564 lines
30 KiB
TeX
564 lines
30 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-7-approach}{%
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\section{Chapter 7: Approach}\label{chapter-7-approach}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Friend and foe know a different man.''}
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-- Helikean saying
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\end{quote}
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The contents of my tent were one of the few splurges of luxury I'd ever
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allowed myself. The bed was from Orense, whose carpenters were famous
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even within the Principate, and though it could be folded in two for
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transport it was nothing like the cots the Legions of Terror used as
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their standard. It was large enough for two and topped by a good woolen
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mattress, as even now featherbeds were just too soft for me -- I found
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it difficult to fall asleep in them. A pair of enchanted braziers and a
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set of magelight lanterns saw to heat and light, while a small sculpted
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table flanked by a library-box and a few trunks held my personal
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affairs. That part of my tent was parted from the rest by a heavy
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curtain sown into the ceiling, keeping it separate from the larger
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segment where I received others.
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The broad desk, which I'd had carved out of Ashuran cedar twice struck
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by lightning to my exact specifications, had been was the great expense
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there though I believed it worth ever copper. It'd been Akua that had
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told me about the cleansing and healing properties of the cedar trees
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that grew in the shade of Mount Tyro, the mountain where the mage-doctor
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schools of Ashur had first been raised centuries ago. Masego had added
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that a lightning strike would bring such properties to the surface, and
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Vivienne's people in the Free Cities had found cedar that'd been struck
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twice being sold by a broker in Mercantis. Whatever the magic behind it,
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sitting at that desk never seemed to pain my leg no matter how long I
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did and I tired measurably slower working on it.
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The seat behind was naturally the same sinfully comfortable armchair I'd
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stolen from a Summer count during the Arcadian campaign, my perennial
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favourite. A pair of less comfortable but prettily sculpted -- roaring
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lionheads for the arms -- seats sent to me by Vivienne matched it on the
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other side. My personal desk was only a part of the large tent, however,
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as it'd become inevitable that I would have to frequently `entertain'
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the kind of people who expected luxuries even when at war. The first
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wooden table I'd used was hacked straight through during either the
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fourth of fifth assassination attempt of last winter -- I couldn't quite
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recall, they rather melded into the same general sense of unpleasantness
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after a while -- and the replacement had only lasted two months before I
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put the Bandit Lord's head through it, but Archer had been sufficiently
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amused by that last setback she'd actually carved me one herself.
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That oaken stretch was the single most beautiful thing I owned, as far
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as I was concerned. Though it was broadly rectangular and the surface
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was still only half-polished, Indrani must have put half a hundred hours
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into the carvings that adorned it. Four snakelike legs coiled their way
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up, jaws opened to swallow legionaries as had truly happened when Akua
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unleashed devils on the Fifteenth before the Battle of Marchford. From
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there Archer had carved scenes as her fancy struck, without rhyme or
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reason. The Woe's battle with the Princess of High Noon abutted
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depiction of the duelling scene from the Lay of Lothian's Passing she so
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enjoyed, the last moments of Larat's splendid escape were wedged in
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between the dying gasp of the Kingdom of Sephirah and the view of the
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Silver Lake from her favourite Laure tavern.
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It wasn't finished, perhaps only two thirds of the sides having been
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carved and the wood atop the table still being prepared for carvings of
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its own, and already it was one of the most precious possessions I'd
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ever owned. My officers and allies had quickly caught on to Indrani's
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habit of adding a few carvings whenever she passed through our camp, and
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it'd become a manner of entertainment for them to make a pretext to
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visit my tent and try to find the latest additions afterwards. The First
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Prince had sent a set of ten cushioned seats in matching oak as a gift,
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which given their delicate craftsmanship were likely worth a fortune,
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but coin couldn't buy what it had meant for someone as restless as
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Archer to have spent so many hours working on a piece meant for me.
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There were other adornments to the tent, of course. Heavy tapestries
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hung from the sides, woven in the Callowan manner -- the Hedges style,
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to be precise, since the thickness of those helped keep the heat in the
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tent during winter. My people's tapestries admittedly tended to only
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depict three things: hunting, the Book of All Things and war. Given that
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I had little taste for hunting or the Gods Above but more than a few
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wars under my belt, I'd settled for the last and matched that martial
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tendency with the grand maps I'd commissioned. Smaller ones of the
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fronts in Cleves and Twilight's Pass, larger ones of the Principality of
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Hainaut and the Kingdom of the Dead. Braziers, sprite-lanterns and a
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long commode that was admittedly mostly a dump for scroll and parchment
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stacks -- as well as holding a pair of compartments filled with bottles
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of wine and liquor -- finished the last of it.
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It was a comfortable dwelling, as had been made necessary by the sheer
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amount of time I'd spent in it over the last two years.
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I rose with dawn and broke my fast on the carved table, wolfing down
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eggs and rashers as I read through the damage reports from last night's
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troubles. Akua sat across from me and we shared a pot of tea in
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companionable silence as I busied myself frowning at the ink. Most of
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the damage was superficial but one of the wardstones from the Third
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Army's camp, which was where the Dead King's ghouls had found the most
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success, had cracked. This was not beyond our ability to fix, but the
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artefact the ghouls has used to try to contaminate the stone -- some
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sort of sharp obsidian spike that just reeked of sorcery -- was still
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stuck in it. It'd have to be either destroyed or extracted. In
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destroying it we'd improve our chances of repairing the wardstone, but
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to extract it we'd have to cut through the stone instead and effectively
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wreck it permanently. On the other hand, if we could figure out what the
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spike \emph{was} we could prepare countermeasures for its next use.
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Adjutant joined us just as I finished reading the last of the report,
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his timing as fatefully impeccable as always, and he claimed a seat at a
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table. He demurred when Akua offered him a cup of tea, as they'd both
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known he would. He hated the Nok blends, insisted they made his fangs
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taste of herbs for days afterwards. Akua had not once, so far, missed an
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occasion to try to socially maneuver him into being forced to drink a
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cup regardless. It was easy to tell how well they were getting along on
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any given day simply by how playful the shade was being about that
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little game. This morning, though, I gave them no time to get into it.
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``Thoughts?'' I prompted.
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``It's only the wardstone against scrying that was affected,'' Hakram
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calmly said. ``The least important of the three. Carve it, send the
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spike to the Belfry and lean on the Arsenal to get a replacement sent as
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soon as possible.''
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My eyes moved to Akua.
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``Destroy the spike,'' the dark-skinned woman replied. ``It costs us
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more than weeks or months exposed to destroy a wardstone: it also costs
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us the hours spent realigning the array with the replacement stone.
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Hours that skilled mages would otherwise spend addressing current
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threats or preparing for those to come.''
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``The Dead King seemingly believed he could sink our full ward array
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with the spike, Lady Akua,'' Hakram pointed out. ``If we do not learn
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the nature of the threat, that might just be the case when one is next
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used against us.''
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``The Dead King has millennia of such accumulated tricks and tools to
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wield whenever he so pleases, Lord Adjutant,'' Akua replied. ``We cannot
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and indeed should not attempt to match every single blow with an exact
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parrying dagger. The superior approach would be tightening security
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around our wardstones and instead leaning our efforts towards
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innovations of our own.''
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``Our innovations spring from Jaquinite and Trismegistan sorcery,''
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Adjutant gravelled. ``One was forged in the Dead King's shadow and he is
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the founding practitioner of the other. We might as well try to drown a
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shark.''
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``However potent a practitioner of sorcery, the King of Death remains a
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single mage,'' the shade argued. ``While he can have helpers and acquire
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the knowledge of others, it is highly improbable for the Dead King's
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mastery of the Gift to be so superior as to eclipse every advance come
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out of the Arsenal.''
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I drummed my fingers against the table, thinking in silence. The two of
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them were, through the locus of an ultimately minor tactical decision,
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coming to stand in for the two great currents of thought among the
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strategists of the Grand Alliance. One school of thought, of which the
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most prominent advocates were Princess Rozala Malanza and Prince Otto
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Reitzenberg, argued that the Alliance should fight aggressively on a
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tactical scale but defensively on a strategic one. Stable defensive
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lines and regular sorties were to serve as way to grind down Keter's
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forces in Procer while the Empire Ever Dark held Serolen and raided
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through dwarven tunnels behind the lines of the dead. All of this was to
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serve as a method of weakening the Dead King until either the Arsenal
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created armaments capable of turning the tide or a strategic opportunity
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to strike at Keter itself was made. The ever-increasing amount of Named
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joining our ranks had, of late, been added to the arguments. Defence was
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their creed, until we took the King of Death's head in his seat of his
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power.
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The other school of thought, which claimed Prince Klaus Papenheim and
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Lord Yannu Marave as leading lights, argued instead for full offensive
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war. Their belief was that the Grand Alliance would soon reach the peak
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of its capacity to wage war and would only be headed into a death spiral
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if it did not begin scoring decisive blows before that capacity was
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spent. The doctrine would begin with reclamation of northern Procer by
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three-pointed offensive, followed by a winter of preparation and then a
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joint all-fronts offensive into the Kingdom of the Dead while the Empire
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Ever Dark struck out from its position in Serolen. With enough victories
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to show for, we could bargain for open dwarven military support and
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offer them a clean strike at Keter while the Hidden Horror's armies were
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tied up on four different campaigns in other corners of his realm. There
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were half a dozen other variations on how the offensives should be
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waged, some of them not even involving the Kingdom Under, but the common
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tie was always the call for offensive campaigning.
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Akua was, I knew, very much inclined to agree with the defensive school.
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Like most Praesi highborn she still saw mages at the most important part
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of warfare and was generally inclined to believe Named were best suited
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to creating the kind of breakthrough that'd deliver victory against
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Keter, either in a study or on the field. Hakram was not quite so
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clear-cut in his preferences, but for good reason his sympathies tended
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more the way of the offensive school. While Akua was hardly uninformed,
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she was not nearly as aware of how fragile the Grand Alliance's
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situation truly was as my second. The strain of the war against Keter
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was being felt across the entire coalition, but most keenly of all in
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Procer: high taxes, frequent requisitions and lasting restrictions on
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trade were causing mounting unrest. And that was without even mentioning
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the waves of refugees in need of settling, for whom sympathy tended to
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sour very quickly whenever food or room ran low and human nature took
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its usual course towards the ugly. Hakram tended to favour the
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aggressive approaches, including getting ready to fight the war
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\emph{now}, because he was unsure how long we could keep waging it.
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I leaned more towards the offensive school myself, as it happened, but
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only within limits. The Principality of Hainaut and the last stretches
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of Twilight's Pass ought to be reclaimed in full and a proper defensive
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line raised across all shores that'd be able to prevent large-scale
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invasion by the dead. Then, and only then, could further aggressive
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campaigning be considered. Cordelia Hasenbach agreed, as it happened, at
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least when it came to the reclamation of Hainaut -- she was less eager
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to try taking back the Pass once more, considering the lair of
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nightmares Neshamah had turned the last fortresses of it into.
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Regardless, the two of us agreeing and the Grey Pilgrim not opposing us
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meant that a summer offensive into northern Hainaut was a certainty
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unless disaster struck beforehand.
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As it nearly had, with that seeded plague. We were not unexpected or
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unseen in our designs.
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``Do either of you have anything else to add?'' I finally said.
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``Our armies will be headed north, to the warded fortresses of the
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defensive line,'' Hakram said. ``We can afford the window of
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vulnerability while we replace the stone.''
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``Expanding the ritual repertoire of our mage cadres would be more
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efficient a use of their time, and the potential gains from breaking the
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wardstone are limited,'' Akua calmly replied.
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I sharply nodded, fingers withdrawing from the table. As things
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currently stood the scrying ward was incontinent but not outright
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broken, so while the choice shouldn't be dragged out it did not need to
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be made immediately either.
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``I'll have a decision by Evening Bell,'' I said. ``Hakram, what have
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you got for me?''
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``You intended on speaking with the soldiers and officers from the
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assault formation,'' the orc reminded me. ``Assembly can be had at half
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an hour's notice. Reports will be coming in by the Alliance scrying
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network at Noon Bell, including Vivienne's. Lady Aquiline and Lord Razin
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seek an audience, as does the White Knight.''
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He paused for a beat.
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``Nestor Ikaroi of the Secretariat arrived during the night as well,''
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he added. ``Along with his usual scribes. He requested audience as well,
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and mentioned he'd been charged with diplomatic correspondence meant for
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you.''
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My eyebrow rose. I did not ask from who -- if he'd known, he would have
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told me -- but it was not from lack of curiosity.
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``I've the usual disciplinary action and assignment summaries for the
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Third Army for you to review,'' Hakram added, moving on to more mundane
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matters. ``As well as the patrol and guard roster suggestions for the
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coming month.''
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The latter parchments could not be passed on to anyone else, since if
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they did not have my authority behind them those suggestions would be
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balked at by our rowdy collation of Proceran, Levantine and Callowan
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captains. They'd need another read, anyway, to see if someone had tried
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to favour their own again. The former, though\ldots{}
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``You don't need to bring me the Third Army summaries anymore,'' I
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grunted. ``General Abigail doesn't need me looking over her shoulder.''
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He flicked a considering glance at Akua, whose face was serene as a pond
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as she drank from her cup of tea. I did not bother to hide my irritation
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at that when his gaze returned to me, and he clicked his fangs
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apologetically.
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``I doubt she'd agree if asked,'' Adjutant said. ``I'll see to it
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regardless.''
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I hummed, sipping at my own cup thoughtfully.
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``Send for Secretary Nestor first,'' I decided.
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The Blood could wait, it'd do them some good, and when Hanno came by for
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our chat I'd rather have it with a drink in hand. Past Noon Bell, then,
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which wasn't a bad idea anyway. Though the White Knight did not get
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reports the way I did, relying on the First Prince for information on
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that scale, he did correspond with a great many heroes who, as heroes
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were wont to, found out all sorts of hidden things. Often what he
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learned there was little better than gossip, but on occasion there was
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treasure buried among the dross. Akua took her leave without needing to
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be prompted, heading out to organize the repairs of the lesser damage on
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the wardstones. Though Senior Mage Dastardly was still the ranking mage
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of the Third Army, he was suborned to Akua's authority as the informal
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commander of our coalition's mage cadres. Both the Proceran wizards and
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the Levantine binders -- those Abigail hadn't slaughtered like lambs,
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anyway -- took orders from her as well, within certain limits.
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From experience I knew Secretary Nestor Ikaroi would be awake even at
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this hour, as the Delosi \emph{askretis} hardly ever slept even at his
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advanced age. I was, it had to be said, rather fond of the man. He was
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polite, useful and his dedication to recording history accurately
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bordered on being principled. It was therefore with a smile that I
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greeted him when Hakram ushered him into the tent, half-rising from the
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desk where I'd migrated before inviting him to sit across. He did so
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after a slight bow, the shallowness of it as much a reminder of his high
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status in Delos as the two stripes tattooed across each of his cheeks.
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One black and one blue, traditionally the highest rank one could rise to
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within the Secretariat.
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``Queen Catherine,'' he greeted me. ``I thank you for the audience, and
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twice over of your promptness in granting it.''
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Ikaroi's long white hair was kept in a clean ponytail and his grooming
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was impeccable even so early, something made clear by his turning back
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to gesture for an attendant scribe to approach. A scroll case was passed
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to the Secretary, who in turn passed it to Hakram. Considering the last
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time someone from the Free Cities had tried to hand me something
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directly it'd been an assassination attempt, that particular bit of
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decorum had grown on me.
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``The Secretariat has proved a good friend, if not outright an ally,'' I
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replied. ``It's my pleasure to return the courtesy.''
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I glanced at the scroll case Adjutant had taken in hand but not opened.
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``Although it seems that this time we aren't to discuss the submission
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of questions,'' I added.
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``In truth the Secretariat has also passed along a list of inquiries,
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along with making funds available to me,'' the blue-eyed man noted.
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Good news, that. The Grand Alliance's war machine was ever hungry for
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coin.
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``Anything interesting?'' I idly asked.
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``Secretary Thais stills seeks to prove her theories on the source of
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the Stygian Spring, so a perspective in attendance of the Violet Peace's
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signing has been requested,'' he replied.
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I snorted. Secretary Thais remained convinced that a secret treaty had
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been signed between Nicae and Stygia beyond the officially recorded
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peacemaking, and that it was exactly such a secret that'd allowed the
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Magisterium to begin aggressive attacks against Delos and Atalante a few
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centuries back. That assertion had yet to have even a slight indication
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of being historically accurate but if the old woman was willing to sink
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a fortune in being proved wrong, I had no objection.
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``A question on Callowan history as well, for the Annals,'' Nestor
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Ikaroi said. ``Seeking to ascertain if Queen Yolanda the Stern's was a
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villain in metaphysical sense or a merely a political one.''
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I hummed thoughtfully.
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``Actually, I wouldn't mind knowing that as well,'' I admitted.
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Callowan historians still debated to this day if Yolanda the Wicked had
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truly been one of Below's or just Proceran-born and deeply despised, but
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I'd never cared much either way. It was ancient history, and not the
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sort I need be concerned about. On the other hand, if she'd truly been a
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villainous Named then it occurred to me there was precedent for one of
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those reigning as Queen of Callow for more than a decade. While I didn't
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particularly want my reign to be painted with the same brush as a woman
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I'd once seen written of as `barely more popular than the plague', it
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could serve as the foundation for a legal argument. One that lent my
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rule a little more legitimacy than that of a victorious warlord. That
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wasn't much of an issue for me, these days -- not unless I started
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losing battles anyway -- but if I didn't want Vivienne or her successors
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fighting a civil in twenty years then we needed a better arguments than
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brute force and wearing a fancy hat.
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``Usual rates, you know the drill by now. I'll be speaking with the
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White Knight later this evening,so I'll see when it can be done,'' I
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told Nestor. ``The list?''
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``Timo, if you would?'' the old man asked.
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The young scribe passed a neatly folded parchment to Hakram. Usually the
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Secretariat only sent ten questions at a time, which I'd been informed
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by the Jacks were the subject of much internal politicking between the
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upper ranks of their bureaucratic ruling class. This entire affair had
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begun when Hanno, early into the first Hainaut offensive, had offered
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during an idle conversation to use his Recall aspect in order to settle
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a question about the size of the armies at the Battle of Lerna as
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recoded in the Annals. The askretis had gone wild at the potential
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resource that was having access to the memories of thousands of heroes
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going centuries back, the Secretariat even lodging a formal request with
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the Grand Alliance to consult with the White Knight over historical
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matters only to be reluctantly informed by Cordelia that the Sword of
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Judgement was not hers to `lend'.
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So they'd gone to Hanno himself, who like a complete chump would have
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simply answered their questions whenever time allowed and thought
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nothing more of it. Gods, \emph{heroes}. It showed most of them had
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never had to handle a treasury, much less fund a war. So I'd had a
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private word with him and we'd emerged from that conversation with
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practical prices in coin if the Secretariat wanted to take advantage of
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an opportunity that might never come to them again. Most the gold went
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into the Grand Alliance's coffers, because Hanno was Hanno, but I'd
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insisted he take a cut even if he ended up spending it on other people.
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These days the Delosi tended to bring the questions to me, since I was
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often easier to find, and strangely enough he seemed to prefer it that
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way. Hakram set the parchment bearing the questions aside on my commode
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and returned to hand me the leather scroll case after having inspected
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it thoroughly.
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``I don't suppose you know what's in that,'' I asked the Delosi.
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``I have my suspicions,'' Secretary Nestor said, ``but cannot know for
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certain. I know only that General Basilia meant it for your hand.''
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Yeah, I'd thought it might be from her. The woman who'd once been Kairos
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Theodosian's favourite general was arguably the closest thing I -- and
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the Grand Alliance at large -- had to an ally in the Free Cities, sad as
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it was to say. I broke open to seal and fished out the scroll, unfurling
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it carefully. Though the courtesies were curt they were still present,
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followed by a few matter of fact sentences about her latest victories on
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the field. The part that caught my attention, however, was right
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afterwards.
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``Stygia's getting involved,'' I summarized. ``One of the Helikean
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patrols caught some of the Magisterium's people bringing wagons of arms
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onto a ship whose captain was headed for Nicae.''
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Secretary Nestor dipped his head, seemingly unsurprised.
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``It is the Secretariat's belief that the Magisterium seeks to prolong
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the war as much as possible,'' the old man said. ``So long as Basileus
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Leo holds the city and Strategos Zenobia holds the countryside, Nicae
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|
remains divided. It is so with General Basilia's campaigns in Penthesian
|
|
lands as well. Our archivist-oracles believe they will not hinder
|
|
transport of supplies so long as no decisive victory is scored, but
|
|
would begin sabotage immediately if General Basilia succeeded at forcing
|
|
such an engagement.''
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|
Which she hadn't, and likely wouldn't. Exarch Prodocius still held on to
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|
the throne he'd won by virtue of being the last puppet standing, but his
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|
authority hardly went beyond the walls of Penthes itself. Many towns and
|
|
tributary cities had declared him usurper and unfit -- moved either by
|
|
genuine outrage or by the very real chance of being sacked by Helike
|
|
should they not -- but his control on the city-state itself and a few
|
|
key fortresses had not been shaken. Malicia was propping him up, if
|
|
rumours of warlock `diplomats' having joined his court were true, but
|
|
for all that he was a pawn the man was not a complete fool. General
|
|
Basilia's army had chewed through every Penthesian field army sent its
|
|
way and taken lesser walls, but Helike did not have the siege weaponry
|
|
or mages to take the city of Penthes itself. The Exarch would remain
|
|
holed up behind his tall walls with the last of his armies, trying to
|
|
wait out Basilia.
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|
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|
``For Stygia to interfere with a supply line that passes through Delosi
|
|
territory might taken by some as an act of war,'' I mildly said.
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|
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``The Magisterium has not done such a thing,'' Secretary Nestor serenely
|
|
replied. ``The worse that can be laid at its feet is words.''
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|
|
|
I could read between the lines. The Magisters had spoken words so the
|
|
Secretariat was being forthcoming with those as well, tacitly passing
|
|
information to the Grand Alliance through me. It wasn't willing to
|
|
escalate any further unless Stygia did first, though, their precious
|
|
neutrality remaining in place. They could have gone to the First Prince
|
|
with this instead, but by going to me they could better claim to have
|
|
maintained an impartial approach: General Basilia was already sending me
|
|
information, and Callow's openly hostile relations with Dread Empress
|
|
Malicia meant I could be said to have a legitimate stake in the war.
|
|
\emph{They're not helping a foreigner against the League}, I
|
|
sardonically thought, \emph{they're helping Helike's almost-ally against
|
|
Stygia's almost-ally. With a few added steps and tortured
|
|
justifications, no doubt.}
|
|
|
|
``One would think that Malicia would advise against Stygian ambitions,
|
|
given the civil war she's fighting,'' I complained. ``But it's never
|
|
that simple, is it?''
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|
|
``Dread Empress Sepulchral has failed to gather support beyond the
|
|
initial wave,'' the old man shrugged. ``She is a threat, to be sure, but
|
|
for all her clever maneuvering she has not beaten the Legions.''
|
|
|
|
``The part of those that still fight for the Tower, anyway,'' I replied,
|
|
bit bothering to hide my relish.
|
|
|
|
Though Malicia had seized the rebel old guard of Black loyalists that'd
|
|
refused to bend the knee and even crucified a few, she'd underestimated
|
|
both how popular my father was with the rank and file and how badly the
|
|
revelation her sorcerous mind control would be received by greenskin
|
|
officers. Nearly half of the former Legions-in-Exile had deserted her
|
|
service at the first opportunity. A few of those joined up with
|
|
Sepulchral's armies, but most had either thrown down their weapons or
|
|
joined the ever-growing camp of disaffected soldiers on the edge of the
|
|
Green Stretch. While Sepulchral's -- once known as High Lady Abreha
|
|
Mirembe -- own High Seat of Aksum had followed her into rebellion and
|
|
Nok had declared for her as well, most of Praes still remained in
|
|
Malicia's hands.
|
|
|
|
She'd not managed to dislodge Sepulchral, though, despite Marshal Nim's
|
|
best efforts, and knowledge that the Grand Alliance had opened
|
|
negotiations with the rival claimant to the Tower ought to have curbed
|
|
her willingness to provoke us even through surrogates. Evidently not,
|
|
though. Now if only Black would come out of the woodworks -- or
|
|
acknowledge he was behind Dread Empress Sepulchral, as many suspected he
|
|
might be -- this entire nest of snakes could be put to rest. But for
|
|
some reason he'd yet to tip his hand.
|
|
|
|
``Praesi will do as Praesi have always done,'' Secretary Nestor said,
|
|
unconcerned. ``It is nothing to Delos. Yet, Queen Catherine, if I might
|
|
give a word of warning?''
|
|
|
|
My eyes sharpened. Not a word the man would use lightly, that.
|
|
|
|
``I'm listening,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``There are strange undercurrents in Mercantis, these days,'' the old
|
|
man warned. ``Ones even the eyes and ears of the Secretariat cannot
|
|
quite parse.''
|
|
|
|
I kept my dismay off my face. The City of Bought and Sold was a pack of
|
|
despicable profiteers, there was no denying that, yet so far they'd
|
|
known how to toe the line of how much they should attempt to profit. The
|
|
wealth of Mercantis' banks and merchant lords had been instrumental in
|
|
keeping the Principate's industry from collapsing as the strain of
|
|
curtailed trade and heavy taxes took its toll, but the city-state was
|
|
almost as useful as broker capable of obtaining materials and rarities
|
|
for the Arsenal. If they turned on us now, it'd be a crippling blow. Yet
|
|
I couldn't quite believe even the famously avaricious merchant lords
|
|
would be this foolish. What would their gold be worth, when the Dead
|
|
King was at their gates? And if they pressed us now, they had to know
|
|
that should we win the Grand Alliance's fury would be a black thing to
|
|
behold.
|
|
|
|
``Thank you for the advice,'' I said, tone forcibly calm.
|
|
|
|
I'd have to speak with Cordelia, soon. She was the foremost diplomat of
|
|
the Grand Alliance, by both talent and station, and I was still
|
|
astounded she'd somehow managed to talk both Atalante and Delos into
|
|
allowing the Helikean armies and supply train to pass their through
|
|
territory. Last I'd heard from Vivienne the First Prince was looking
|
|
into bringing Strategos Zenobia into the Grand Alliance's orbit without
|
|
angering her current patron General Basilia in the process, so she ought
|
|
to have been keeping an eye on the region. If something was going wrong
|
|
with Mercantis it was Hasenbach that'd be noticing the signs, and likely
|
|
she who'd have to fix it anyway. If this was a ploy from Malicia,
|
|
though, that'd make two provocations from her: Stygia's growing
|
|
interventionism and trying to strike at our finances. The Tower would
|
|
be, to be blunt, picking a fight. If we didn't answer her in kind she'd
|
|
only grow bolder, too, and that simply couldn't be allowed. On the other
|
|
hand, we could hardly afford to send an army Praes' way could we?
|
|
|
|
There was no easy answer to this, as tended to be the way when dealing
|
|
with Dread Empress Malicia.
|
|
|
|
``I trouble you no longer, then, Your Majesty,'' the old askretis said,
|
|
rising only to offer another slight bow.
|
|
|
|
``Always a pleasure, Secretary Nestor,'' I simply replied.
|
|
|
|
I slumped into my seat, after the old man and his attendant had left.
|
|
And this, I thought, had been meant to be the \emph{pleasant} part of my
|
|
day. Adjutant stood in silence at my side, close but not reaching out.
|
|
|
|
``All right,'' I sighed, opening my eyes. ``Get me those rosters,
|
|
Hakram. Let's get this done before some other looming disaster appears
|
|
on the horizon.''
|
|
|
|
One thing at a time. It could be done, if we did it one thing at a time.
|
|
|
|
I told myself I believed that, straightened my back and got to work.
|