613 lines
29 KiB
TeX
613 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-51-endwise}{%
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\chapter{Endwise}\label{chapter-51-endwise}}
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\epigraph{``And so Maledicta said: `All the world had denied us, so let it
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all be damned and we with it. This wasteland of our own making, it will
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kill us or we will kill it.'\,''}{Extract from the Scroll of Misfortunes, thirteenth of the Secret
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Histories of Praes}
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Before the Conquest my people's maps of Praes had tended towards
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imprecision when it came to the interior of the Dread Empire, with only
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the western parts well-known to the Old Kingdom and the details of the
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eastern coast usually being cribbed off of Ashuran maps. I'd never dealt
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with that difficulty, as even before my time in the War College had
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given me access to standard Legion maps I'd been given the luxury of
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using Black's own whenever I wished -- though I'd not understood quite
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how much of a gift he was giving me, back then.
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Only when Juniper and I had gotten around to raising the Army of Callow
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had I realized how troublesome it was to get any good maps that weren't
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in noble hands or Legion-made, much less sets as good as those Black had
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kept for Praes and Callow. Back in the day I'd suspected the
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cartographers that were an official part of the Legions -- under the
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Kachera Tribune of any legion's general staff -- weren't the only reason
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my father's charts were so exactingly precise, and now I was getting
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confirmation.
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The leather-bound scroll that Scribe unfolded across the table was no
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larger than a saddle length but I openly lusted for what I saw displayed
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on it: a map of the Dread Empire, showing not only cities towns and
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villages but also the roads and typical regional weather. The last of
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these had been the death of many an incursion into the Wasteland, given
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how centuries of reckless rituals had turned it into a deathtrap of
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sudden storms morphing into burning heat or freezing cold on a whim.
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Gods but I wanted a dozen of these.
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``When we're done with this, we'll be talking about your upcoming
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contributions to my personal map collection,'' I noted.
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She shot me a look, a face I glimpsed to be lightly tanned giving me the
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impression of disconcertment. Had those been brown eyes I saw? Already
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my recollection was fading.
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``Sometimes you do remind me of him,'' she admitted. ``Though nowhere as
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much as some people like to claim.''
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``We've all got some of our teachers in us,'' I shrugged. ``And he's
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been more than just that to me. But I interrupted, my apologies.
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Continue.''
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She nodded, then idly set down painted iron blocks -- regular Army of
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Callow issue for our general staffs, I noted with some chagrin -- on two
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cities: one black and over Ater, one white and over Aksum.
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``On the surface, the situation in the Dead Empire is a classical Praesi
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civil war,'' she said. ``Being waged between empress-claimant Sepulchral
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and empress-regnant Malicia.''
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``You even us the proper terminology,'' Akua said, sounding surprised
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yet pleased.
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I snorted. Yeah, I supposed considering how often someone raised a rebel
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flag in the Wasteland to take a swing at claiming the Tower the Praesi
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would have been forced to develop a very specific vocabulary to address
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the situation. Would have gotten real awkward in conversation otherwise.
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``I have spent longer in Praes than the Free Cities, Sahelian,'' Scribe
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chided. ``Few even remember I was not born of the Wasteland. Your
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preconceptions aside, I was setting out the factional lay of the land.
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Both empresses have, naturally, gathered supporters.''
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A single smaller white block went on the city of Nok, where High Lord
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Dakarai Sahel ruled. Nok was traditionally considered the weakest of the
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High Seats, as the Kebdanas of Thalassina had long been kings of the sea
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trade and dominated overland trade towards Ater even though Nok was
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physically closer. That said, with Thalassina now largely vapour High
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Lord Dakarai now sat atop the only major remaining Praesi seaport. His
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support was no small thing.
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``Hardly a surprise,'' Akua said. ``Dakarai has been looking for a way
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to get a foothold into a reigning coalition for decades. It is a matter
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of pride, for him, and pride matters much to the man. He made sure to
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oppose Mother in public frequently simply to make plain that the Sahel
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origins as a branch family of the Sahelians did not mean she held
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influence over him.''
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The man had never been a friend to Malicia, I recalled, or at least not
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been counted among her supporters. Considering the High Lord of
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Thalassina had been one of her most ardent partisans, there was little
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need for an explanation as to why.
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``It is as tight an alliance as can be had in the Wasteland,'' Scribe
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informed us. ``His daughter Hawulti is now wed to Sepulchral's appointed
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successor to the High Seat of Aksum, her grand-nephew Isoba.''
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\emph{Hawulti Sahel}, I mused. I'd heard that name before, hadn't I? I
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glanced at Hakram in question.
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``She was once one of Heiress' retinue, recalled to her father's side
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after First Liesse,'' he provided.
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``You threatened to have her soul cut out by Lord Masego to coerce her
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father into supporting the establishment of the Ruling Council,'' Akua
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amusedly reminded me.
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I had, hadn't I? It'd been a while. I could hardly recall her face, or
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that of her father's for that matter. I'd only spoken with the man the
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once. I'd also gotten a little more cavalier with souls in the following
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years, so the threat hadn't exactly stuck with me.
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``Someone we should be worried about?'' I asked.
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``Ambitious but cowardly,'' Akua assessed. ``A born follower. Her father
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sent her to me for hardening, as she is the only one of his children to
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be born with the Gift and he favours her for it.''
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That'd be a no, then. Probably why Sepulchral had been willing to twine
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their lines too, which Praesi high nobles were notoriously careful
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about: they hoarded the secrets of their blood most jealously.
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``Malicia's support, as empress-regnant, is significantly stronger,''
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Scribe continued.
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Black blocks went down, one after another. Wolof, where Akua's cousin
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Sargon Sahelian ruled now that her mother was dead. Okoro under High
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Lord Jaheem Niri, which had been a political nonentity in Praes for most
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of my lifetime due to the brutal succession crisis that'd eventually put
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the man on the high seat. Kahtan under High Lady Takisha Muraqib, now
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the last High Seat in the hands of the Taghreb. The Northern Steppes,
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where Malicia had raised the chieftains of three southern clans to the
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office of Lords of the Steppes and charged them with keeping order and
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collecting tributes. And last of all Foramen, where the former Matron
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Wither now ruled as High Lady. Pickler's mother had backstabbed her
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fellow goblins brutally, and gotten an unprecedented title for it.
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``She's also still got most of the Legions,'' I pointed out.
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While maybe half of the former Legions-in-Exile had deserted in the wake
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of the dirty trick that'd brought them home, the forces that'd already
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been in Praes had stayed largely loyal and absorbed the soldiers that
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hadn't deserted. As far as military might went, even if you left noble
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allies out of it Malicia had a larger stick to wield. Sepulchral was
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relying on a kind of army Black had built the modern Legions of Terror
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to beat, too, which was one of the many reasons why she would be
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avoiding giving battle.
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``And that's where it gets complicated, right?'' Archer said, eyeing the
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map with mild interest.
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Wasteland games were no real concern of hers, unless I made them to be
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otherwise, but Indrani did like an occasional spot of theatre and even
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at its worst the Dread Empire tended to deliver on that.
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``Indeed,'' Scribe said. ``The first illusion to discard before the
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situation in Praes can be understood is that there are only two sides in
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the civil war.''
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She set down a small red iron block on the edge of the Green Stretch,
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where thousands of deserters from the Legions-in-Exile had raised
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reportedly raised a great camp.
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``Lord Amadeus' army?'' Adjutant asked, dark eyes watching Scribe
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closely.
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I watched them flick away more than once, no doubt prompted to do so by
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her aspect, but they always found her again. It was the obvious guess,
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now that I was learning more about the situation. Dread Empress
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Sepulchral's ability to outwit the Legions on the march, if not beat
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them, had led many -- including me, once -- to believe that my father
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might be behind her. The way this was being described though, made it
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seem much less likely. Black would have gone for the throat by now, not
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kept maneuvering in this empty stalemate.
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``I'd presumed so as well,'' Scribe admitted. ``But I have found no
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evidence of it. The leaders, General Mok and General Sacker, seem to
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have been acting without orders and out of a degree of genuine disgust
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for Malicia's actions with the control contingencies -- though Sacker,
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at least, has sympathies in the Grey Eyries and rightfully fears being
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killed by Malicia or Sepulchral if she lays down arms.''
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It also meant that leadership of the deserters was nonhuman at the very
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top rung, I mused, since as I recalled General Mok was an ogre. No doubt
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that was making the two Soninke fighting for the right to rule over them
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more than a little wary.
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``Lots of ogres in charge now,'' Indrani mused, narrowing in on the same
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detail. ``Isn't the last Marshal one too?''
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``Marshal Grem is under house arrest in Ater, not dead,'' Scribe
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corrected. ``But you are correct that the commander of Malicia's armies,
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Marshal Nim, is an ogre as well. It is the most influential their kind
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has been in imperial affairs for centuries, if ever.''
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``But there's no black block over the Hall of Skulls,'' I said.
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A grim name for the sole ogre city on Calernia but then they tended to
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be a grim people all around.
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``The ogres are hedging their bets,'' Scribe frankly said. ``As they
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always do. It is why no attempt was made to recall your own General
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Hune. It has historically been their policy as a people to have someone
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already lodged within every side so that they have a foot in the winning
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one, whichever it might be.''
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And I could see how that spared them crackdowns, I thought, but it'd not
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really \emph{paid off} for them either had it? Required military service
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quotas under Malicia and Black had been lower than under Nefarious but
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they'd still existed, and there'd been no major push to increase their
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status as a people within the Empire like there'd been with greenskins.
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Part of that was numbers, since there were so few of them compared to
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the constituent peoples of the Dread Empire, but those alone weren't
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good enough an explanation. Hune had always been bluntly frank with
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about her people being on no one's side because they saw no one as being
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on \emph{their} side.
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``I can understand the deserters making Malicia wary of overextending,''
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I said. ``Explains why there hasn't been a serious attempt to siege
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Aksum yet even though it falling would end Sepulchral. But she should be
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winning this pretty decisively with this many supporters to call on,
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Scribe, so what are we missing?''
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``Her coalition is fragile,'' Akua murmured, ``and at odds with
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itself.''
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Scribe nodded in her direction.
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``Kahtan eyes High Lady Wither, now the last of the Taghreb bastions,
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and begs off committing soldiers to Malicia's war,'' she said. ``High
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Lady Takisha ponders her blood ruling both Kahtan and Foramen, and
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supports Malicia only because Sepulchral has no better offer to make.
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Wither herself is mired in war with the Confederation, while a
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combination of mismanagement and hatred makes the humans under her
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rebellious. There have been riots.''
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Off the map went the blocks for Kahtan and Foramen.
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``Okoro backs the empress-regnant, but her freshly-raised Lords of
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Steppes are pulling at the leash,'' Scribe continued. ``The Niri must
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keep men out on the fields, lest the Blackspears take to raiding again.
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Their contributions are measured, mage cabals instead of battalions. And
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the Clans are pushing back against these lords they did not choose --
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Grem's old clan, the Howling Wolves, are at war with the Graven Bones
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and sending envoys to other clans to assemble a coalition. The Red
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Shields burned the holy grounds of the Stag-Crowned, and denounce them
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as traitors to orckind. The warbands that were sent to serve Malicia
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stayed, but there are no more forthcoming.''
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Only a single block was removed, the one in the Steppes. Okoro was
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committed, if not as much as Malicia probably wished it to be.
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``And so Wolof remains,'' Akua quietly said. ``She owns Sargon, then?''
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``I believe she has soulboxed him,'' Scribe replied.
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I'd never head of the term before, so I cocked an eyebrow at Akua.
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``It is much like it sounds, dearest,'' she told me. ``His soul was
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severed from his body by ritual and placed in an enchanted box. It is
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difficult to kill through this, but by sorcery atrocious pain can be
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inflicted. It is tradition, however, that the box be sealed for only so
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many years.''
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She turned her gaze to Scribe, her silence an unspoken question. Wolof
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had taken a beating when Sargon overthrew Tasia Sahelian, Akua's mother,
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and it'd been the Legions of Terror under Marshal Nim that ultimately
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re-established order there. With Malicia's soldiers in the city the
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freshly-risen High Lord Sargon would not have been in a great bargaining
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position, so I doubted the length of time would be small.
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``At least ten years,'' Scribe said. ``Perhaps as much as three
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decades.''
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Akua sighed.
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``He'll try to steal it back,'' she said, ``but with Mother's spies in
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disarray the Eyes will have gutted them. Sargon will not turn on the
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Tower so long as she has the box.''
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``Wolof is still handling demonic taint from its latest contested
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succession,'' Scribe said, ``and so it has offered few troops, but those
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it sent are elites. They have been raiding the hinterlands of Aksum with
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great success, stealing people as much as wealth. High Lord Sargon
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intends to fill his city anew.''
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I drummed my fingers against the table, frowning. All right, so I could
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see how the stalemate had come into being. Sepulchral couldn't afford a
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field battle against the Legions of Terror, she'd lose and her cause
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would die. Yet since it stood between Askum and Nok, Ater had to be
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garrisoned with reliable soldiers -- which meant legionaries, not
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household troops with ever-dubious loyalties. That'd peel soldiers off
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of Marshal Nim's army, enough she'd be careful about sieging the rebel
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High Seats and all the nastiness that implied. If she lost too many
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soldiers storming a city, she risked being caught by Sepulchral and
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smashed in a war that was frankly hers to lose.
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And all the while the deserters were looking on, keeping everyone from
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taking hard risks lest they intervene and finish off the weakened
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victor.
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The balance of the power was in the south, I thought as I stared at the
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map. Foramen and Kahtan, the forges and the armies. If High Lady Takisha
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could be convinced to call on her many vassals and make war for Malicia,
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Marshal Nim would have troops to throw into the breach when attacking a
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High Seat. But it was not something the High Lady of Kahtan would be
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eager to grant the Tower when instead she could try to cement the
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Muraqib legacy and have her family rule the last two great cities of the
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south. Which led me to another question.
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``How can Malicia afford to make trouble for us abroad, with all these
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fires in her backyard?'' I frankly asked. ``She should not have the time
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or gold to spare.''
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``Kahtan and Foramen still pay their taxes, fully and promptly,'' Scribe
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replied without batting an eye. ``So do Okoro and Wolof, though their
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caravans are larger and armed. The Tower has undertaken no rebuilding of
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Thalassina, so Malicia's treasury is filled to the brim by taxes and
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decades of Callowan riches. What can she spend her wealth on, if not
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trouble for the Grand Alliance? There are no more mercenaries to buy,
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and the gold does her no good sitting in a vault.''
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Huh. That was one way of looking at it, I supposed. And from her
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perspective the Grand Alliance wouldn't stop being an enemy if it wasn't
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fought, it'd just have more allies and resources to spare when it
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finally turned its gaze on her after the war with the Dead King was
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done. But this did raise the veil on a situation that had largely been
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opaque to us so far, which was more than a little useful. If nothing
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else, it made it clear what the state of the opposition truly was. I
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shared a look of understanding with Hakram.
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``Malicia's position is much weaker than it seems from the outside,''
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Adjutant stated. ``And though the military advantage is with her, so
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long as she cannot bring Sepulchral to battle it means nothing.''
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They could keep marching back and forth across the Wasteland for years
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and little would change. It was hard to tell whether a long stalemate
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would favour Sepulchral or Malicia, though I was inclined to believe
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it'd help neither so long as the High Lady of Kahtan kept sitting the
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fence. I suspected the bribes being offered to Takisha Muraqib were
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rising by the day, but with riots in Foramen making it clear Wither's
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grasp on the city was loose there would always be a greater temptation
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to the south.
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``So where's the Carrion Lord?'' Indrani bluntly asked. ``It's all
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pretty stuff, this story, but it doesn't mean shit if he and the Lady
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aren't accounted for.''
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I glanced at her in surprise.
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``You're not that flattering when speaking of him, usually,'' I noted.
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She grimaced.
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``If the Lady's stuck with him for two years, they're up to something
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that caught her interest,'' Archer said. ``Her interest isn't easy to
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catch, Cat.''
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True enough, I thought. Though I'd been given to understand there was
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actual sentiment between them too, which was bound to weigh on the
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scales.
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``The man does command a remarkable amount of loyalties within the
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Legions and the bureaucracy,'' Akua warily agreed. ``It seems odd he has
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not called on them.''
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``I found him near Hospes, on the southern shores of the Wasaliti,''
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Scribe said. ``Without attendants or even companions save for Ranger. He
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was travelling south.''
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``And I'll believe that's all you know when it snows in Levante,'' I
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said. ``Go on.''
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``Before Ime's purges began to seriously hamper my ability to gather
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information, I confirmed he's been in both Foramen and the Grey
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Eyries,'' Scribe said. ``I cannot be certain as to why, however. There
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are also semi-reliable sightings of him much further north, to the west
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of Okoro.''
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Which meant close to the Steppes, where he was a lot more likely to find
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allies than at a High Lord's court. I made sense, but I wasn't buying
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it. Black had always been popular with greenskins, but stripped of
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command over his Legions it was almost \emph{predictable} for him to try
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to raise fresh armies in the Steppes and the Eyries. My teacher was a
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lot of things, but predictable was rarely one of them.
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``He will be using the Twilight Ways, if can move so quickly and
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discreetly in a war-torn land,'' Adjutant said.
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I nodded in agreement after a moment, gauging the distances involved
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mentally. Yeah, there weren't a lot of other credible explanations for
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that. We'd been pretty sure that was how he'd left Salia, as he would
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have been caught riding through the Proceran countryside otherwise, but
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confirmation was always useful.
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``As for why the two of them have been so discreet,'' Scribe continued,
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``I do have an answer. Or at least part of one.''
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She came forward to offer me a folded parchment, which I opened with
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impatience. To my surprise it was something I'd heard before: wild
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rumours from the Green Stretch about pale ghosts being glimpsed off the
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roads. A number had supposedly been put to them: ten. So it wasn't even
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Black and Ranger that'd been sighted. I passed the parchment to Hakram,
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who after a puzzled moment passed it to Akua. She looked equally
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bemused, and passed it to Archer absent-mindedly. It was Indrani who
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went still after a casual glance, cursing in what I was pretty sure was
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High Tyrian.
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``Ten. Fuck. You're \emph{sure}?'' Indrani asked Scribe.
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``There have been several independent sightings,'' Eudokia confirmed.
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``Anything you'd care to share?'' I mildly asked.
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``There's ten Emerald Swords,'' Archer said. ``And when the Forever King
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gets in a mood and decides it's time to start trying to kill the Lady
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again, they're who he sends. He hasn't tried anything since the dwarves
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told him if his people stirred up shit near a dwarven gate they'd take
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it as an act of war -- it's why people called us a protectorate of the
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Kingdom Under -- but she's left Refuge behind now. It makes sense they'd
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go for her again now that she's low on allies and the Tower can't do
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much but complain even if the Swords are seen.''
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I hummed. That rang true, considering Hanno had just passed along a
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reminder from the Golden Bloom that they were going to take it very
|
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badly if we let Ranger into the Truce and Terms. They'd want the old
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thorn in their side as isolated as possible, not under the protection of
|
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treaties binding together half of Calernia. Considering the general
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uselessness and unpleasantness of the elves while we'd been waging a war
|
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for survival against Keter, I found myself in the surreal position of
|
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actually rooting for Ranger a little bit.
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|
|
Gods but these were strange times.
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|
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``The Carrion Lord cannot formally seize command of an army, else the
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Emerald Swords would converge on it looking for the Ranger,'' Akua
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lightly said, sounding mightily amused. ``Ah, the fickleness of fate.''
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I didn't particularly share her amusement, as if my father had seized
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the Tower we'd have the east settled instead of this fucking mess going
|
|
on for forever and a half. He could have signed onto to the Terms and
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|
brought the Legions of Terror north instead of playing hide and seek in
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|
the Wasteland while trying to get something rather nebulously defined
|
|
off the ground. Mind you he'd had her father killed as she watched, so I
|
|
could forgive some manner enjoyment at his expense. Akua could claim
|
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Praesi mores as the source of her indifference there all she wanted,
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she'd actually loved the man who'd died.
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|
|
No one got over that quite as neatly as she liked to pretend she had.
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|
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|
``Anything you would care to add?'' Adjutant asked Scribe.
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``Not at the moment,'' she replied.
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|
For a moment I considered dismissing her until we were done discussing
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Praes, then I figured there would be little point: she'd learn what was
|
|
decided in here sooner or later, anyway, and we might need to call her
|
|
back in if we had questions.
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``Take a seat,'' I ordered her.
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|
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I didn't bother to check if she did, already turning towards my
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councillors.
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|
|
|
``So,'' I thinly smiled, ``the Praesi situation. Thoughts on what our
|
|
response should be?''
|
|
|
|
It was not a long debate that followed, or a particularly contentious
|
|
one. It wasn't for lack of opinions, though. Archer's take on what our
|
|
involvement should be east of the Wasaliti was essentially a shrug, with
|
|
an added suggestion that the Tower should be made aware of the presence
|
|
of the Emerald Swords -- whether it'd harm the elves or Malicia she
|
|
cared little, since she smiled on both outcomes. Akua and Hakram were
|
|
both in favour of intervention, but in different ways and seeking
|
|
different outcomes.
|
|
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|
Adjutant suggested Callow begin providing arms to the Clans fighting
|
|
Malicia's appointed lords in the Steppes, noting that my kingdom had
|
|
much to gain from closer ties to a victorious orc uprising: it could
|
|
serve as a point of pressure against whichever empress edged out the
|
|
other, and broadly speaking favoured a faction that in turn favoured
|
|
Black. Hakram agreed with me that my father in the Tower was our best
|
|
outcome in the Wasteland, though he wasn't as inclined to see him as an
|
|
ally. If we wanted the Dread Empire at peace with Callow and willing to
|
|
fight north, though, there was no denying that Black was the best
|
|
choice.
|
|
|
|
Akua favoured backing Sepulchral instead, though not enough to make her
|
|
win. She argued that a bolder, better armed Dread Empress Sepulchral
|
|
might be tempted to give battle to the Legions of Terror -- and that
|
|
ensuring no one won a decisive victory there was Callow's gain, since
|
|
casualties and desertions would weaken both sides. She advised leaning
|
|
on Cordelia and the Dominion to have Sepulchral recognized as ruler of
|
|
Praes and attempting to broker an alliance between her and the rebel orc
|
|
clans in the Steppes. Her approach was cheaper on our coffers than
|
|
Hakram's, but it carried other risks.
|
|
|
|
Callow couldn't afford to get dragged into fighting out east right now,
|
|
we just didn't have the men to spare. And adventurism in the Wasteland
|
|
was brutally unpopular a notion back home, especially now that it'd come
|
|
out that Malicia's deal with the Dead King supposedly ensured his undead
|
|
would not attack us so long as she lived. It was only after they'd all
|
|
spoken that I turned to Scribe.
|
|
|
|
``Suggestions?'' I mildly repeated.
|
|
|
|
She stayed silent a moment.
|
|
|
|
``It is my understanding that the Army of Callow is severely lacking
|
|
goblin munitions?''
|
|
|
|
My brow rose.
|
|
|
|
``True,'' I admitted.
|
|
|
|
``Then I would suggest reaching out to High Lady Wither,'' Scribe said.
|
|
``Who has a large stock of these she is not using, while she
|
|
\emph{could} use shipments of grain to quell the riots in Foramen.
|
|
Rationing is one of the causes of unrest.''
|
|
|
|
It also meant helping Pickler's mother, to some extent, while we were
|
|
nominally allies with the Confederation of the Grey Eyries. Which she
|
|
was at war with, after having betrayed them. Was I comfortable with
|
|
that? Not really, but then I wasn't any more comfortable with my sappers
|
|
having empty hands.
|
|
|
|
``Something to consider,'' I acknowledged. ``Go on.''
|
|
|
|
``Reach out to General Sacker,'' she said. ``The defeats she inflicted
|
|
Sepulchral are what made her desperate enough to rebel, and she is close
|
|
with the same Matrons who rose against Malicia in addition to being an
|
|
Amadeus loyalist. Neither empress will suffer her to live if the
|
|
deserters disperse, which means she is very much in need of a patron.''
|
|
|
|
My eyes narrowed. That camp was bound to be full of spies, both Eyes of
|
|
the Empire and Sepulchral's own, but so long as I didn't actively
|
|
support a rebellion against the Tower -- which the fighting up in the
|
|
Steppes was, effectively speaking -- I doubted Malicia would make
|
|
aggressive moves against Callow. She'd be throwing away the advantage
|
|
she bought with making known the terms of her treaty with the Dead King
|
|
if she did. It also opened the door to recruiting many of those soldiers
|
|
if things went bad for them in the Wasteland, which they yet might.
|
|
|
|
Shit, I thought. Akua had been right, it really \emph{would} have been a
|
|
waste to kill the Scribe. A handful of sentences and she'd both given me
|
|
a shot a steadying my munition problem and figured out a palatable
|
|
alternative to being a mere watcher to the mess unfolding in Praes. I
|
|
turned to look at Hakram.
|
|
|
|
``Can Duchess Kegan be trusted to negotiate with Sacker?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
It was tacitly accepting Scribe's suggestion and did not pretend
|
|
otherwise. The orc's face tightened a moment, but it went away almost
|
|
immediately. A spasm of pain? I'd thought his wounds under control. I'd
|
|
talk to his healers tonight about the dosages in his potions.
|
|
|
|
``I am uncertain,'' he admitted. ``She would see the use in it, but she
|
|
is less than fond of both goblins and Praesi. I'd advise naming a
|
|
negotiator ourselves instead and putting them under Kegan's nominal
|
|
authority afterwards.''
|
|
|
|
I nodded thoughtfully.
|
|
|
|
``Have five names for me by nightfall,'' I said. ``And forward word to
|
|
our contacts in the Grey Eyries: I want to broach the subject of buying
|
|
up Wither's munitions to our friends the Matrons. Just sound them out
|
|
for now, gauge how bad the fallout would be.''
|
|
|
|
I doubted the Matrons would be all that offended by backroom dealings
|
|
even with their sworn enemy -- those were a proud goblin tradition --
|
|
but I'd rather keep things above board so they wouldn't suspect I was
|
|
softening on Malicia. Without Callow's support their situation looked
|
|
much grimmer, and the Tribes had ended most their previous rebellions by
|
|
cutting a deal with the Tower when things looked that way.
|
|
|
|
``Send reports to Vivienne about all of this, please,'' I added after a
|
|
moment.
|
|
|
|
I would have liked her in the room for this, I thought with a pang of
|
|
regret, but there'd been no anticipating that Scribe would suddenly come
|
|
to us. And by the time word got to her, we'd be out on campaign so it
|
|
would be exceedingly difficult to discuss affairs like this -- outright
|
|
impossible, when we got deep enough in the Dead King's territory and
|
|
scrying was broken up.
|
|
|
|
``I'm sure those will make for a pleasant reading with her breakfast,''
|
|
Indrani drily said.
|
|
|
|
I suppressed a grimace. Without meaning to, Archer had reminded me I was
|
|
slipping back into old habits -- keeping Vivienne out of the loop, out
|
|
of major decisions. I wasn't doing it for petty reasons this time, but I
|
|
was doing it anyway.
|
|
|
|
``You're right,'' I told Indrani, who blinked in surprise, before
|
|
turning to Hakram. ``Arrange a scrying session with her tonight, I'll
|
|
tell her in person. Tell her it's urgent, worth cancelling prior
|
|
engagements for.''
|
|
|
|
And we could discuss her suggestions, if she had any, before I handed
|
|
her the reins on this. Someone was going to have to handle it while I
|
|
was gone and it might as well be her. She'd be handling the fallout long
|
|
after I'd abdicated.
|
|
|
|
``It'll be done,'' Adjutant said.
|
|
|
|
I nodded my thanks, eyes finally turning back to the still-seated
|
|
Scribe.
|
|
|
|
``So let's talk maps,'' I smiled.
|
|
|
|
Adding another few to my growing collection would give me something to
|
|
ponder about, when we began the march north.
|