular half-trained mob would have to as well wasn't anything
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unusual. Especially since we'd all come here through the Twilight Ways,
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which would be highly disorienting for those unfamiliar with Arcadian
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journeys. An embarrassing mistake, maybe, but nothing worth a grin.
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``Well, the general,'' Indrani said. ``You know, the one that didn't
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die? I think he must have been the one who chose the directions,
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because-''
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``They executed him,'' I sighed.
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She chuckled at that, and to my utter lack of surprise even Akua's body
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language hinted a smile under the veils. Yeah, well, between Wolof's
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golden child and the favourite pupil of the Lady of the Lake I supposed
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the general sense of humour for this company tended towards the dark.
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``Bellerophon and Atalante flee the field, then,'' Akua calmly said.
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``We face numbers diminished and disunited. Who was it that lingered in
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the League's lodgings?''
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``The people in the camp are mostly Mercantis mercenaries and the
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Delosi,'' Indrani said. ``Everyone else is headed here, but not
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together.''
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``Should I guess?'' I grunted. ``Stygia and Penthes together. Nicae will
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have made room for a few members of the Secretariat with their own
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people, their Basileus needs all the friends he can make right now.
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Helike will come alone.''
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``Penthes came with Nicae,'' Archer corrected, ``though you're right
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about the Secretariat. Stygia and Helike march without allies, even each
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other.''
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I worried my lip.
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``Penthes is Malicia's hook in the League,'' I said. ``And Malicia just
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broke Nicae's naval power in a single stroke, so why is Basileus Leo
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Trakas tolerating them at his side?''
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``There were only two cities among the League that might feasibly be
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able to scry on par with \emph{Procer}, much less Callow or Praes,''
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Akua pointed out. ``Stygia and Helike, and even the latter held true
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mostly on the back of the many deals made by Kairos Theodosian. Neither
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of these have an interest in passing such news along to Leo Trakas.''
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``Hakram assessed he still didn't know during the conference, but even
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\emph{now}?'' I frowned.
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It'd been at least two days since the disaster, by my reckoning.
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``Dearest heart,'' Akua said, sounding amused, ``not all realms are so
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blessed as yours, to have inherited the scrying rituals of Praes and
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then been graced with the work of one of the most brilliant
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practitioners in living memory, the Observatory of Laure. Though your
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nets are not as wide and your spies nowhere as deeply planted as the
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Empire's, Callowan long-distance scrying is likely the most swift and
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reliable on the continent.''
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I grimaced as I considered that. It was true that even when I'd begun as
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the Squire I'd had access to the reports and assessments of the Eyes of
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the Empire as well as Legion scrying, and then spent near every campaign
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that followed with \emph{Masego} at hand. My standards for the swiftness
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information was transmitted at were probably askew from most people's,
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as Akua was so gently implying. Besides, scrying was largely
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Trismegistan as far as rituals went -- though the Principate's Order of
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the Red Lion used a formula Masego had noted as being raw, `primitive'
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and influenced by Jaquinite methods -- and the Free Cities weren't
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exactly practitioners of that. There were some local magics, from what I
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remembered reading, but no dominant school or unified tradition. The
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Stygian Magisterium were the finest sorcerers in the region, but they
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weren't sharing their secrets and it was a point of pride for them
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they'd been practicing sorcery for longer than the Praesi. Which the
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Praesi denied, of course, but that sort of historical pride pissing
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match tended to continue because no one could really be sure either way.
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``All right,'' I said. ``So Basileus Leo sees the League is falling
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apart. Stygia's the traditional rival of his city among the League as
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well unpalatable for the slavery besides, and Helike's the power he's
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trying to dislodge from the place of first among equals. Everyone knew
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Bellerophon couldn't be kept in the fold from the start, I'm guessing,
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so doubtless they didn't even try.''
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``That Atalante walked away implies he is failing to consolidate the
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League,'' Akua noted. ``He would have attempted to keep the preachers
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from walking, if only for their coffers and healers.''
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Indrani laughed.
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``So in Leo's hour of need, his buddies from Penthes come to offer
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support,'' she said. ``And he's got no idea's that Malicia's hand is up
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the ass of the Exarchs, moving the lips so they'll say all the right
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things.''
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Colourfully put, but not inaccurate.
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``You think she wants to prop up Leo Trakas and make a puppet of him?''
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I guessed. ``I don't see how it can hold all that long. As soon as he
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hears about Still Water being used on his fleets, he turns on them in
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fury. He \emph{has} to, his own people will stone him in the streets if
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he doesn't.''
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``Agreed,'' Akua said. ``I would wager his usefulness is purely
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temporary, and the man himself disposable.''
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``Yeah, Sahelian's got that one pegged. He's an arrow loosed, not a
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lasting catspaw,'' Indrani said. ``Ain't like the Tower's ever been shy
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about using people and then tossing them away.''
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``We are in agreement this is a ploy of the Empress, then?'' I said.
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``It seems likely,'' Akua agreed.
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``We'd already be hip-deep in corpses if this was the Dead King's
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work,'' Archer frankly replied.
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``Good,'' I grunted, eyes fixed on the shapes approaching in the
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distance. ``Then we tread carefully. I'm not willing to hand her yet
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another fucking victory tonight.''
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We slowed and stopped without ever needing to speak a word, my limp
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carrying me atop a slight hill on the plains and the two of them coming
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to stand by my side as we waited for the League to walk the last stretch
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separating us. We could have met them halfway and gotten to speaking
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more quickly, but that would have been sending the wrong message: it was
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them coming to me, not us meeting as equals. The Tyrant had not made
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granted the same quantity of soldiers to all members of the League when
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making the delegation, that much was made clear by those advancing
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towards us. The two Exarch-claimants of Penthes had maybe three hundred
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foot with them, with the looks of professional soldiers about them: long
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mail shirts of good quality, crested helms with full cheek guards and
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oval shields. Their spears were unlike the long beasts the Stygians used
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in their phalanx, only about the height of a man, and they bore not
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swords but long-shafted axes at their hips.
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The forces of Nicae, themselves numbering closer to five hundred, steady
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sword and board men in chainmail and cuirasses though they used small
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round steel shields and straight-edged sabers instead what I'd equip a
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shield wall in in their place. They had about a hundred riders as well,
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though it was only light horse. Long lances and javelins as well as what
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looked like armour of leather and \emph{cloth} had me almost rolling my
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eyes. Aside from riding down conscripts, I hardly saw what good that
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kind of cavalry could ever do in a proper battle. They'd shatter under
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Legion crossbows in a hurry, and Gods wouldn't that be a horrible waste
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of good warhorses? The Stygians had brought a mere two hundred, their
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Spears of Stygian with their long spears raised high advancing at brisk
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pace as the few mounted people ahead I assumed to be magisters keeping
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an eye on the slave-soldiers. Kairos Theodosian had not been a man
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afraid to stack the deck in his favour, so it was the Helikean force of
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nearly nine hundred that was by far the largest of the approaching
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contingents.
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Men-at-arms with their scale armour and sharp blades, the steady foot
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that was the foundation of Helikean warfare, counted six hundred. They
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moved in formation and good order. The last three hundred, however, were
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a sight that half-surprised me: \emph{kataphraktoi}. I'd confiscated the
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equipment of the four thousand cataphracts that'd warred on my army in
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Iserre and sent them back to Kairos with a broken finger each, but it
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seemed at least part of that force had been raised anew. The broken
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finger I'd not expected to keep them down for too long, not with so many
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priests among the League army, but the horses and armaments were
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surprise. Mind you, I was looking at three hundred when my soldiers had
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once fought four \emph{thousand}. I doubted even the deeper schemer like
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the Tyrant had anticipated needing to rearm all four thousand of the
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most elite force in his army. The last presence from the League was the
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Delosi Secretariat, and it evidently had not brought soldiers at all. A
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handful of \emph{askretis} were walking with Nicaeans, carrying small
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scribing desks for what I assumed to be a senior member of the
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Secretariat.
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``This is pretty nostalgic,'' Archer said, silver flask in hand. ``The
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three of us, more enemies than we practically know what to do with.''
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``They're not necessarily enemies,'' I said.
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``Cat insisting we're not necessarily going to kill them,'' Archer
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airily continued. ``All we need is caves full of corpses and it'll be
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like we never left the Everdark.''
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``Any moment now, we'll declare war on an entire civilization,'' Akua
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suggested.
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``We did pretty well last time,'' Indrani mused. ``I'd say we rank at
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least a draw, don't you?''
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She passed the flask to the shade, who drank a deep sip.
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``Generous, that,'' Akua said afterwards. ``Although, for an invasion
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force three women strong I'll concede there was a surprising amount of
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invading achieved.''
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``I need a better quality of minions,'' I complained. ``Mine are too
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mouthy. I bet the White Knight never has to deal with anything like
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this.''
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Heroes must be all sweetness and light, to the Sword of Judgement. All I
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got were crows that got mouthy about giving me directions and underlings
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who couldn't ever let anything go. Akua handed me the flask and I took a
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sip myself -- then spat it out, coughing.
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``Indrani, you horrid wench,'' I gasped out. ``This is senna.''
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Drow liquor, made from mushrooms and tasting like godsdamned mud. It'd
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been tolerable underground, where there was little else even remotely
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drinkable, but up here? After months of wine? It was like licking a
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muddy lake shore.
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``You slipped me a flask when I left before the Graveyard,'' Indrani
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beatifically smiled. ``How does the saying go again? For small slights,
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long prices. Wench.''
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I glanced at Akua who had brazenly betrayed me by pretending this was
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halfway decent liquor when she'd drunk of it herself, and she languidly
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shrugged.
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``How could I stand in the way of righteous revenge, my heart?'' the
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shade said. ``It would have been most uncharitable of me.''
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``This is why Hakram is my favourite,'' I muttered under my breath.
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At the very least, the indignation had me less tense as the soldiers
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approached.
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``And now,'' Indrani narrated, ``as foes stream forward like a mighty
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river, atop the hill stand a peerless beauty, a regal queen, a
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mysterious seductress -- and also you two, I guess.''
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I could not flip off Archer in front of the League, I reminded myself.
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No matter how much she deserved it. Indrani shifted slightly to the
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side, eyes narrowing, and her tone went serious without warning.
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``Mages with the Basileus,'' she warned. ``At least three.''
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I followed her gaze and found Leo Trakas atop his white stallion, as
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well as the two Exarch-claimants, but the mages took me a while longer
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to figure out. Some of Basileus Leo's escorting horseman wore
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ill-fitting armour, I realized. The sleeves were too long, as if made
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for larger and taller men, and they seemed uncomfortable with the
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weapons they were carrying.
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``You sure?'' I quietly said.
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``Their horses move like they've been drugged,'' Archer murmured.
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``Those are war horses, willful, and they're not good riders. Either
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those mounts were spelled to be docile, or they were fed something.''
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``Akua?'' I said.
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``Enchanted,'' she said. ``Though sloppily. I'd wager they are either
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Nicaean mages -- no great wonders, those -- or hired practitioners from
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Mercantis.''
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``Lovely,'' I growled.
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If Leos Trakas had tight reins on his `allies' I'd call this a
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precaution and let it go, but given that Penthes was likely playing him
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at Malicia's behalf there were risks involved. The larger party,
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consisting of the Penthesians, Nicaeans and the Secretariat observers,
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halted its march maybe a hundred feet ahead of our hill. A smaller party
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advanced, though it wasn't that small: the Exarchs brought thirty men,
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Leo Trakas thirty men of his own -- including the mages, now dismounted
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-- and with four scribes and the Secretariat official it was sixty eight
|
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people who strode towards the three of us. In the distance, the forces
|
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of Helike and Stygia halted on either side of the large force. Two
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riders peeled out of the band for Helike, one for Stygia. Bundled up in
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furs, Basileus Leo was at the head of the delegation and it was him that
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addressed us first.
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``Hail, Black Queen,'' the young man said.
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``Hail, Basileus,'' I calmly replied. ``Your visit is an unexpected
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pleasure.''
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``Is it a visit to walk Proceran soil, now?'' one of the Exarchs mocked.
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``How quickly your dominion extends, Queen of Callow.''
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I glanced at Akua.
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``Advisor,'' I said. ``Do remind me -- is that one Prodocius or
|
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Honorion?''
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``Prodocius, my queen,'' Akua replied.
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I glanced at the dark-haired man, his cheeks gone red from anger as much
|
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as the cold, and my eyebrows rose.
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``Did you know that the Eyes of the Empire have you officially marked as
|
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`having the wits of a well-bred trout'?'' I asked.
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The man snarled.
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``You coat your insults in lies, you-''
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``I assure you,'' I amicably smiled, ``it is a verbatim quote.''
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``Prodocius,'' Basileus Leo sharply said. ``We did not come to trade
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barbs.''
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``That is pleasing to know,'' I said.
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``So why did you come?'' Archer drawled. ``I'm assuming it's not to
|
|
visit the nice Proceran countryside. Snow's not measurably any nice
|
|
close to our camp.''
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Knowing her, she might actually have checked.
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``Accusations were made against you, Queen Catherine,'' an old man spoke
|
|
in lightly accented Lower Miezan.
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|
Long hair white as snow and bound in a ponytail, the man who'd spoken
|
|
was wrinkled like old leather and nearly as dark of skin. This was, if I
|
|
remembered my briefings correctly, Nestor Ikaroi of the Secretariat. On
|
|
each of his cheeks could be found a blue stripe and a black one,
|
|
tattooed. The marks of someone who had climbed the ranks of their
|
|
bureaucracy until there was nothing left to climb.
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``Secretary Ikaroi, isn't it?'' I said.
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The old man, to my surprise, gallantly bowed.
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``It is a great pleasure to formally meet you, Your Majesty,'' he said.
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|
``And I you,'' I replied, dipping my head in thanks. ``I've long had an
|
|
interest in the ways of the Secretariat.''
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|
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|
Which was true enough, since back in the first days of my reign I'd been
|
|
desperate to find a working bureaucratic model that wasn't an imitation
|
|
of the Praesi one. There'd never really be time or resources to spend on
|
|
a venture in the Free Cities though, not with Procer mobilizing.
|
|
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|
``Then perhaps in the days to come you might be willing to speak with
|
|
formal chroniclers,'' Nestor Ikaroi offered. ``We have a troubling lack
|
|
of direct sources concerning the beginning of the Uncivil Wars.''
|
|
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|
I blinked, taken aback at the continued civility. Usually people were
|
|
only this polite after they'd lost a few battles or I'd put a blade at
|
|
their neck.
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|
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|
``Time allowing, I've not objection,'' I slowly said. ``The Marshal of
|
|
Callow is already writing a history of her own, and I would not object
|
|
to your speaking with her either.''
|
|
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|
``It pleases us all you are willing to interact peacefully with the
|
|
League, Your Majesty,'' Basileus Leo said, reclaiming the lead on the
|
|
League side. ``Yet it would benefit us all if you would answer the
|
|
accusations that were posed.''
|
|
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|
``It is interesting that the Basileus of Nicae considers himself to have
|
|
authority over the Queen of Callow,'' Akua mildly said. ``I wonder which
|
|
precedent is so in use.''
|
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|
The younger man looked like he'd swallowed a lemon.
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|
``Should I take this as refusal to speak with the League?'' he asked me.
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|
``Do you speak for the League now?'' Indrani drily said. ``You seem to
|
|
be missing parts, `Hierarch'.''
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|
I raised a hand.
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|
``We have further guests, Archer,'' I said. ``Let us not jump to hasty
|
|
conclusions.''
|
|
|
|
The riders from Helike and Stygia had finally arrived. The Stygian was
|
|
no surprise: Magister Zoe Ixiani had been the voice of the Magisterium
|
|
through the League civil war and the Proceran campaign, and it seemed
|
|
she was still to be the same tonight. The fact that she was a slaver
|
|
rather spoiled her good looks, sadly. As for the two Helikeans, I was
|
|
familiar with both. General Basilia, who had I once met in Rochelant and
|
|
later learned was the Tyrant's favourite general, rode well and high in
|
|
the saddle. Dark-eyed and dark-haired, she had sharp cheekbones and the
|
|
well-built shoulders of a warrior. The other I knew almost intimately:
|
|
the pale eyes straddling the line of blue and grey, the surprisingly
|
|
young tanned face I had once seen kneeling before me. General Pallas,
|
|
who had led the \emph{kataphractoi} who killed my men.
|
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|
``Generals,'' I said. ``Magister Ixioni.''
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|
|
The two commanders offered brisk salutes.
|
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|
``Magister Zoe would suffice,'' the sorceress smiled.
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|
|
|
I did not smile back and flicked a glance at the Helikeans.
|
|
|
|
``Quite the gathering,'' I said. ``Dare I ask why?''
|
|
|
|
``We are here as observers,'' General Basilia said.
|
|
|
|
``You are here as an usurper, \emph{general},'' the other
|
|
Exarch-claimant said.
|
|
|
|
That one wasn't Prodocius, which made him Honorion. Plump where the
|
|
other was thin, he was middle-aged and his curly hair luxuriant. From
|
|
what Black had told me, he was prodigiously wealthy and had no
|
|
particular talent aside form this. Considering a great source of wealth
|
|
for Penthes was trade with the Empire, I'd wager he was even more
|
|
Malicia's creature than the other one.
|
|
|
|
``I will uphold the last will of the Tyrant of Helike, Penthesian
|
|
swine,'' General Basilia coldly said. ``Steel in hand, if I must.''
|
|
|
|
I was detecting the slightest hint of tension there.
|
|
|
|
``Accusations, you said,'' I mused. ``Am I to hear them, or will they
|
|
remain a mystery?''
|
|
|
|
``Are you willing to submit to the judgement of the League?'' Basileus
|
|
Leo eagerly said.
|
|
|
|
I met his eyes, unamused.
|
|
|
|
``Look at my back, Leo Trakas,'' I said. ``What do you see there?''
|
|
|
|
The young man's lips thinned.
|
|
|
|
``The Mantle of Woe, it is called,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``It's a list of people who asked me to \emph{submit} to things,'' I
|
|
said. ``I would not be so eager to be number among them, were I you.''
|
|
|
|
``Then we are at an impasse,'' Basileus Leo said.
|
|
|
|
``Secretary Nestor,'' Akua said. ``What does the record indicate the
|
|
accusations are?''
|
|
|
|
Leo Trakas paled, either in anger or fear.
|
|
|
|
``Claimant to the title of Exarch Prodocius Lesor alleges that Queen
|
|
Catherine Foundling murdered the Tyrant of Helike,'' Nestor Ikaroi
|
|
calmly said. ``Claimant to the title of Exarch Honorion Kapenos alleges
|
|
that Queen Catherine Foundling was accessory to the murder of Anaxares
|
|
of Bellerophon, Hierarch of the Free Cities.''
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat of silence passed, then Archer burst out laughing. It was
|
|
not, I decided, the most diplomatic we'd ever been. I glanced at the
|
|
Helikean generals, who seemed untroubled.
|
|
|
|
``And what does Helike say of this?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``We cast no such accusation,'' General Pallas bluntly said.
|
|
|
|
``Our sire would have disdained such a measure, even were the accusation
|
|
true,'' General Basilia added with open contempt.
|
|
|
|
I glanced at Basileus Leo, wondering in what possible world he might
|
|
have thought that my `submission' to `League judgement' might have
|
|
resulted in anything the wholesale slaughter of everyone trying to
|
|
execute me on such thin pretence. Gods Below, I'd sent running larger
|
|
forces than the entire League escort, much less his little coalition.
|
|
No, he was young but he wasn't an idiot -- he wouldn't have been able to
|
|
prevent a Strategos from being chosen in Nicae if that were the case.
|
|
Ah. Had he been presenting himself as the speaker for the League so that
|
|
he could then declare me innocent in that capacity, avoiding a fight
|
|
with me while binding Penthes to him? On parchment that was a halfway
|
|
decent plan, but he had to realize I had no damned incentive to indulge
|
|
him and the precedent of the League having authority over a Queen of
|
|
Callow was unacceptable. \emph{If he is not stupid, which I know him not
|
|
to be}, I thought, \emph{then he must be desperate.}
|
|
|
|
``Gods, do you have a semblance of evidence at least?'' I asked. ``Tell
|
|
me you didn't march near two thousand soldiers for\ldots{}
|
|
\emph{this}.''
|
|
|
|
The Basileus flushed and gestured towards his attendants. Archer, I saw,
|
|
was carefully watching the mages. Good. One of the soldiers came forward
|
|
with two sheaths of parchment, but Exarch Prodocius sneered and elbowed
|
|
him, snatching the scrolls. He strolled up the hill, staring me down
|
|
with surprising aplomb for a man who as far as I could tell had no power
|
|
and no military training -- he wasn't even in particularly good shape.
|
|
Except, I realized as he approached, he \emph{wasn't} staring me down.
|
|
His eyes were wide and showing white, like a terrified horse's. He was,
|
|
I grasped as he hurried towards me, frightened nearly out of his wits.
|
|
And still he threw the parchments towards my face. Akua slapped them
|
|
down, even as Exarch Prodocius stepped up to me with a rictus of bared
|
|
teeth that straddled fury and terror.
|
|
|
|
``There,'' Prodocius snarled, ``you murdering tyrant, you-''
|
|
|
|
At the Basileus' barked order two Nicaean soldiers stepped forward, one
|
|
grabbing him by the shoulder and dragging him back and the other
|
|
offering me an apologetic bow before picking up the parchments -- they'd
|
|
fallen short, as open scrolls were want to do -- and bowed again before
|
|
pressing them into my hand.
|
|
|
|
Or at least tried to, before Archer caught his wrist and rammed a blade
|
|
through the side of his neck.
|