555 lines
27 KiB
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555 lines
27 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-28-contend}{%
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\chapter{Contend}\label{chapter-28-contend}}
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\epigraph{``Diplomacy is not an art of peace or a higher calling, it is the
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act of nations bartering what they disdain for what they desire.''}{Magister Haides Katopodis the Elder of Stygia}
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The sword came forward in swift thrust that I let come close, as Prince
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Frederic's footing told me it was just a feint.
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``My people don't have a great opinion of royalty west of the Whitecaps,
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as a rule,'' I said.
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Or east of the Wasiliti, south of the Hwaerte and north of Daoine.
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Callowans were less than fond of foreign crowns in general, was the
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point, though it would be impolitic to belabour it.
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``Not without reason,'' the Prince of Brus replied.
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I limped to the side, baiting an attack with an opening that was seized
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without hesitation -- an opportunist, this one, man after my own heart
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-- and the Kingfisher Prince's sword came swiftly from the side. I spun,
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putting my weight on my good leg, and swept him back with a swing he
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easily avoided but set him up for a longer thrust with the tip of my
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staff. Leaning backwards and edging his head to the side by half an
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inch, he narrowly avoided the second blow. It ruffled his blond locks
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some, and I only partly managed to catch his own blow with the
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crossguard of my practice sword. He was better than Ishaq with a blade,
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I decided, but not as physically strong. That last catch with my
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crossguard would have broken my wrist if I'd tried it with the Barrow
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Sword. The Kingfisher Prince was quicker on his feet, though, and that
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was a lot trickier for me to handle given my limp.
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``I like to think so,'' I said. ``Which means when even \emph{I} say
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that I have doubts Gaspard Langevin of Cleves, whose lands are on the
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frontline of a war with Keter, would be enough of a fool to try
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something? A claim like yours begs an elaboration.''
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Of course, he probably hadn't meant a civil war that'd begin tomorrow.
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Even princes who despised Cordelia -- and there were more of those than
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I'd once thought -- wouldn't try to start one in the Principate when it
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was under siege from the Dead King and swarming with foreign armies it
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currently required to continue existing. But if this was headed where I
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thought it was headed, then Cordelia Hasenbach's envoy was going to make
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her position and intentions clear as spring water. And her offer as
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well, I thought, because if I knew anything about the First Prince it
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was that she always had one of those up her sleeves.
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``Such a war would yet be on the horizon,'' the fair-haired prince
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agreed. ``Yet it looms tall there. Before I elaborate, if you might
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permit an insolence? It has been suggested by advisers to Her Most
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Serene Grace that you have become aware of what stirs in Cleves.''
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He came in close, this time. Dropped under the swing of my staff, a
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half-step took him right out of the way of my sword's sideways swipe and
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he aimed his own blow perfectly. Unfortunately for him, I wasn't in the
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habit of playing fair: fingers abandoning my staff to stand perfectly
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still, I withdrew my hand and just in front of his face snapped my
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fingers. Eyes widening, he hastily withdrew with swiftness that was too
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smooth and sudden to have been entirely natural. I took back my staff,
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beginning to circle him again as absolutely nothing happened. I'd known
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for a while that the Pilgrim had given a pretty good accounting of my
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skills with Night, so I was not surprised in the least that the
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assessment had made it to the Principate's sole royal hero.
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``A bluff,'' the Kingfisher Prince grinned.
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``I don't know,'' I shrugged, keeping down a smile, ``was it?''
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I was, against my better judgement, enjoying myself. I'd always had a
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weakness for the pretty ones, especially if they could handle
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themselves.
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``The Augur or the Thorns?'' I asked.
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``The Circle of Thorns,'' the Prince of Brus said, ``noticed a sudden
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rise in the antipathy of certain sigils in Cleves towards Cleven
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forces.''
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The strength and weaknesses of the Firstborn in a sentence, that:
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skilled enough to spy on a hero, sloppy enough people who couldn't even
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speak their tongue could read them. The Everdark had forged them into
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one of those blades of obsidian they so loved: remarkably sharp in some
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ways, remarkably brittle in others. Neither of us commented on the fact
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that we'd both been spying on allies, which was for the best considering
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neither of us had any intention of stopping. Gods, but what I wouldn't
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do for spies as good as the Circle of Thorns.
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The Jacks were, in truth, better than such a young and haphazard
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organization had any right to be. That they could operate outside Callow
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at all was damned impressive, all things considered, much less with the
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amount of success they'd had. But the Thorns were still several notches
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above even the best of what the Jacks could do. Imagining the kind of
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access their long-standing rivals, the Eyes of the Empire, must have
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back in Callow had caused many a worried night. Even after several
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purges and Scribe outing part of the network to me as appeasement back
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in Salia, I doubted we'd flushed all of them out.
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Black and Malicia had spent two decades digging them in, it'd likely
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take just as long to dig them out.
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``I got wind of Gaspard's ambitions to expand the boundaries of the
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Principate,'' I acknowledged. ``And of how his daughter's been spending
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some of her evenings.''
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``The First Prince passes along her appreciation of how measured your
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response has been,'' the blue-eyed man told me.
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I went on the offensive, this time. Came in low, sweeping with the sword
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so he'd have to parry, and then struck with the staff. In an impressive
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display of skill, at the last moment he angled his parry so that my
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sword would get in the way of my staff, then without missing a beat
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tried to trip my bad leg. I managed to pivot on myself, Mantle of Woe
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fluttering and hiding away my body as he withdrew his blade and tried a
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downwards cut. I slapped it aside with the staff and gave ground, which
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he graciously enough allowed.
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``Don't thank me yet,'' I said. ``Sve Noc were livid, and I have visions
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to share of the kind of casualties the Empire Ever Dark has taking up
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north to drive home exactly what kind of an ally your man in Cleves is
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tempting to walk away.''
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``Given the unpopularity of the current levies and taxes with the
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people, ordering Prince Gaspard's arrest might result in the current
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riots turning into uprisings,'' the Kingfisher Prince said. ``I assure
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you, it is not apathy to the bad faith on display that has stayed the
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First Prince's hand.''
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``You know,'' I mused, ``I even believe that. Mostly. But here's the
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deeper issue behind all this, Frederic of Brus.''
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I touched my arm with Night and struck out, viper-quick: when the prince
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parried he found me significantly stronger than before, and in the
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misaligned surprise of his parry the tip of my staff hit his shoulder
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once and sharply.
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``A Proceran prince is scheming, which threatens the war against
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Keter,'' I flatly said. ``Proceran politics prevent anyone from doing
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anything about it, which threatens the war against Keter.''
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I struck out again, even as he gave ground, and when with Name-strength
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he turned aside my sword and staff I abandoned the latter and spun
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about. When I snapped my fingers he thought of it as a bluff, at least
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until dark light bloomed. A closer look at the purely decorative effect
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gave me the barest of openings to slug him in the stomach, though he
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rolled with the blow and so it was barely more than a caress to a
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martial Named like him.
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``A Proceran heroine tries to kill Proceran royalty, which threatens the
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war against Keter,'' I continued. ``And then \emph{another Proceran
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hero} snatches up a unique artefact forged through the efforts of
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several Named to kill the Dead King and begins making demands, which
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once again threatens the war against Keter.''
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I ceased moving, even as he got back his footing and raised his guard.
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``Do you perhaps begin to divine a pattern to our troubles, Prince
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Frederic?'' I bluntly asked.
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I wasn't blind to the fact that the Dominion was having some growing
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pains of its own when it came to the Truce and Terms. It would have been
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hard to when I'd been forced to look those very troubles in the eyes
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through the Barrow Sword. Yet neither Ishaq nor the Blood were allowing
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their arguments to become a growing international crisis, so the way
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that Procer kept foisting its internal troubles onto everybody else was
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really starting to be a trial on my patience.
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``That is the price to fighting this war on our lands instead of
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yours,'' the Prince of Brus bluntly replied.
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He'd begun to take me halfway seriously, so instead of the almost
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teasing spar before I got a glimpse of what he looked like on a proper
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field of war: with dexterity he struck, baiting my parries into
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overextending and then stinging like a wasp. Even with two weapons I
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found myself hard-pressed and forced to give ground.
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``The Principate is crumbling,'' the Kingfisher Prince said as he kept
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advancing. ``What few of our youths are not needed in fields and mines
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are sent north to die in dwarven armour we went into debt to buy.
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Royalty are now forced to confiscate the necessary goods they cannot pay
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for, while no grain has been set aside in two years because massive
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armies must be fed. Horses in the fields go without horseshoes because
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the blacksmiths were conscripted; fish is taken from the hands of
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fishermen as far south as Salamans so it can be salted and put in
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barrels headed north.''
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With a flashy snap of his wrist, he batted aside my parry and cut
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downwards at my wrist. I didn't drop my blade, but it was a near thing
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and I was sure to get a bruise. If the sword had not been dulled, I'd be
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seeing bone. I chased him away with a swing of my staff, though he
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retreated at his leisure and without giving openings.
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``What you condemn as our fecklessness is in truth the death rattle of a
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nation of millions,'' Prince Frederic said. ``And while I confess I know
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little of your people, Queen Catherine, I doubt they would fare any
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better under this strangling grasp than we have.''
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``I won't deny that Procer has been taking the harshest losses in a lot
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of ways, or pretend that our sending coin and soldiers and grain is a
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true replacement for what was lost,'' I said. ``But neither can
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\emph{you} deny that your royalty has not been a constant thorn in the
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Grand Alliance's aside at a time where we can ill afford that sort of
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foolishness.''
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``I do not deny it,'' the fair-haired man frankly said, ``for it is the
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truth. Yet you have a reputation as a pragmatic woman, and so I expect
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you can recognize that regardless of what is deserved having Gaspard
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Langevin arrested is not a solution. It is a way to precipitate the
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collapse of the realm standing between Callow and the Dead King.''
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That was a solid retort, I had to give him that. And all of it true, if
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not necessarily answering my grievance.
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``I didn't ask for Prince Gaspard in chains, or in a grave,'' I said.
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``What I am asking for is for the First Prince to get her people in
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order, before my own hands become tied and I \emph{have} to act on
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this.''
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``Then the First Prince requests that you add your voice to the Red Axe
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standing trial before a tribunal of the Principate,'' Prince Frederic
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reluctantly asked. ``As it would send a stark warning to the House of
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Langevin, as well see justice done.''
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Ah, and there we were. The reluctance told me this was more Cordelia
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than him, but nothing I'd heard about the Kingfisher Prince had let me
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to think he was a spineless lackey: if he was willing to pass along the
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request, then he at least saw the sense in it.
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``So you approach me instead of the White Knight,'' I said, ``since I'm
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more likely to be willing to deal.''
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It wouldn't be impossible to sell to my side of the fence that I'd
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simply traded the Red Axe's neck to Procer in exchange for concessions,
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if I could then distribute those concessions. And if she was still
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executed, then I genuinely shouldn't get too much trouble over this.
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Hanno, though? Hanno wouldn't bend the neck over this. \emph{He might be
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more inclined to consider if Procer goes to him with my signature
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already on the parchment, though}, I thought, which explained with
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Cordelia Hasenbach was going to Below's side of the Terms first.
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Unfortunately, she'd misread me on this. The Truce and Terms were to be
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the foundation the Liesse Accords were built on, so my bottom line
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wasn't anywhere as flexible as she might have imagined.
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``The White Knight has not ruled,'' the Prince of Brus said. ``I admire
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his principles a great deal, but it does everyone a disservice to
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pretend that his political judgement is infallible.''
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``I don't disagree with him,'' I bluntly replied. ``If the Red Axe
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doesn't stand trial as a Named but as a criminal under Proceran law, it
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erodes the foundation of the Terms.''
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``If Named are judged only by Named, then are two laws of the land,''
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Frederic Goethal said.
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I took a swift step forward and struck out with the blade, pressing down
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on his parry when he caught it.
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``Oh, don't give me that shit,'' I said. ``You're a prince of the blood,
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we both know that maybe in principle you get the same justice a peasant
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does but that's not how the world actually works.''
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``Yes,'' the Kingfisher Prince agreed, to my surprise, ``which is why I
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am wary of enshrining near as unfair a distinction into law.''
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I was pushed back but slapped away his thrust with the side of my staff,
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losing no ground as we began circling each other again.
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``You can't regulate Named like you would other people,'' I said. ``It's
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not like making laws about magic or dealing with fae, you're basically
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dealing with wild horses -- if you make the pen too small, they'll burst
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out. That's why the rules stay limited, not because more wouldn't be a
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positive change. The point is to establish a foundation, a baseline that
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future generations can build on.''
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``If Named do not answer to the same laws as even princes, not even in
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principle,'' Prince Frederic said, ``then they are by objective measure
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set above even royalty. That would birth an age of warlords, Queen
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Catherine. I do not believe Christophe de Pavanie is the kind of man who
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would use his strength to make himself a crown, but by would other
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Chosen and Damned not be tempted to seize power if they are above the
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laws of other men? You would make Named a kind of royalty standing above
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all the crowns of Calernia.''
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``If I'd written that in the Accords, you'd be right,'' I said. ``But it
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isn't there. You can hang heroes and villains alike should they break
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Proceran laws -- so long as the law doesn't simply outlaw being a
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villain. It's the Truce and Terms that extend these protections, and
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those last only until the Dead King is dealt with.''
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A feint with my staff, then I tried to whip at his wrist with the blade
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much as he'd done with me -- instead he caught it with his crossguard
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and tried to flip my blade out of my fingers, though I withdrew before
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he could.
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``The Terms are the predecessor to the Accords, it is openly known,''
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the Prince of Brus retorted. ``What becomes common practice now is
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likely to remain regardless of what is put to ink. If Chosen and Damned
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refuse to enforce the parts of those treaties they mislike, those that
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go against what they have become used to, how are we to make them
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obey?''
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``Force, if need be,'' I said. ``Even the most powerful of our kind
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can't take on armies alone, much less armies backed by those Named who
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\emph{will} respect the Accords as written.''
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``What you describe is likely to lead to a civil war that would finish
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breaking apart Procer even should we defeat the Dead King,'' Prince
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Frederic said. ``The schemes of the Tower set our principalities tearing
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at themselves for decades, and now the weight of the war against Keter
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teaches us fresh ways to despise each other. We will not survive a third
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conflict, Queen Catherine, not as a single nation.''
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He'd advanced and struck quickly, and at an angle where it was hard to
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drive him back, but I joined my staff to my sword and that forced him
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back a step.
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``It's a convincing speech you made,'' I said, ``but we both know that
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ultimately half of it is guesswork and predictions. If the Augur had
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predicted it, you'd have led with that. So we're left to choose behind
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the danger I see looming, Named seeing the Terms and later the Accords
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as a tool for nobles to control them and so walking away, or the one
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you've described. One I can only see as avertable even should it come to
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pass.''
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``Your reluctance is not unforeseen,'' the Prince of Brus admitted.
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``Which is why I was asked to tell you that the First Prince is willing
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to sign the Liesse Accords as they currently stand should you concede in
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this.''
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I'd been angling towards his side with my sword raised, but at his words
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I drew back with a start of surprise.
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``Lady Dartwick left me under the impression that there were still
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months of negotiations left to be had,'' I cautiously said.
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``Yes,'' Frederic Goethal said, ``and on all currently contested issues,
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the First Prince will concede.''
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Mhm. She couldn't speak for the Dominion, though, so while this was a
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significant concession it didn't end the negotiations outright. It'd
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still be a massive boon and one that put a \emph{lot} of pressure on
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Levant to sign on as the terms were, or at least with minimal quibbling.
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And even should Hasenbach go to them in private to try to use them as
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proxy to continue negotiating -- which I doubted, it'd be too starkly in
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bad faith -- they were unlikely to champion points that favoured Procer
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without also helping them. It was damned tempting offer, which was
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nothing less than I should have expected coming from a diplomat of the
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First Prince's skill.
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``Something to consider,'' I eventually replied.
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There could be no serious expectation of my agreeing to this in the
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middle of spar, much less when I'd not spoken with Vivienne or had a
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recent look at the articles of the Accords still in dispute. But it was
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classic Hasenbach to use someone beholden to her yet on good terms with
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me to present her offer early, preparing the grounds before negotiations
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truly began -- and well in advance of any rivals. Cordelia did like to
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win before the battles were had, when she could. I did not disapprove.
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Even her sort of battles could be messy and chancy things when started,
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no matter how well you might think the situation was in hand.
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``A lot of this could be made simpler if you went out and asked for the
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Red Axe's head,'' I said. ``Her attack could stand trial as both a
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breach of the Terms and Proceran laws, so we'd sidestep at least part of
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the troubles.''
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The fair-haired prince studied me closely.
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``The two of you are more similar than either cares to admit,'' Prince
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Frederic said.
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Ah. He'd gotten that speech from the other side as well, then. If
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Hasenbach hadn't managed to sway him, I very much doubted I'd be the one
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to manage it instead.
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``I'll choose to that take that as a compliment,'' I said.
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``It was,'' he said. ``And other things as well. It is a matter a
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conscience, Queen Catherine. I will not ask for a death I do not believe
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deserved.''
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His sword rose and I matched it with mine. Circling began again, my eyes
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lingering on his footing as he tested my defences with quick flicks.
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Looking for an opening to score a decisive blow and end this, I'd wager.
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``That's an interesting stand to take, considering what you've just said
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about the White Knight,'' I said.
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A deeper lunge, but I was low on my feet and in a swirl of my cloak
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obscuring my movements I pivoted and let him pass by me -- though I
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wasn't quick enough to catch his back as he passed. We were face to face
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once more before I could even mount a proper attack.
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``On matters of politics, I can and will compromise,'' the Kingfisher
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Prince calmly said. ``But not on matters of integrity.''
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And the thing was, I respected that. Admired it, even. But when
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principle got in the way of itself, a closer look usually gave away that
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the whole affair was really about pride. I tested his guard with a flick
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of my staff, found it slow and pressed on. It'd been a trap, and he
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tried to slide under my guard in the beat where I began to move and my
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bad leg slowed me, but I'd been waiting for it. Finesse wasn't going to
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get me anywhere, so instead I bludgeoned at him as hard and quick a I
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could. It took him by surprise, enough that I drew back the staff and
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began to press him with both arms.
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``I've lived most my life in the shadow of people that would use that
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rope to hang you twice over,'' I told him, ending the sentence with a
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flourish of the wrist.
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The strike I'd thought would bruise his shoulder was instead caught with
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the very end of his own blade, Name-strength compensating for the poor
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angle I'd forced him to parry in.
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``That a principle can be used against you does not invalidate it,''
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Frederic Goethal fiercely said, ``and decency is not made worthless for
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the use the indecent would make of it.''
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Even with a touch of Night, the difference in strength allowed him to
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first force away my sword and then rip it out of my grasp. He did not
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get to take the opening that give him, though, as I spun around his back
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and elbowed him harshly. He gave ground just in time to avoid the strike
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of my staff, and before he could turn on me I'd retreated -- bending to
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snatch my blade up from the sand as I did.
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``If the exercise of a virtue is put to the service of evil,'' I
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replied. ``It is an accomplice to it, regardless of what else it might
|
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be.''
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|
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The fair-haired prince had begun to use his Name more liberally, though
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he was keeping aspects out of this much like I was refraining from using
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workings of Night, so I'd have to adjust. I wouldn't be able to force my
|
|
way through his guard anymore, even using both arms. Bait and flank, I
|
|
decided. My staff was too long, it'd get in the way, but there were ways
|
|
around that. Better wait for him to close in on me, though: my leg was
|
|
beginning to throb so now was not the time to dart about.
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|
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|
``To put evil means in the service of good ends is still putting out
|
|
evil in the world,'' the Kingfisher Prince replied. ``We can quibble of
|
|
lesser or greater evils as we wish, but averting harm is not the same as
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|
acting morally.''
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|
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|
I'd turned this on him once or twice, so he came in careful. I took it
|
|
as a mark of respect, coming from a swordsman of his calibre. A quick
|
|
half-step forward, baiting out a strike of my staff that I gave him --
|
|
he flowed into a high parry as he used his backfoot to quickly shoot
|
|
forward, already trying to turn the first movement of his blade into the
|
|
beginning of a strike at the side of my neck. I abandoned the staff,
|
|
spinning to the side, but I'd used that on him twice now and he'd been
|
|
waiting for it. A sharp strike of his elbow into my flank pushed me
|
|
aside, putting me back into the trajectory of his swing if he finished
|
|
the full arc. I dropped low and instead of pivoting anchored myself at a
|
|
steady angle, ramming by shoulder into his chest even as he barrelled
|
|
into me. He was light on his feet, though, impossibly so. Like he'd
|
|
somehow turned into mist as he reversed his momentum, my shoulder hit
|
|
nothing at all and I was instead forced into a damned awkward parry to
|
|
cover my neck.
|
|
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|
``Not the same at all,'' I agreed. ``We just disagree on which is more
|
|
important.''
|
|
|
|
I saw the muscles in the prince's arm tightening as he put his back into
|
|
the clash of blades and knew that in the heartbeat that followed my
|
|
guard would give. So I gave with it, using the moment where he thought
|
|
he'd gotten me to finally pivot around him like I'd already tried twice.
|
|
I deftly flipped my grip and thrust under my armpit, though just before
|
|
the tip of my practice sword could touch the ridge of his spine I found
|
|
the edge of his own against my throat, ready to slit it. He must have
|
|
begun reversing his swing the moment I began moving, to match my timing,
|
|
and it was with a degree of admiration I realized that meant he'd read
|
|
my movements without even seeing them.
|
|
|
|
``Draw?'' Prince Frederic lightly offered.
|
|
|
|
``Draws are for suckers,'' I replied, and tried to trip him.
|
|
|
|
He let out a startled laugh and turned around as I tried to tackle him
|
|
down into the sand, dropping his sword to try to wrestle mine out of my
|
|
grasp. We dropped down in a tangle of limbs, and perhaps I did not
|
|
struggle quite as much as I could have to prevent Frederic Goethal
|
|
ending up on top of me, holding down one of my wrists. His blond locks
|
|
were a mess, he smelled lightly of sweat and not even those puffy
|
|
sleeves were enough to take away from my enjoyment of the muscles under
|
|
them. It would be bad politics to fuck a prince of the blood, I reminded
|
|
myself as I looked into very blue eyes, and besides we were on sand.
|
|
|
|
I couldn't even be sure that he was interested, besides,
|
|
although\ldots{} I wiggled my hips under the thin pretence of struggling
|
|
and got confirmation I might not be the only one finding our position
|
|
startingly arousing, swallowing a pleased gasp. That knowledge did
|
|
nothing to curb the temptation, especially not when I could feel his
|
|
broad chest against mine and his face was so close I'd barely have to
|
|
lean up to nip at his lip.
|
|
|
|
``You could have just declined to put forward charges,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
The tone came out more flirtatious than I'd intended, but I wasn't
|
|
exactly biting my nails over it.
|
|
|
|
``It wouldn't have been as interesting,'' Prince Frederic replied, voice
|
|
gone slightly husky.
|
|
|
|
All right, I could at least be honest enough with myself to admit that
|
|
if we weren't out in the open -- or at least not in sand -- I'd be
|
|
flipping him over and undoing his belt right now. \emph{Shit}. This, uh,
|
|
might end up being something of a problem.
|
|
|
|
``Maybe I'll take that draw, after all,'' I made myself say.
|
|
|
|
Best to make this about politics again, I decide, since I didn't usually
|
|
wonder about how politics would feel between my legs. Although he
|
|
\emph{was} a prince, so if I wanted to get technical about it\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
``Of course,'' the Prince of Brus agreed.
|
|
|
|
The fair-haired man released my wrist and then the rest of me, rising to
|
|
his feet and gallantly offering his hand to help me up. I took it, still
|
|
much too flustered and aroused for my own good.
|
|
|
|
``I get the feeling you're no exactly enthusiastic at the First Prince's
|
|
method of solving this,'' I made myself say.
|
|
|
|
He offered me my sword by the handle, having picked the blades up while
|
|
I adjusted my cloak on my shoulders. Nonchalantly, he tugged his shirt
|
|
back into a semblance of order. It still fit him very nicely, I tried
|
|
not to notice and promptly failed. I reined in my gaze before it could
|
|
get me into any more trouble.
|
|
|
|
``I recognize the dangers she speaks of,'' the Prince of Brus admitted.
|
|
``But while the necessity of staying them might be clear, it does not
|
|
sit well with me that we have made a woman's life into a rag doll for
|
|
half the world to pull at.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{She's Named}, I thought. \emph{We're all rag dolls for Creation to
|
|
pull at, until enough gives we're only fit to be thrown away.} The lucky
|
|
ones among us got to accomplish a few things. The rest died remembered
|
|
only as their killer's stepping stone.
|
|
|
|
``So what is it you'd do instead?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
The man was an idealist, but he wasn't a fool. He'd know that mouthing
|
|
regrets at a course without offering another was just wind. The Prince
|
|
of Brus considered me silently, seemingly sobered by the seriousness of
|
|
the question I'd asked.
|
|
|
|
``I would begin,'' Frederic Goethal finally said, ``by speaking with the
|
|
Red Axe.''
|
|
|
|
I clenched my fingers then unclenched them.
|
|
|
|
Well, I supposed it'd make a change from all this talking \emph{about}
|
|
her instead.
|