663 lines
31 KiB
TeX
663 lines
31 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-42-castigation}{%
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\chapter{Castigation}\label{chapter-42-castigation}}
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\epigraph{``Do not look down on fear, my friend: it is the rare case of a
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voice in your head actually helpful to your survival.''}{Dread Empress Prudence, the `Frequently Vanquished'}
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I'd seen some profoundly beautiful things over the years. I sometimes
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liked to remind myself of that when the bad days came. I'd seen the
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first breaths of Liesse reborn under twilight, the peace born of a good
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man's sacrifice. I'd walked the ancient cities of the Everdark, where
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flowers lit up the dark and poetry paved the streets as a riot of
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colours claimed the rooftops. I'd been hosted in the finest palaces of
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Salia, felt a storm sweep over me from the heights of the Tower and
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strolled through the mad bazaar at the heart of Skade. I'd even glimpsed
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the last glory days of Sephirah, before death came for it. I'd seen
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wonders enough to fill two lifetimes, and perhaps before I died I might
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see yet a few more. It felt good to remember that, to believe that.
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But I'd known terrors the likes of which few could fathom, too, and it
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was those I would be calling on for this kind of work.
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There was no lack of them to draw from. Black had preferred. I recalled,
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to use fear as a watchman's cudgel: sparingly, measuredly, and always
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bluntly. He'd seen it as a tool, and not a particularly good one. But
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while my father had been my first teacher, he'd not been the only one.
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I'd learned from the Empress and the Diabolist, exemplars of the most
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horrifying Wasteland virtues, and then from even harsher creatures. The
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King of Winter and his patient, farsighted cruelties. Shrouded Sve Noc,
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a godhead born of fear and blood and kept hallowed through the same.
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Even the Dead King had, in his own way, been a teacher: you could not
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fight such a monster as long as I had without learning some of its ways.
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And so, honouring those many tutelages, I set to crafting horror.
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I began with the smell.
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Death had a particular reek to it. It came to the aftermath of battles
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along with the rest of the carrion, that stench of blood and shit and
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steel -- with the rotting of flesh never far behind, even as the crows
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gobbled up the dead and flies burrowed into the flesh. I drew from the
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Doom, from the Battle of the Camps, but it wouldn't be enough. Death
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come to a city wasn't quite the same, even before stone and flesh began
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to burn green. A hint of the Hierarch's madness spread through the
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streets of Rochelant, red hate bleeding out of every pore, and more from
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the burning blaze of green that'd begun at my very feet and devoured a
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fourth of Summerholm. All this I wove together and made my own, then
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slipped into the sleeping mind of Ambassador Livia Murena.
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Her sleeping self sunk into the dark and gave me my opening: a glimpse
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of the winding streets and beautiful avenues of Mercantis. Night
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coursing through my veins like a river, eyes closed as I cut myself off
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from my senses and skimmed around the edge of the wards protecting the
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ambassador just the way Hierophant had taught me, I smiled and sunk my
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teeth into the older woman.
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I began with murder. Livia Murena felt warm blood splash her face as a
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drow in the colours of the Losara opened the throat of a man with an
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obsidian blade. The ambassador screamed and stumbled away, wiping away
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with her hands and finding them soiled red. There was no relief to be
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found away from the drow. She turned the corner into an avenue only to
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find it burning green, legionaries dragging people out of houses and
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butchering them in the streets, eyes cold and hands steady. Livia Murena
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ran, finding a large plaza with a sprawling marble fountain, but painted
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Levantines of the Brigand's Blood were there. Some amused themselves by
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drowning people, holding their heads under the water until the panicked
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scrabbling against the stone died, while others were pulling down a
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great statue with hammers and rope. Livia Murena let out a strangled
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sob, and as she did a painted warrior threw a barbed javelin at her that
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tore through the flesh of her shoulder.
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Bleeding, in pain, she ran again.
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She found only horror. Orcs tearing at the corpses of merchant lords
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with hungry fangs, armoured ogres smashing through villa gates to rip
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apart those huddling behind them, Taghreb and Soninke making bonfires of
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paintings and tapestries to roast the loot they'd ripped out of pantries
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over the corpses of their owners. Goblins made servants race only to
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shoot them in the back with crossbows, the drow blinded the young and
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let them bleed out screaming, jeering Callowans dragged entire families
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to the gallows to hang. Livia Murena wept but kept running until she
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found a tall house. Hers, I intuited, but it was not the house she
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sought. A wife, and though the face did not come to my mind's eye long
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blonde tresses and fair skin did. It was enough.
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Green flames and heavy smoked filled the halls of Livia Murena's home as
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she raced through them and up, up the stairs and at the end of a
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too-long hallways where finally her great bedroom could be found. Relief
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as she found her wife standing there, besides the great canopy bed.
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\emph{Cassia}, she exclaimed. With a crisp, resonating twang a coin went
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spinning. Livia Murena's eyes went to it, spellbound, watched it rise
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and fall and land onto the open palm of the Black Queen, who had been
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sitting in the dark. The coin, shining gold, had landed on the side
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showing crossed swords.
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``Do you believe in fate, Ambassador Livia?'' I asked.
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And before she could answer, her wife burned green. I drew on the
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screams from Three Hills, for that. I remembered those well. Cassia
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screamed and screamed and \emph{screamed}, until mercifully she died. I
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met Livia Murena's eyes and smiled, thin and sharp like a blade slid
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between the ribs.
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``Not the right answer,'' I told her. ``Let us go again.''
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And we did.
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Mercantis was put to the sword and the coin showed swords and Cassia
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burned.
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``Not the right answer,'' I told the weeping ambassador. ``Let us go
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again.''
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And we did.
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And we did.
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And we did.
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Nott until dawn did I let her learn the lesson this had been meant to
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convey. Cassia burned, the screaming having grown more vivid as the
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sleeping ambassador filled the gaps, and Livia wept exhaustedly as she
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fell on her knees. Like an old friend I leaned forward, offering a
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girlishly mischievous smile.
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``Fate's a trick, Livia,'' I told her, and showed her the coin.
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It had the crossed swords on both sides.
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``The only way not to fall for it,'' I said, gently smiling, ``is not to
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flip the coin at all.''
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I left her dreams alone, after that, but she slept not a wink anyway.
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---
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I was in Hakram's infirmary room more often than my own quarters, or the
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offices made available to me -- I'd pretty much handed those over to
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Vivienne -- so it was there that messengers came to find me. It was the
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same with Archer, when she returned from the little errand I'd sent her
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on. I dipped my bread in the warm potage that was to be my morning meal,
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cocking an eyebrow at my friend.
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``So?''
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``Didn't drive her mad,'' Indrani replied, settling into the seat by my
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side, ``but I'd bet it was a close thing.''
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I popped the bread into my mouth and chewed on my mouthful thoughtfully.
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I'd walked the line just fine, then. If I kept doing this for too long
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I'd probably break the ambassador, which wasn't the objective here, but
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I wanted at least one more night of this. Once could be dismissed as a
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fluke, but twice? Twice was a warning.
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``What'd she look like?'' I asked when I'd swallowed.
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``Exhausted and twitchy,'' Indrani said. ``You really didn't pull your
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punches there.''
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``She needs to be more scared of me than she is of Malicia,'' I replied,
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``and if we're to get through this without Mercantis trying to blackmail
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the Grand Alliance, then I need that fear deep enough in the bone that
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they know \emph{exactly} what the consequences of that would be.''
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``Hey,'' Archer shrugged, ``you know me -- I could care less if you want
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to turn the lot of them into gibbering wrecks. I'm just surprised it's
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the two of us alone having this conversation, I guess.''
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I threw her an unimpressed look. That had been less than subtle.
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``If you have something to say, say it,'' I told her.
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She sighed, passing a hand through her long dark hair. Unbound, today,
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and a little messy. It suited her.
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``You been fighting with Vivienne?'' she asked.
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My fingers clenched. She noticed it, unpleasantly perceptive as she was.
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``So that's a yes,'' Archer mused. ``I'd ask you if you want to talk
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about it, but I don't think you've ever actually answered that question
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with a yes in your life.''
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``That's pretty rich, coming from you,'' I flatly said.
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Our last tense heart to heart had required half a fistfight to get
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started. She looked more amused than offended, waving the reply away.
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``Sort that shit out, Cat,'' Indrani said. ``I won't try to use sweet
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reason with you, because Gods know the odds on that are steep-''
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``\emph{Hey},'' I reproached.
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``- but her sister cold-hearted logic will do,'' Indrani blithely
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continued. ``It's too late for you to dismiss Vivienne from her place as
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your heiress: she's got support, and when it comes to us she knows where
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a lot of bodies are buried. So if you won't talk to her because she's
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your friend and you're being pissy for things not really her fault, then
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at least do it because otherwise you're being a pretty terrible queen.''
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I grimaced. Archer didn't really care about Callow except maybe in the
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sense that a lot of her stuff was there and it'd affect some people she
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cared about if it got destroyed, but that didn't mean she was unaware it
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was good angle to take with me. She wasn't wrong, at least, that I
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couldn't just let this go forever.
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``I don't like that I have to do things, now,'' I admitted.
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Indrani's brow rose. I snorted.
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``I mean that, when we disagree, I have to compromise with her now,'' I
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explained. ``Not always, and not on everything, but it still irks that I
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have to do it at all. I gave her the title in the first place, and
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`Drani it's not that I think she'd done badly with it, on the
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contrary-''
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``But she's got power of her own now,'' Archer finished. ``And she
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doesn't always agree with you.''
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``I can't just tell her to fuck off either, when we disagree,'' I
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tiredly said. ``If I do that in public she'll lose a lot of support in
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the Army of Callow, and if she loses the Army there's a lot less
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dissuading nobles from taking a swing at the crown down the line.''
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It wouldn't be a sure thing, and I was doing my best to polish her
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military record so that she'd have some reputation with the soldiers,
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but at the end of the day Vivienne just didn't get on with them the way
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that I did. On occasion I'd taken some petty satisfaction in that, given
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how the nobility made no qualms of its preference for her and more
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people back home that I was comfortable with shared that opinion, but it
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was a hollow thing to embrace. After putting her in that position in the
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first place, how much of a prick would I have to be to relish her
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difficulties? It wasn't a minor matter, either. There weren't Dartwick
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household troops for Vivienne to call on, she had no personal holdings
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and most noble forces had either been abolished with their titles or
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curtailed under Imperial law. Within Callow, after the war it would the
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army Juniper and I had built that'd stand as the largest amount of
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people with swords.
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My banner had the sword weighing more than the crown on the balance for
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a reason.
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``I bet it's like a burr in your boot that some of the folk back home
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like her better now,'' Indrani knowingly said.
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I breathed out, keeping my face calm.
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``I'm starting to get tired of hearing that,'' I evenly said.
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She squinted at me.
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``Yeah, that's about the face you would have made,'' Archer said. ``And
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Viv's never been great at handling your moods, so now you two fine
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ladies are in snit. Lovely.''
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``It'll pass,'' I grunted.
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``It'll pass when you have a drink with her and you spell it out,''
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Indrani said. ``But you already know that, Cat, you just don't want to
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do it. I'm guessing you'll get to it once you're done tripping over the
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pride you keep claiming you don't have.''
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I flipped her off, but without much heat, and she took it in stride.
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``Go find out what the Mercantis delegation will do to proper up their
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defences after tonight,'' I said, having tired of this conversation the
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moment it began. ``I want to know as soon as possible so I'll know how
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to get around it.''
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Another night of this, maybe two, and then I'd be ready for the talks.
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Even as she left, I began to consider the shape of the nightmare that
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would plague Livia Murena tonight.
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It was not going to be any more pleasant that the last.
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---
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I'd let Hasenbach pick the room where, at long last, the diplomats would
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get their meeting.
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I went to visit it beforehand though, to have a look at what I'd be
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working with. It was yet another hall from the seemingly endless supply
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of them the Arsenal had to offer, though this one was clearly not meant
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for meals. Multiple tables facing each other in half-circles, enough
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room between for servants to pass and no less than six ways in -- as
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much for refreshments as the fetching of documents, I figured. Well lit,
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but with chandeliers and mage lights. I could work my way around both of
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those, I knew the tricks. It would do. I'd need to strike the right tone
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from the start, though. Come in alone and with not a thing in hand, when
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they'd be laden with attendants and papers.
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I trailed a hand atop the smooth surface of the table, enjoying the
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grain of the wood, and frowned in thought. Ambassador Livia had only
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gone though another night of my tender attentions before I -- Archer --
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had judged her to be on the ragged edge. Not a faint-hearted sort, that
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one, but I suspected a great deal more used to doling out cruelty than
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suffering it. Part of me wanted to throw in another night just to be
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sure, but there would be risks to that: the protective amulets the
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ambassador had worn after the first time might not have been a match for
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Night paired with the Hierophant's eyes, but if the Mercantians asked
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for heroic protection this would get trickier. No, best to end it here.
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Today, this very evening.
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I napped through most of the afternoon, as using Night had been less
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than restful, and woke less than half a bell before we were due to hold
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the meeting. The clothes I was to wear were only of middling import, a
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simple grey tunic and matching trousers, but I made sure to wrap around
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myself the patchwork banners of the Mantle of Woe and set a jagged iron
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crown on my brow. With the last errand I'd asked of Indrani tucked away
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into my pocket and my dead staff of yew in my hand I limped to our
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appointed time, though with careful timing so that I would be the last
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to arrive. Not so late that it would be remarked upon, but just enough
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to be mildly insulting. The doors were opened for me by attendants, and
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even as my name and titles were announced I flicked an assessing glance
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at the people within.
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That Cordelia Hasenbach had brought a number of scholars and secretaries
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was nothing unusual, but that she'd brought a full fifteen people with
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her \emph{was}. She must have pieced together that she'd be handling the
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actual negotiations here mostly on her own. My gaze did not linger on
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them, instead moving to the delegation from Mercantis. Ambassador Livia
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Murena was easy to pick out from the rest: she sat at the centre, and
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her ostentatious gold and ivory chain of office was hard to miss. On the
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ivory medallion at the end of it thirty silver coins had been carved,
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the ancient crest of the merchant lords of the Consortium. Seven golden
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braids hung from her left shoulder, over a robe of deep blue silk that
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made it plain the ambassador was overweight.
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Most of the diplomats were as well, for fat was considered a sign of
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wealth and power among the merchant lords of Mercantis. All wore blue
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silk and the seven braids denoting that they were here on the behalf of
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both Merchant Prince Fabianus and the Consortium itself -- the prince's
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business could carry three braids of gold, and the Consortium's seven in
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silver, but only both in agreement could command the seven golden
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stripes -- but for all the riot of bracelets and rings dripping from
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their arms and ears laden with and precious stones, no one save
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Ambassador wore anything around the neck. Each diplomat had an attendant
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standing behind them, all of them young and beautiful and utterly still.
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Mercantis did not practice slavery, it was said. Of the Free Cities,
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only Stygia still kept to that horror.
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Yet Indrani had been raised a slave there, and called such, though no
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doubt if pressed her owner would have had papers proving it was mere
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bonded service. All very legal, nothing at all like \emph{slavery}. That
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was the trick, you see: the `servants' began with the debt of the sum it
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had cost to acquire them, and though they were paid for their work the
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roof and food they were provided cost them money. The debt increased,
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and the service continued until death -- and then was passed onto
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children, for debts always carried in Mercantis. I kept that knowledge
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in mind, looking at the dark rings around Ambassador Livia's pale brown
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eyes that cosmetics did not quite manage to hide, and found that guilt
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never came for the torturous horror I'd put this woman through.
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I'd done worse to people a great deal less deserving.
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``Queen Catherine,'' the First Prince greeted me amiably. ``I am glad of
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your presence.''
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``Your Majesty,'' Ambassador Livia said, tone even, ``we are-''
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``Let's wrap this up quickly, Your Highness,'' I interrupted, looking at
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Cordelia. ``There's a war on, in case you forgot.''
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The ambassador was well-trained, so she did not betray her offence at
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the casually offered insult. It wouldn't be the first I'd thrown her way
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since this started.
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``I assure you, Your Majesty, that I have not,'' the First Prince
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replied, eyebrows rising the faintest bit.
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A warning to tone this down? No, I decided after a moment. She would
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have had other ways to reach me if restraint were called for. I slid
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into the seat at the edge of the part of the half-circle kept empty for
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myself and my delegation, seeing from the corner of my eye the dismay
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that flickered across some Mercantian faces when they realized I had
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come alone. That was not the mark of someone taking all this seriously.
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I drew lightly on the Night, softly, and wove a thread that slipped into
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the shadows beneath the table and to the side. It remained hidden,
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waiting. I leaned back into my seat, looking impatient, and waited for
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someone to speak.
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``I must protest the insults you keep offering us, Queen Catherine,''
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Ambassador Livia said. ``Has the Consortium not been a generous and
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understanding ally? What have we done to earn such treatment?''
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This was the part, I thought, where I was supposed to demur and weave
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and bob and all those little diplomatic dances. So we could keep talking
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in precise truths and pretty lies, keep this all civilized as we tried
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to a war of words just as dangerous as one of steel. I did not bother.
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``Either you genuinely don't know the answer to that question,'' I said,
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``and speaking with you is a waste of time. Or you \emph{do} know the
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answer to that question, and you are \emph{still} wasting my time. Which
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is it, Ambassador Livia?''
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Her face tightened for the barest fraction of a moment before going
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almost unnaturally slack. That one had stung, huh. I glanced at the
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First Prince, whose face was the very definition of polite serenity.
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``Is this serious?'' I asked.
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``It is, Queen Catherine,'' Cordelia amiably replied, then half-glanced
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at the diplomats. ``Though perhaps we should see to the purpose of this
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meeting, given the demands made by circumstance on all our hours.''
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Under the table, she traced with a finger a \emph{Y} against the Night.
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\emph{Yes}, it meant. I was not to keep pushing them, she wanted this to
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advance.
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``That would suit as well,'' the man to the ambassador's side smoothly
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said. ``If there are no further objections?''
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An expectant gaze went to me. Ambassador Livia had regained her calm on
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more than a surface level, so it was her I replied to.
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``By all means,'' I drily said. ``The suspense has me all atwitter.''
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``Given information recently acquired by the Consortium, it has become
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necessary to revisit the matter of the loans extended to the Grand
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Alliance,'' the ambassador said.
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\emph{N}, Hasenbach's fingers traced against the table. I pushed back my
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chair and rose to my feet.
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``There are no such loans,'' I flatly said. ``As Lord Yannu Marave made
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exceedingly clear, I believe. This meeting is at an end.''
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She looked, to my faint amusement, genuinely surprised. For career
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|
diplomats, they really weren't catching on to this game quick. It wasn't
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|
that they were fools, I thought, but simply that they weren't used to so
|
|
bluntly being \emph{dismissed}. Mercantis might not be a power in the
|
|
leagues of Praes or Procer, but it'd always been influential -- and when
|
|
crossed, it was not above spending coin to make its displeasure known.
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|
``Perhaps the honourable ambassador refers to the loans extended to the
|
|
Principate and its constituent principalities,'' the First Prince mildly
|
|
said. ``I am sure the unfortunate wording will be rectified, Queen
|
|
Catherine, if you give the ambassador opportunity to do so.''
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I cocked a brow at the ambassador.
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``We did not mean to imply that the Kingdom of Callow is indebted to the
|
|
Consortium, Your Majesty,'' Livia Murena lied. ``My apologies for the
|
|
misunderstanding.''
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|
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|
Barely refraining from rolling my eyes, I settled back into the seat.
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|
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|
``As was mentioned by our esteemed ambassador,'' the man at Livia's side
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said, pouty red lips offering up a smile, ``the Consortium has learned
|
|
of the particulars of Proceran debt. Given the almost\ldots{} reckless
|
|
borrowing practices that were used, doubts have been raised as to the
|
|
capacity of the Principate of Procer to repay these debts.''
|
|
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|
``Gods Below and Everburning,'' I said, tone openly contemptuous. ``You
|
|
really are going to insist on being the Tower's borrowed knife, aren't
|
|
you? No matter how many people warned me, I'd genuinely not believed
|
|
that the Consortium would make that glaring a blunder.''
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|
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|
``A hollow accusation,'' Ambassador Livia replied. ``And one thrown very
|
|
carelessly, I might add. There are limits to our tolerance, Queen
|
|
Catherine.''
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|
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|
\emph{Y}, Cordelia wrote. I changed course, snorting in feigned
|
|
amusement.
|
|
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|
``You know what?'' I mused, ``Maybe you're right. I just \emph{assumed}
|
|
that you lot are going to try something as hilariously ill-advised as
|
|
attempting to coerce an alliance that commands more soldiers on a single
|
|
front than there are people in all of Mercantis. That was premature of
|
|
me. Go on, then. Speak.''
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|
|
|
I thinly smiled.
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|
|
|
``Prove me wrong,'' I said.
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|
|
|
There was a beat of silence.
|
|
|
|
``We recognize the heroic contributions made by the Grand Alliance, and
|
|
Procer in particular, to the safety of all Calernia,'' Ambassador Livia
|
|
said. ``It is why we have been so willing to extend loans, and at rates
|
|
with little precedent. The Consortium will continue to support the war
|
|
effort however it can, rest assured that this is not in doubt.''
|
|
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|
``That is most pleasing to hear,'' Cordelia mildly said. ``His Grace
|
|
Fabianus has reconsidered my request to expel the Praesi embassy,
|
|
then?''
|
|
|
|
I smothered a grin. She had them there, considering Malicia was the Dead
|
|
King's open -- if rather lethargic -- ally.
|
|
|
|
``The high court of the Consortium is debating such a measure, Your
|
|
Highness,'' Ambassador Livia smiled.
|
|
|
|
``Indeed,'' Cordelia Hasenbach smiled back, just as pleasantly, ``yet I
|
|
recall hearing the debate was to be set aside indefinitely. Has this
|
|
measure been revoked?''
|
|
|
|
``That is quite possible,'' the ambassador evaded. ``Given the length of
|
|
our journey here, our news are grown quite out of date.''
|
|
|
|
``You were leading up to a `but', Ambassador,'' I said. ``Do get on with
|
|
it, instead of insulting the intelligence of everyone in this room.''
|
|
|
|
``While the Consortium remains firmly behind the war effort,''
|
|
Ambassador Livia said, tone aggressively calm, ``given the financial
|
|
troubles of the Principate and its extensive amount of loans it has been
|
|
suggested that assurances must be sought. Else a collapse of Proceran
|
|
commerce could feasibly, in the coming years, bankrupt Mercantis
|
|
itself.''
|
|
|
|
``A reasonable worry,'' the fair-haired princess replied. ``I have
|
|
pondered this issue myself, as it happens. The Highest Assembly is
|
|
willing to sign a treaty guaranteeing a set portion of the taxes
|
|
collected by the office of First Prince until the debts are settled.
|
|
Would such an assurance be acceptable to you?''
|
|
|
|
Promising coin that had yet to be collected, huh. I supposed that was
|
|
one way to make up for lack of revenue. Mind you, if Cordelia's
|
|
eventually successor refused to pay up there honestly wasn't that much
|
|
that the Consortium would be able to do about it. \emph{Unless the
|
|
treaty is guaranteed by the Grand Alliance itself}, I thought, and
|
|
glanced at Hasenbach. Even the most firebrand of First Princes would
|
|
hesitate at antagonizing its two most powerful allies in such a way.
|
|
\emph{Canny woman}, I thought, not without fondness. It wasn't like
|
|
myself or the Dominion would refuse to be guarantors of this: it'd give
|
|
us some leverage over Procer after the war, which given how short-lived
|
|
Proceran gratitude tended to be would prove most welcome.
|
|
|
|
Somehow I doubted it was a coincidence that this arrangement would end
|
|
up soothing some of the lingering fears about Procer belonging to the
|
|
two nations Hasenbach wanted to keep as close allies. Circles within
|
|
circles within circles, with this one.
|
|
|
|
``It would go some way in abating worries, Your Most Serene Highness,''
|
|
Ambassador Livia replied, ``yet to invest more coin into the war, the
|
|
Consortium seeks more practical dividends.''
|
|
|
|
Ah, and there we were. Her eyes went to me but did not linger. She never
|
|
looked at me for long, I was beginning to notice. Even when she was
|
|
talking to me. The nightmares had left a mark, as they were meant to.
|
|
|
|
``It has come to the attention of Mercantis that plans are being drawn
|
|
for a city to be raised at the heart of the Red Flower Vales,'' the
|
|
diplomat with the pale brown eyes said. ``Cardinal, is it not?''
|
|
|
|
I drummed my fingers against the tabletop in open impatience.
|
|
|
|
``We recognize such a city for the opportunity it is,'' Ambassador Livia
|
|
said. ``And so in place of further loans, the Consortium seeks instead
|
|
to purchase monopolies on the trading of certain goods in Cardinal.''
|
|
|
|
I cocked my head to the side. Huh. That was cleverer than what I'd been
|
|
expecting, actually. They had to know that purchasing land ceded by
|
|
Callow and Procer was not a suggestion that'd go over well, but
|
|
monopolies over trade that did not yet exist was another story. By
|
|
putting up gold now they could get a stranglehold on certain kinds of
|
|
trade down the line, effectively pushing out any competition by being
|
|
the sole providers for long enough that people would grow used to
|
|
relying on them. It was their old role as middleman made anew, I thought
|
|
with a touch of admiration. The merchant lords were a greedy but they
|
|
were not without wits. This was actually halfway reasonable, as far as
|
|
demands went, which had me rather wary.
|
|
|
|
``And how long would these monopolies be expected to last?'' the First
|
|
Prince asked.
|
|
|
|
``Permanently,'' Ambassador Livia said. ``This would reflected in the
|
|
price offered for them, naturally.''
|
|
|
|
I did not need Cordelia's finger to trace the \emph{N} to know this was
|
|
not to be tolerated. So this was to be the pivot of this little
|
|
adventure. Now they would push, or be pushed.
|
|
|
|
``Mercantis,'' I said, enunciating the word slowly. ``The City of Bought
|
|
and Sold. The most impartial place there is to be had on Calernia, for
|
|
coin is queen and it claims no party.''
|
|
|
|
``A lovely compliment, Your Majesty,'' Ambassador Livia replied, smiling
|
|
like a shark.
|
|
|
|
``Spell it out,'' I said, learning forward. ``What happens, when I laugh
|
|
at this and tell you to crawl back to your island.''
|
|
|
|
I drew on Night. Slowly, quietly. The shadows of the room began to
|
|
lengthen, in the spaces between the glow of the mage lights and the
|
|
chandeliers.
|
|
|
|
``There is no need for such hostility,'' the diplomat said. ``We will
|
|
not withdraw our support for the war effort, as I have said. Yet it
|
|
would be difficult for the Consortium to consider extending further
|
|
loans when it would be courting its own bankruptcy.''
|
|
|
|
Which sounded all nice and reasonable, until you knew what we knew.
|
|
Hasenbach had told me that Malicia was almost certainly aware that
|
|
Procer needed the flow of gold from Mercantis to keep its head above the
|
|
water. Malicia had in turn told at least \emph{some} of these fine
|
|
fellows the piece of information. This had the Empress's touch all over
|
|
it, the more I saw the more it was obvious. As usual, Malicia had played
|
|
to all the angles. Merchants not in the know would not consider ending
|
|
loans to be enemy action, and if the Grand Alliance reacted harshly they
|
|
might turn to the Tower for protection against our perceived tyranny.
|
|
Merchants that were in the know, and there were bound to be a few, would
|
|
consider us to be deep enough in the hole that they could extract
|
|
concessions from us if they didn't push it too far. No doubt the Empress
|
|
had made promises of protection to encourage that perception, and leaked
|
|
information about where our armies were.
|
|
|
|
Very far from Mercantis, the bottom line was.
|
|
|
|
``I'm curious,'' I said. ``You must believe -- I can't understand this,
|
|
otherwise -- that you have the upper hand here. And I have to ask, Gods,
|
|
I really have to ask-''
|
|
|
|
The Night deepened, the light dimmed.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Why?}'' I coldly asked. ``Why is that you think that, exactly?
|
|
Explain it to me.''
|
|
|
|
``No threat has been made, Queen Catherine,'' the ambassador said.
|
|
``Your behaviour is-''
|
|
|
|
``Let me tell you what happens,'' I softly interrupted, ``if you choose
|
|
to become my enemy.''
|
|
|
|
I met Livia Murena's eyes. Darkness deepened around us, and came a faint
|
|
sound like the dying whisper of a scream.
|
|
|
|
``I will not be civilized,'' I gently told her. ``I will not keep to
|
|
laws and treaties, to decency or the milk of human kindness. If you
|
|
become the tool of a woman who has allied herself with the King of
|
|
Death, if you \emph{willingly} make that choice, then I will visit a
|
|
ruin on you that will still haunt the sleep of men in a hundred years.''
|
|
|
|
She looked away, towards the First Prince.
|
|
|
|
``Your Highness-''
|
|
|
|
``Don't look at her,'' I said. ``It won't help. She can't stop me, and
|
|
she doesn't particularly want to.''
|
|
|
|
The ambassador's pudgy fingers tightened around her chain of office and
|
|
she turned back to me, gathering her courage, but my hands had slipped
|
|
in the pocket where I had stowed away my last surprise.
|
|
|
|
``Do you believe in fate, Ambassador Livia?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
She did not answer, eyes fixed on the golden coin in my hand. There were
|
|
crossed swords on the side that could be seen. The other woman's
|
|
breathing went uneven, her hands trembled, and still I waited. Sweat
|
|
drenched the back of her neck, smudged the cosmetics on her face, and in
|
|
her eyes I saw reaped the terror that I had sown.
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' Livia Murena hoarsely answered. ``Yes, I do.''
|
|
|
|
``Then let us keep to laws and treaties,'' I said, my smile never
|
|
reaching my eyes. ``To decency and the milk of human kindness.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Or else}, I did not say. She heard it anyway.
|
|
|
|
I did not speak another word for the rest of the meeting, or need to.
|