659 lines
31 KiB
TeX
659 lines
31 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-36-trepidation}{%
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\chapter{Trepidation}\label{chapter-36-trepidation}}
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\epigraph{``It is traditional to kill to preserve your secrets, but I have
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found it more efficient to instead kill everyone who would be offended
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by the revelation.''}{Dread Empress Massacre}
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A claim like that required elaboration and it was had. The long-dead
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fantassin had apparently been quite the chatty fellow once he got
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talking, so even though the Relentless Magistrate had only been cut into
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a few of his memories a fairly complete picture of the events could be
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had. None of us were all that concerned with the history of it all,
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though, not right now. So when the floor was opened for questions, it
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began with Hasenbach asking for more details about the intervention by
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the `unknown woman'.
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It was the Bard. \emph{Of course} it was the fucking Bard, and I wasn't
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sure why any of us were wasting our time pretending otherwise.
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``The White Knight called on the Brighteyed Lords,'' the Painted Knife
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said. ``Those you know as the \emph{Ophanim}. And they came down in a
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wave of burning light, to strike down the Grey Pilgrim, but even among
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the blinding radiance a silhouette could be seen to have appeared.''
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That had Intercessor written all over it, as far as I was concerned.
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There weren't a lot of people who could take a hit from an angel -- I
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certainly couldn't, at least not without Sve Noc and the right story
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behind me -- but the Wandering Bard was certain to be one of them. Even
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if it killed her, it wasn't like she'd \emph{stay} dead.
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``Was the woman ever identified, by either your prisoner or any others
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in the valley?'' Hanno asked.
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I snorted, ignoring the looks I got from some in the room.
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``We all know who that is,'' I said, ``and faces don't matter a whit to
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her. She'd had more of those than we've had meals.''
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``If I can hear even a fake name, I can search through old lives for a
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connection,'' the White Knight reminded me.
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``I think you underestimate how good the old bird is at hiding her
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tracks,'' I bluntly replied. ``But be my guest.''
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I'd have to remember to ask if they still had the dead fantassin about,
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though, since I could probably take those memories through Night and
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make of them something that could be seen by multiple people. Could be
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useful. The Painted Knife had patiently waited for us to finish
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speaking, but it was actually the Magistrate that she bid to answer
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Hanno's question.
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``The prisoner never saw a face, though the silhouette was definitely a
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woman's and the timbre of her voice supports this,'' the Relentless
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Magistrate seriously said. ``The Grey Pilgrim was not in the field of
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vision of the prisoner when this took place, as he was looking at the
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White Knight, which leaves us instead with an impression of her face as
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she reacted.''
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My brow rose. They'd been very thorough, I noted appreciatively, and
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they weren't hiding the imperfections of their results as some might be
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tempted to in front of such an influential audience.
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``She looked surprised,'' the Relentless Magistrate said. ``And she
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spoke, though the noise of Mercy's descent drowned it out. I believe,
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however, that by reading her lips I have pieced together what the word
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was. It is not, however, a certainty.''
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``Your work has been exemplary so far,'' the First Prince said, ``and
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certainty is a rare thing indeed, in these matters.''
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``Agreed,'' I said, drumming my fingers against the tabletop. ``On both
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counts.''
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The Royal Conjurer looked pleased, though the Poisoner was harder to
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read. My approval was something of a mixed bag for the rest, not
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unexpectedly.
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``It was in Chantant,'' the Relentless Magistrate said.
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``\emph{Trouveur}.''
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Which meant `finder'. Huh, not exactly something I'd associate with the
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Bard. Not all at the high table seemed to share my opinion, though. At a
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glance both Proceran royals, Roland and the White Knight all seemed to
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be varying between grimness and understanding.
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``I'm guessing I missed something,'' I noted.
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Considering only the native speakers and Hanno -- a filthy cheating
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cheater who cheated, because his aspect was bullshit -- seemed to have
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caught it, I'd guess it was something Proceran. Probably specifically
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Alamans, as the scholar with the Arlesite name didn't seem to know about
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it either.
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``In older Alamans traditions, a \emph{trouveur} was something like a
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troubadour,'' the Rogue Sorcerer told me.
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Oh, Roland. Both reliably competent and socially skilled, why hadn't
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Zeze figured out a way to make more of him yet? Still, would you just
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look at that. It might be a few centuries late but we'd caught the tail
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of the Wandering Bard at last. Whatever it was that'd gone down in the
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Verdant Hollow, she'd clearly not wanted anyone to know about it.
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``I will attempt to confirm this independently,'' the White Knight said.
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``It may take some time, but it should not be impossible to learn more.
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Until then, however\ldots{}''
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``I am willing to operate on the assumption that it is the Intercessor
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we are dealing with,'' Cordelia agreed. ``Queen Catherine?''
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``I was sold the moment someone stepped in on Mercy in smiting mood,'' I
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drily replied. ``But consider me formally in agreement, if that's what
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you're after.''
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It was, so we moved on with little ceremony. Masego had questions but no
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burning desire to ask them himself -- at least not right now -- so I did
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on his behalf.
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``On the subject of the Ophanim being made to `leave','' I said. ``I've
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inquiries about some of the details.''
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It was the Magistrate who fielded answers once more, and he began by
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striking a cautious tone.
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``The prisoner saw nothing of what took place after that, not until the
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light had dispersed and the soldiers fled,'' the dark-haired hero said.
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Which their report had made clear enough. The fantassins led by the
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White Knight had skirmished with the warrior band led by the Grey
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Pilgrim over the span of an afternoon before it turned into a proper
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battle over a grassy slope. The battled had turned in the favour of the
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Levantines. Their training and equipment were both flatly inferior but
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they were \emph{much} better at skirmishing than the mercenaries, so
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they'd softened up the fantassins over the afternoon.
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When the fight had gone south for the Procerans, the White Knight had
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stepped back from the frontline and called on Mercy, which was when our
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old friend had stepped in. Our sole witness had gone temporarily blind
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and only got his bearings later, running away with the survivors and
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wounded after they found the Levantines had not taken the opportunity to
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slaughter them while they were blind. Hierophant didn't want me to fill
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in the blanks in the history, though, he was after something else.
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``I understand that,'' I said. ``But, to be clear, even after the
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silhouette was seen the light \emph{did} intensify?''
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The man frowned, collecting his thoughts for a moment.
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``That is correct, Your Majesty,'' the Relentless Magistrate said.
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Masego let out what someone who loved him less that I did might have
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called a cackle.
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``A limitation,'' Zeze said in Mtethwa. ``Finally.''
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A surprising amount of people spoke that tongue, considering the side of
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the Whitecaps we were on, but it was still far from a full roster. I
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cleared my throat.
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``Lord Hierophant has deduced something of import from the detail,'' I
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said. ``Which he will now share with us.''
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Masego's Chantant was significantly better when listening than speaking,
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so it was in Lower Miezan he addressed the high table.
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``The Choir of Mercy did strike at the valley,'' Hierophant said. ``It
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explains the presence \emph{tabula rasa} effect observed in the valley
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by the Royal Conjurer, which would not have been there if the Ophanim
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had not fully aligned with Creation.''
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Hanno was fairly learned in matters of sorcery, at least as much as
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someone without the Gift could be, but unlike me he didn't have the
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benefit of being familiar with the Praesi parlance in the art.
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``If I understand correctly, Hierophant,'' the White Knight slowly said,
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``you are stating that Mercy did smite the Grey Pilgrim?''
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``Yes,'' Masego bluntly replied.
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Surprise flickered across half a dozen faces and from the corner of my
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eye I found that the Painted Knife was grinning, muttering \emph{honour
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to the Blood} with an awed look on her face. Must have been nice for the
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national pride that the original Pilgrim had walked off Mercy's
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attentions -- and where Procerans would have considered it an indication
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of virtue, with the Dominion it was a flip of the coin if they'd decide
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it'd been about pure strength instead. I was pretty sure we were about
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to get into the specifics of being smote by angels, which should run
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afoul of at least one Proceran heresy law, so I decided to give a
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warning.
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``Deeper explanation will require drawing on learning that some deem to
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be blasphemous,'' I said. ``I tend to find the academic tone there
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refreshing, but I'm not unaware that others differ in opinion.''
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Cordelia flicked a discreet glance at her secretary, who ceased writing.
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``Given the situation, I believe such objections can be set aside,'' the
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First Prince of Procer mildly said. ``Lord White?''
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``I've no objection,'' Hanno said, sounding faintly amused.
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Considering he'd once told me his own mother had kept to Below, I
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suspected he'd be harder to shock theologically than people would expect
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of him.
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``Try to keep it concise,'' I told Masego in Kharsum. ``And please don't
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talk about dissecting anything someone prays to.''
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``My children will eat your goats,'' he replied in the same, sounding a
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little miffed.
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I threw him an offended look. There'd been no need for that sort of
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language, I was just giving advice. Given how important cattle was to
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the Tribes, that was actually a pretty brutal putdown for them -- I'd
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seen orcs brawl over less. I bet it was Robber who'd taught him that
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one, though. The malevolent imp had an almost encyclopedic knowledge of
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taunts and insults in every tongue he was even slightly proficient in. I
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caught Hanno covering his mouth as if to hide a yawn -- or a chuckle, I
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realized, since I'd forgotten he actually knew Kharsum.
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``Angelic power is fundamentally like any other,'' Masego told everyone.
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``It has fixed rules and properties, however esoteric, which allows it
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to be measured and predicted. In this case, the \emph{tabula rasa}
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observed means that there was a strike in the valley. That it does not
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seem to have caused any deaths means a property of that power was
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amended.''
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The First Prince of Procer observed him carefully.
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``And that is\ldots{} feasible, even for one who is Named?'' she probed.
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``I cannot think of another who could do this,'' Hanno admitted.
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The Fallen Monk had been able to screw with Light, from what I recalled,
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but having fought him my opinion was that a scrap between him and an
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angel would have begun and ended with the sound `splat'. The Intercessor
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wasn't some second-stringer with a grudge against priests, though.
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``She's not like other Named,'' I said. ``We've known that for some
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time. It's the reason we're tugging at threads that are literally
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centuries old.''
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Mind you, if it wasn't an aspect that let her do that I'd eat my own
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fingers. The Intercessor might be in a class of her own in some regards,
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but she wasn't beyond the constraints of being Named. Beating her thrice
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forced her away, she'd avoided the Hierarch like the plague and my money
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was on her having only three aspects just like the rest of us. One was
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the wandering trick, coming and going everywhere, and another had to be
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her sight for stories. That left whatever the Hells \emph{this} was to
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look out for.
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``Yet it is telling that the strike \emph{did} land,'' Masego continued.
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``As she clearly did not want it to. It implies she does not have the
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ability to outright command angelic entities.''
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Which was the good news. So now came the bad ones.
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``It does seem, however, that she is able to affect the properties of
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angelic power,'' Hierophant continued. ``Be it directly or indirectly.
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Which property in particular was tinkered with I cannot say, as there
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are too many possibilities. Reduced potency, different parameters for
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harm, different \emph{manners} of harm\ldots{}''
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He trailed off, shrugging, as he'd made his point. The specifics didn't
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actually matter all that much when it came down to it. Whatever the form
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it was a problem, to say the least, that if a metaphorical angelic arrow
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got shot the Bard could decide what \emph{kind} of an arrow it became.
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``Are you saying that the Intercessor has the ability to\ldots{} reforge
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angels as she wills?'' the First Prince said, sounding appalled.
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``No,'' Masego said. ``In a sense it is impossible to affect an angel
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directly -- even those that are said to be `dead' and have left behind a
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corpse remain in their Choir and unchanged. The Choirs are fixed
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entities. As befitting the way that she has been named an
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\emph{intercessor}, I would theorize that what she affects are the
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`senses' of angels. Not unlike coloured glass tinting one's perception
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of the world when that world itself remains objectively unchanged.''
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``So Mercy struck,'' I said. ``But it didn't kill anyone, because
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simultaneously it saw that there was no one it should be killing.''
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``In essence,'' Hierophant agreed.
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If the lever could be pulled down on that, though, it could also be
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pulled up. Which would be something of an issue if someone had, say, an
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angel corpse lying around that they'd unwisely made a weapon out of,
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\emph{Cordelia}. That wasn't a conversation that needed to be had in
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front of the Painted Knife and her fellows, though, so instead I asked
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if anyone still had questions for the band. The First Prince apparently
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shared my curiosity as to the fate of the dead fantassin, but we were
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both to be disappointed: it'd been the sorceries of the Barrow Lord that
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kept him moving and aware, so within a few days of the villains'
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destruction the corpse had begun breaking down. The aftermath of
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necromancy tended to be rough on bodies, from what I recalled. Made
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sense. You could only shove so much magic into even a living body before
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things started going south and corpses were even less flexible.
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``He was given a marked grave in the way of the southern companies,''
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the Grizzled Fantassin said, almost challengingly. ``He kept his
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contract to the end, and deserves the long peace same as any of us.''
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It might have been possible to extract a few things out of the remains
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of the remains, in practice, but it honestly wasn't worth the effort
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considering it'd require either myself, Akua or one of few oldest Mighty
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in Cleves to see to that extraction in person. Being halfway decent
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people, the rest of the high table weren't inclined to argue in favour
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graverobbing anyway. Hanno made plain to the thee heroes that he'd want
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a more in-depth talk about their investigation at some point, and I
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casually informed my pair of the same, but aside from that we were done
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here. With the questions, anyway. They were released to rest and
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recreation, and within moments of the door closing we were dealing in
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state secrets.
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``The crown of Callow has already made known its concerns regarding
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Procer's continued custody of the corpse of an angel,'' Vivienne said,
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leading the offensive. ``After today, the dangers of continuing down
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that path should be even clearer.''
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Not what Hasenbach wanted to hear, I saw on her face -- practiced a
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diplomat as she was, she'd spent too much time around me. Enough I'd
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learned some of her tricks, and that' pleasant yet distant' smile on her
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face tended to come out when she was feeling pressed.
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``Secretary Corrales,'' the First Prince said, ``if you would speak the
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appropriate part from the transcript of the Dead King's words at the end
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of the Salian conference?''
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The tanned man sharply nodded. Idly I noted that Hasenbach had not said
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read and that the man was not looking at any papers. She was fond of
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precision, the First Prince.
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``-\emph{and it will tell you, should you be clever enough, of the doom
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you all so narrowly escaped by the grace of Kairos Theodosian},'' the
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secretary quoted.
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``Thank you,'' Cordelia smiled. ``Now, should we take the Hidden Horror
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at his word then there seems to be different trouble here than the risks
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inherent to the Principate's possession of a large-scale defensive
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weapon.''
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Hasenbach wasn't a fool, much as her insistence to keep the corpse still
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angered me. It wasn't like I didn't understand the temptation of keeping
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the angelic weapon around. She'd only seriously consider using it if the
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Grand Alliance were already collapsing, anyhow, so from her perspective
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there really wasn't anything to lose in keeping it except some unease
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from my camp. It was a card up her sleeve in case the night got too dark
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for the dawn to pierce through, and unlike Named and coalition armies it
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was also something she had complete control over. No one would be
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pulling that trigger without her say-so, at least in theory. That had to
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be reassuring, considering that in practice Cordelia Hasenbach was
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sharing the reins over the war that would decide the survival of her
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nation with more people than any ruler would like.
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My issue with this whole blunder had previously been that doomsday
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weapons were disaster magnets no one could ever really control -- and
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were prone to backfiring massively -- but with Zeze's words there was
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fresh unease to add to the brew. A weapon that answered to someone else
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first was best snapped over your knee.
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``The Dead King implied that Kairos spared us something,'' I agreed,
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``which fits with the end of the Salian Peace. The angelic remains
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dredged up are allegedly from one of the Seraphim-''
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``They are,'' Hanno flatly said. ``You may take my word on it.''
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This might be a tad of a sensitive subject for the Sword of Judgement, I
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thought, but there weren't ways to tiptoe around it that I could see.
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``I will,'' I agreeably replied. ``So we've got a Seraphim corpse and a
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confirmation that the Intercessor can affect angels. The Tyrant of
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Helike then masterminds the Hierarch rising to\ldots{} obstruct the
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Choir of Judgement, so to speak, and in the wake of that the Dead King
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speaks of us being spared doom by Kairos Theodosian's actions. The
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picture there is pretty clear, as far as I'm concerned.''
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If Cordelia had pulled the trigger on the Judgement corpse before
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Judgement got walled off by Bellerophon's maddest son, the Bard would
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have had a degree of control over what happened. Now, though, the corpse
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could have no tie to the Choir -- even Hanno, its champion on Creation,
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could not get a peep out of them as far as I knew. If Masego was right
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and the Bard worked over angels by screwing with their `senses', then
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the current state of the weapon was a dead end for her. She couldn't
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trick an inanimate object, after all. The Tyrant of Helike had, true to
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form, solved an old headache by leaving us with a fresh one: right now,
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no one had any fucking idea what would actually happen if Cordelia
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pulled the trigger. Gods, but sometimes I wished I'd killed the little
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bastard myself. It'd at least give me something to look back to fondly
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when sill dealing with the fallout of his actions \emph{several years
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after his death}.
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``By the Dead King's own admission, the danger has been averted,'' the
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First Prince noted.
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``Are we now to take the word of the Hidden Horror for truth, Your
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Highness?'' Roland politely asked. ``Let us not pretend the creature
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will not serve its own interests above all.''
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``If the weapon is a threat to the Dead King, his interest is in
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discrediting it,'' the Kingfisher Prince pointed out. ``Which he has
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not, strictly speaking, accomplished here.''
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In the sense that the Bard wouldn't currently be holding the reins, he
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had a point. On the other hand, Neshamah had neatly soured us on the
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Bard with this and further deepened my already deep objections to
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Hasenbach keeping that looming disaster of a weapon around. He'd gotten
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his gains, as he tended to.
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``He hates the Intercessor like poison,'' I said. ``Insofar as he's
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damaging her in our eyes, I'd tend to take him at his word. He's too
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canny of an old thing to try a lie there, there's too many Named in play
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for one of those to actually work for long.''
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The Intercessor herself would delight in revealing the inaccuracies, if
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only to further establish herself as the Dead King's ancient sworn enemy
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that we should all be listening to. After all, if the Hidden Horror was
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going out of his way to discredit her then she \emph{must} be a threat.
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Truth be told, I did believe her to be that. Only to more than just
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Neshamah.
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``Adanna,'' Hanno said, voice clear and calm. ``If the remains of the
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Seraphim were used in a ritual and the Wandering Bard amplified the
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effects as much as she could, what sort of a scale would we be looking
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at?''
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``I am uncertain,'' the Blessed Artificer reluctantly admitted. ``Though
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as a rule, the greater the quantity of Light the simpler the purpose it
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can carry. At a greater than regional scale, harm is likely the sole
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effect that could reliably be had. I do not have the proper references
|
|
to hazard a guess at the scale of propagation.''
|
|
|
|
From the corner of my eye I saw Masego finishing a flourish of the wrist
|
|
with a wooden stylus that's somehow written in dark letters over the
|
|
tabletop. I leaned in closer, glancing at equations that were giving me
|
|
a headache just to try to parse.
|
|
|
|
``Masego?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
He breathed out a little noise of triumph.
|
|
|
|
``The Whitecaps are the limiting factor,'' Hierophant called out.
|
|
``Assuming there is a hard limit to the power a Choir can wield and the
|
|
source would be in central Procer, we are looking at an estimated two
|
|
thirds of Calernia being affected. Rhenia and parts of Hannoven would be
|
|
untouched, up north, while the eastern limit would be the Whitecaps down
|
|
to the Stygian border with Delos. Assuming a dilution effect by large
|
|
bodies of water-''
|
|
|
|
``At such a scale, there would not be,'' the Blessed Artificer told him.
|
|
``A higher threshold of propagation, but that's all.''
|
|
|
|
Masego let out a noise of grudging appreciation.
|
|
|
|
``In that case,'' he continued, ``the city of Levante might be
|
|
unaffected, and the mountainous parts of the Titanomachy would certainly
|
|
be. Everything else would be within range.''
|
|
|
|
``Ashur?'' I faintly asked.
|
|
|
|
He shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``Fifty-fifty odds,'' he admitted. ``The sea is an unpredictable
|
|
boundary.''
|
|
|
|
Utter silence followed in the aftermath of his words. Putting together
|
|
the words of Masego and the Artificer, the picture painted was\ldots{}
|
|
horrifying, for lack of a stronger word. More than nine tenths of Procer
|
|
and Levant dead, the better part of the Free Cities -- including its two
|
|
largest cities, Helike and Nicae -- and \emph{even odds} on the complete
|
|
annihilation of the Thalassocracy. An end to the ratlings, and at the
|
|
moment the Firstborn as well. Callow and Praes would get to hide behind
|
|
the mountains and four of the Free Cities were far enough east to be
|
|
spared, but the sheer loss of life\ldots{} \emph{Fuck}.
|
|
|
|
``It would end the armies of the Dead King as well,'' the Blessed
|
|
Artificer quietly said. ``And most likely destroy the Hellgate in
|
|
Keter.''
|
|
|
|
At the cost of what, two thirds of the population of Calernia? The
|
|
Dominion wasn't densely populated, but Procer sure as Hells was and the
|
|
Free \emph{Cities} were aptly named. No wonder the Hidden Horror had
|
|
believed everyone would turn on the Bard after learning this.
|
|
|
|
``Removing the hard limit in power, the Whitecaps will eventually be
|
|
vaporized and we're looking at full saturation of the continent,''
|
|
Masego noted. ``Including through the ground into the Kingdom Under,
|
|
though that will take up to days longer.''
|
|
|
|
``Even under your limited model the crater in central Procer is likely
|
|
to touch dwarven tunnels,'' the Blessed Artificer condescendingly said,
|
|
``and they'd be looking at the loss of a few principalities' worth of
|
|
territory as well.''
|
|
|
|
Ah, I thought with fixed smile on my face, would you look at that.
|
|
They'd actually made it worse, which I'd doubted was possible. Now we
|
|
also had to worry about the dwarves considering the weapon a threat and
|
|
deciding to strike first.
|
|
|
|
``Merciless Gods, Hasenbach,'' I feelingly said. ``How much more will it
|
|
take to convince you to drop that fucking thing at the bottom of the
|
|
Skiron Ocean?''
|
|
|
|
``The Kingdom of Callow has \emph{grave} concerns about the keeping of
|
|
such a potentially calamitous weapon,'' Vivienne said, translating my
|
|
words into something more diplomatic.
|
|
|
|
``Much of what was said here is speculation,'' the First Prince mildly
|
|
replied. ``And even this speculation points to the risk having passed.''
|
|
|
|
``If a proper method to wield the remains is created, it is the sort of
|
|
weapon that could win us this war,'' the Blessed Artificer agreed.
|
|
|
|
``Or it could kill us all,'' the Rogue Sorcerer gently reminded her.
|
|
|
|
``You have personally patronized the Quartered Seasons weapon, Queen
|
|
Catherine,'' Cordelia reminded me. ``Which carries great risks as well,
|
|
to my recollection.''
|
|
|
|
``I've limited information on it, but it's ultimately a Grand Alliance
|
|
initiative and not a purely Callowan one,'' I replied. ``I've been
|
|
preparing the results for perusal, as a matter of fact, now that
|
|
tangible progress has been made. I can't say the same about that corpse
|
|
you're dragging around.''
|
|
|
|
``Then your issue is the lack of Callowan observers, not the weapon
|
|
itself,'' the First Prince said.
|
|
|
|
My brow rose. This kind of wordplay might be useful in a place like the
|
|
Highest Assembly, where appearances were everything and such little
|
|
victories counted, but she ought to know better than to try to finagle
|
|
me. I was in no way above using a bloody hatchet where a stiletto failed
|
|
to get the point across.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I bluntly said. ``My issue is with anyone' possession of a
|
|
weapon that could potentially wipe out two thirds of Calernia. There's
|
|
no equivalence to be drawn there, First Prince. If Quartered Seasons
|
|
goes wrong it'll be a disaster, but a \emph{survivable} one. Your
|
|
`large-scale defensive weapon' is a blade put to the throat of millions,
|
|
and I did not torch such a weapon in Praesi hands only to meekly accept
|
|
your keeping the same.''
|
|
|
|
A bit of an exaggeration there, since Black had been the one to destroy
|
|
Liesse while I'd actually been inclined to side with Malicia in the heat
|
|
of the moment, but it wasn't like anyone else here \emph{knew} that.
|
|
Blue eyes stayed on me as Hasenbach attempted to gauge how serious I was
|
|
being, and I hid nothing: this was genuinely unacceptable. It'd been a
|
|
liability before, but now it was something a lot worse.
|
|
|
|
``We have gone far beyond the remit of this council,'' the First Prince
|
|
eventually said. ``If there are grievances to be had, there are
|
|
mechanisms to address them under the treaties binding the Grand
|
|
Alliance.''
|
|
|
|
My eyes narrowed. The diplomatic thing here would have been implying it
|
|
was up for negotiation before brushing me off, opening the path for
|
|
later private talks if she wasn't willing to hash this out in the open
|
|
here. The First Prince had \emph{not} done that. She was sending the
|
|
message there wasn't room for compromise there, and coming from a
|
|
diplomat of her calibre that surprised me. What was driving her to keep
|
|
her finger on that trigger at all costs? I glanced at the White Knight
|
|
and found him looking remote, almost absent-minded. Whether it was
|
|
because Judgement had been spoken of or because he saw the disputes of
|
|
crown as beyond him, I could not be certain. Either way it was less than
|
|
helpful.
|
|
|
|
``It might allay some unease if specialists were allowed to take a look
|
|
at this weapon and ascertain its possible effects,'' Vivienne suggested.
|
|
|
|
A fair suggestion, I thought, but not a tempting one for Procer. In our
|
|
case said specialist would be Masego, which I somehow doubted they would
|
|
go for. They weren't idiots, they had to know that letting the
|
|
Hierophant riffle through anything miraculous was as good as allowing
|
|
him to shut it down at will.
|
|
|
|
``Something to discuss under different circumstances, Lady Dartwick,''
|
|
the First Prince politely replied.
|
|
|
|
Huh. Really not giving even the shadow of an inch, was she?
|
|
|
|
``White Knight?'' I tried.
|
|
|
|
If he wasn't going to step in by himself, I'd drag him into the melee by
|
|
the scruff of the neck.
|
|
|
|
``It would be unwise to further debate this without having sought more
|
|
information,'' Hanno eventually said. ``This council has served its
|
|
purpose, I believe, and need not be further prolonged.''
|
|
|
|
I hid my displeasure. Not what I'd wanted to hear, though I supposed it
|
|
was much like him to keep silent until he'd dug through enough memories
|
|
he had a better idea of what he was dealing with. The White Knight
|
|
disliked rushing to decision when there were still cards yet to be
|
|
revealed. Though he didn't show it, I suspected he was a lot warier of
|
|
making mistakes now that the Seraphim were no longer looking over his
|
|
shoulder. With both Hasenbach and Hanno supporting this all coming to an
|
|
end there was little point in pursuing the opposite, so I folded and we
|
|
called the meeting to an end. The First Prince caught my eye as we began
|
|
to disperse, however, and her secretary passed along an invitation to
|
|
walk with her a span. Before long we were sharing a stretch of hallway
|
|
between my limp and her measured stride, Vivienne and the Kingfisher
|
|
Prince trailing behind us.
|
|
|
|
``I have concerns,'' the First Prince told me with unusual
|
|
forthrightness.
|
|
|
|
For her to drop the more elegant methods she preferred, they had to be
|
|
some pretty dire fucking concerns.
|
|
|
|
``You've heard mine,'' I said, frowning. ``I'm all ears for yours.''
|
|
|
|
``The Truce and Terms are proving to be highly unstable,'' Cordelia
|
|
Hasenbach said. ``An uncomfortable number of collaborators were found by
|
|
the Intercessor among both Chosen and Damned, and now the White Knight
|
|
himself was mutilated by one of his subordinates. I am forced to wonder
|
|
if these trials are not simply the act of gilding a sinking boat.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Fuck}, I thought. All this time I'd been worried about keeping my
|
|
villains in line and Hanno's lot from stepping on mine, but I'd not
|
|
stopped to think about how the Principate would see it all. Hasenbach
|
|
was still being asked to ignore attempted regicide of one of her princes
|
|
so that the authority of increasingly bloodied Terms might be preserved.
|
|
The more their credibility was damaged by little things like the Mirror
|
|
Knight cutting up a high officer of the Grand Alliance, the less she'd
|
|
be inclined to bend her neck. I studied her from the corner of my eye.
|
|
Given how useful Named still were to the fronts, she was exaggerating to
|
|
some extent there. Even if the Terms had been much worse, from a
|
|
pragmatic perspective they'd still be a net advantage when it came to
|
|
survival -- and that was the way Hasenbach had to think, right now. She
|
|
was drawing my attention to this to make a point elsewhere.
|
|
|
|
Considering what we'd just finished having a council about, it was not
|
|
hard to guess.
|
|
|
|
``There are some matters that can be gambled with,'' I slowly said.
|
|
``There are others where the simple act of implying a gaming mood loses
|
|
trust in a way that cannot be mended.''
|
|
|
|
I would not haggle over the custody of the doomsday corpse, not when
|
|
it'd been made clear that there might be millions of lives hanging in
|
|
the balance.
|
|
|
|
``I will not allow policy to be dictated by pissing matches among Named,
|
|
Queen Catherine,'' Cordelia Hasenbach coolly said.
|
|
|
|
It was the crudest thing I'd ever heard come out of her mouth, and that
|
|
was enough to give me pause.
|
|
|
|
``The coming trials will clarify whether Chosen and Damned can be
|
|
trusted to oversee themselves,'' the First Prince of Procer warned.
|
|
``And if your kind proves to be running wild unchecked, Black Queen, if
|
|
they cannot be counted on?''
|
|
|
|
She met my eyes.
|
|
|
|
``Then the Principate will do what it must to survive, no matter whose
|
|
feathers it ruffles. On that point there can be no negotiation.''
|