630 lines
29 KiB
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630 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-38-tantamount}{%
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\section{Chapter 38: Tantamount}\label{chapter-38-tantamount}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A diplomat without a general at his back is just a polite man no
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one heeds.''}
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-- Exarch Acantha of Penthes
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\end{quote}
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Within an hour I received a formal message asking for my agreement to
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hold the Mirror Knight's trial tomorrow. I sent back said agreement
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immediately and I must not have been the only one to be prompt, as
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within an hour of \emph{that} the White Knight sent along the formal
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charges that Christophe de Pavanie would be accused of. I narrowed my
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eyes at the paucity of them: assault of an ally and insubordination.
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That was it. No mention of the fact that he'd kept the Severance at his
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hip long after the crisis had passed, though Hanno might make the case
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that since no formal demand to return it had been made of the Mirror
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Knight it hadn't actually been a breach of the Terms for him to keep it.
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It wasn't even \emph{unprovoked} assault of an ally, I noted with
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distaste, but instead a lesser sister-charge.
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I'd reserve judgement -- no pun intended, Sisters preserve -- until the
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trial took place, but I wouldn't consider this an auspicious beginning.
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Intriguingly enough, I got a third message in the wake of the first two
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and not from someone I'd expected to be reaching out. After I'd sat down
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with Vivienne to go over the possible outcomes of tomorrow with a cup of
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wine in hand, our talk was interrupted by a message from Lord Yannu
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Marave. He was overseeing the sparring of his sworn swords in the
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Revel's arena, and he'd invited me to come have a look. It was a
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threadbare excuse to have a private talk, but that he might want that
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talk at all surprised me. I shared the thought with Vivienne.
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``They call him Careful Yannu, back home,'' she mused.
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My brow rose.
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``He did not strike me as all that careful a man, during the trial,'' I
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said. ``Juniper has some respect for his skill as a general and I'll not
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argue there, but he's not particularly impressed me otherwise.''
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``The Dominion doesn't do politics like we do, Cat,'' Vivienne reminded
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me. ``They often duel, when they disagree, and they're cautious with
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risking their honour. He didn't particularly care about the trial
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because by Levantine ways he shouldn't have been in the room -- villains
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are yours to discipline, as your `sworn men'.''
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My forehead creased in thought as I considered him again with fresh
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eyes. He'd spoken in favour of death, when the time came for
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recommendations, but to Levantines things like betrayals tended to be
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seen as matters of honour. Honour was usually settled by blood on the
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floor, back in Levant, so for a lord of the Dominion to express surprise
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this didn't start and end with putting the Magician's head on a pike
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made a brutal sort of sense.
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``Careful Yannu, huh,'' I murmured.
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I wasn't entirely convinced, but best to watch my step anyway. There
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were damned few situations where it wouldn't be a good idea to do that,
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so what was there to lose?
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``There's an emerging pattern of the Dominion reaching out to us
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amicably,'' Vivienne thoughtfully continued. ``When they suggested we
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arrange formal ambassadors I thought it might be leftover goodwill from
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your saving the Pilgrim, or perhaps courting your support in keeping
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their villains from making trouble, but now I'm not so sure.''
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``They've been wary of making deals with me,'' I slowly said, ``but at
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the highest rungs of Dominion leadership they'll be aware of my eventual
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abdication. You're a lot more palatable, from their perspective.''
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A former heroine with some impressive deeds to her name, nobly born but
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not afraid to get her hands a little dirty? That sort of reputation
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would go over very well, down in Levant.
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``They also remember how quickly Proceran gratitude fades,'' Vivienne
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murmured. ``And how a First Prince can withdraw from the treaties signed
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by a predecessor. A treaty of mutual defence between our realms might
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appeal to their Majilis.''
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``I'd think it more likely they want an informal alignment within the
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bounds of the Grand Alliance,'' I told her. ``They don't want it to
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become a vessel for Proceran interests any more than we do.''
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``They'll be in no hurry to seal a pact, regardless,'' Vivienne noted.
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``Bargaining done with an ally is expected to be gentler, and the
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negotiations over the Accords is the greatest leverage the Dominion has
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over us at the moment.''
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True enough. More than once I'd wondered if Procer and Levant were
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actually drawing those talks out so that they could bribe me with
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`concessions' when they wanted something from me. Not a pleasant thought
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to entertain, but even if it turned out to be true there honestly wasn't
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much I could do about it.
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``No reason not to take up Lord Marave on his invitation, then,'' I
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said, draining the rest of my cup before rising to my feet.
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No reason to waste time, either, so I got to it.
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---
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I wasn't one to complain when offered up the sight of two dozen very fit
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men and women half-naked and laying hands on each other, but it lost
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some of the charm when they were doing their best to pummel each other
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unconscious. I'd been in a few brawls myself, back in the day, so I
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could tell that no one was taking it easy down there: those blows
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weren't being pulled in the slightest. If the personal sworn swords of
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Yannu of the Champion's Blood had been `sparring' with blades instead of
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fists, there'd be corpses on the sand by now. As it was, I saw only
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blood and broken bones. A pair of young Levantine healers -- who
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amusingly enough wouldn't be considered real priests in the Dominion
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even though they used Light, as unlike the Lanterns they did not battle
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against evil -- mended the fighters during their breaks, but did not
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otherwise involve themselves.
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Yannu Marave himself sat besides me on the rafters, drinking deeply from
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a waterskin. He'd been down there fighting with the others when I got
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there, and only come up after one of the healers set a broken finger and
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bathed it in Light. The Lord of Alava was still barefoot and clad in
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only loose trousers and a sweat-soaked tunic, neither of which hid the
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fact that the man was a towering slab of muscle. He was tall, for a
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Levantine, and unusually for one of their men close-shaven instead of
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bearded. His colours were not currently on his face, but instead
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discreetly painted in intertwined threads around his wrist. After
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emptying what must have been half the skin, the Lord of Alava sighed in
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pleasure.
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``I thank you for your patience,'' Lord Yannu said.
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``I didn't send a messenger ahead to warn of my coming,'' I dismissed
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with a shrug.
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There'd been others up here when I first came, who'd invited me to take
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a seat on the bench where I still was, but they'd withdrawn when their
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lord came up. Now he glanced back at them meaningfully and they reached
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within the leather bags at their side, fiddling with something within. A
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moment later the small tingle of a ward coming down over the area passed
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over my skin, and I eyed the men speculatively. They wore armour, both
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of them, which was rare in mages aside from those in my army and the
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Legions -- and even there it was a lighter kit than that of the
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regulars. They might not be mages at all, though, or just practitioners
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with a meagre Gift: it did not take much to wake the wardstones the
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Blood used. Gifts from the Gigantes, they were a wonder to behold and
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one I remained deeply envious of.
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``Hiding stones,'' the Lord of Alava said, noting my interest. ``We will
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not be heard, not even by the men carrying them.''
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``Useful,'' I said.
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Hopefully it wasn't too obvious on my face that I'd trade the Blessed
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Isle for a reliable way to get those. Not that I currently owned the
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Blessed Isle, but that'd never stopped me before.
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``I will not waste our time with small talk,'' Lord Yannu said. ``We
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both know what this is.''
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I hummed, inclining my head in unspoken agreement.
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``We're not happy with Procer having an \emph{ealamal},'' the tall man
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said.
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``I'm not familiar with the term,'' I said, ``but I can guess what
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you're referring to.''
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``The angel-corpse, you have called it,'' Lord Yannu said. ``That is the
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word for such a thing in Murcadan.''
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\emph{Ealamal}, huh. It had a ring to it. Less ungainly to keep
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mentioning, too.
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``Understood,'' I said. ``I'm not happy about it either, as you already
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know.''
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``I do,'' he said. ``And the heads of two lines of the Blood vouch that
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your word has weight, so now we speak. Procer is a great but dying
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beast, and I do not advise forcing its lair, yet for that same reason we
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must act. An animal bleeding out cannot be trusted with the likes of an
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ealamal.''
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He paused there, as if to invite me to speak.
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``I'd prefer the weapon scrapped,'' I admitted, ``but I agree that no
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good will come out of pushing the Principate too far. The reasonable
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compromise would be having people of our own near it, so that it can't
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be used without our agreement.''
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The tanned man nodded.
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``I speak for the entire Majilis when I say this,'' Yannu Marave said.
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``We want the ealamal to be made a weapon of the Grand Alliance, like
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the Severance.''
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``I don't see Cordelia Hasenbach going for that without assurances,'' I
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said. ``At a guess, Procer keeping the most boots on the ground around
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it and maybe even controlling who has access.''
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Rubies to piglets that the First Prince would cut off a finger before
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letting Masego anywhere near her angelic doomsday weapon.
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``We'd agree to limiting Bestowed access,'' the Lord of Alava said, ``by
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making it subject to a vote needing to be unanimous. But we want Binders
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and Lanterns there, so that we can know the nature of the threat. I will
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not accept our first warning being a tide of burning light on the
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horizon.''
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``Preaching to the choir there,'' I grunted back. ``I'd agree to
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limiting Named under those terms as well, but I want your support in
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pushing for the Rogue Sorcerer to have a look.''
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Roland was in that narrow category of people who were both likely to
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understand what they were looking at and then share that information
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with me. The Lord of Alava studied me closely.
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``Agreed, if you support the same for the Forsworn Healer,'' he replied.
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I hid my surprise. The man was from Atalante from what I recalled, not
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Levant. And he served up in Twilight's Pass, where no Named from the
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Dominion had been assigned. There were Levantine troops up there,
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though, led by Itima of the Bandit's Blood. Might be there was a tie
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there that'd slipped me by: there were few of my lot in Lycaonese lands,
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and none I was close to. Either way I had no reason to refuse his terms.
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``Bargain struck,'' I replied, offering up my arm to clasp.
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``On my honour,'' Yannu Marave agreed, taking the arm.
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Good, that tended to be reliable in Levantines.
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``All that's left is deciding how we approach her,'' I said. ``It will
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have more of an impact coming from Levant, I'd say.''
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``If Callow is the one to approach her, she will sound us out and find
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the door closed,'' the Lord of Alava replied. ``A softer creep, yes?''
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``If she doesn't already know we're talking, I'll put up my crown for
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auction in Mercantis,'' I snorted. ``Besides, soft won't get this done.
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It needs to be made clear to her she'd standing alone in this, and that
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her allies are not pleased.''
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``A common front, then,'' Lord Yannu said. ``Wearied comrades coming to
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her together.''
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Interesting. He really didn't want to be the one to swing the sword on
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this, did he? Worried about the appearance of siding with a villain, or
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some of the undercurrents of the Dominion's own politics tying his
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hands? It was a shame that the Jacks knew so very little of the powers
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that moved Levant, but given the distance and the youth of their
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organization it would have been foolish to expect them to have spread
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their net that far.
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``That could work,'' I conceded, sensing pushing for more would get me
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nowhere. ``A dinner tomorrow, after the trial?''
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``No point in letting her dig in,'' the Lord of Alava agreed, sounding
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amused. ``I will make the arrangements, Black Queen, if you have no
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objection.''
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``I entrust my honour to your hands,'' I replied, nodding.
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Surprise flickered across the man's face, and though he tried to hide it
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the courtesy had obviously flattered him.
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Lord Yannu of the Champion's Blood would be less flattered if he knew
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I'd learned the words from the Barrow Sword, I suspected, but I had no
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intention of telling him.
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---
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I'd expected to derive some pleasure from this, to have to hide it, but
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when the time came I found that I got no joy from the sight of
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Christophe de Pavanie being pilloried.
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Metaphorically so, that was. Aside from being unarmed and heavily
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guarded the Mirror Knight wasn't bound in any way. He still looked like
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a beaten dog as the Sword of Judgement briskly went through the charges
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laid against him, face bleak as he remained silent unless spoken to. No
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one wanted to drag more Named directly into this, so the testimony of
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heroes had been offered in written form instead and the entire affair
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took no more than a quarter hour. The White Knight made his case
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methodically, laying no accusation that could not be proven and
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justifying his charge of `assault on an ally' instead of `unprovoked
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assault on an ally' by specifying that there'd been some fighting
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between heroes and that he himself had not done as much as he could have
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to prevent violence from erupting.
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It'd keep the Mirror Knight from more severe consequences, but even as I
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watched the First Prince's face subtly harden I decided it'd been a
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strategic mistake on Hanno's part. Admitting to heroes brawling amongst
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each other only helped make them seem less reliable in Hasenbach's eyes,
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damningly enough not without reason. That my own lot was looking better
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in comparison was darkly amusing, considering they tended to be
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significantly worse people. They were, however, \emph{much} better at
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hiding their misdeeds. The most fire that was squeezed out of the Mirror
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Knight was when he was probed over his reasons to have acted in such a
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manner by the First Prince.
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``I sought only to prevent the scapegoating and execution of a Chosen,''
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Christophe said, voice defiant. ``I took the wrong path in seeking this,
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I'll not deny it, but the intention itself I will not apologize for.''
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Cordelia warmly thanked him for his candor with a smile and he looked
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both surprised and rather charmed. I wasn't fooled, myself. I knew that
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glint in her eye, as it was cousin to one that'd often gleamed in my
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own. The First Prince of Procer was looking at a Heavens-ordained victor
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still insisting even now that his own half-baked sense of justice should
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trump laws and treaties, and finding indignation rising within her. I
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suppressed a wince. Those two sentences had probably done as much damage
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as the rest of this trial put together. Now she had to be asking herself
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how many heroes like Christophe de Pavanie there were, for each one like
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the White Knight.
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I could only begin to imagine her horror at the thought of that sort of
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strength and ignorance bolstering the position of some Highest Assembly
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cutthroat.
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With the charges fully presented and little doubt left as to the
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truthfulness of them, Hanno asked if the tribunal wanted to deliberate.
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I was still gauging the risk of being seen as overstepping if I pushed
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for that when the First Prince voted in favour. I quickly added my vote
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for to the tally and the Lord of Alava belatedly voted that way as well,
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looking more curious than anything else. With a majority secured the
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Mirror Knight was sent out of the room to a nearby one where he could
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wait until deliberations were finished, and within moments of his
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departure Arsenal mages put a privacy ward over the room. Cordelia
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opened the dance without being coy about it, much to my pleasure.
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``Before punishment is decided by the White Knight, I have relevant
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facts to present to the tribunal,'' the First Prince said.
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``By our own rules of procedure, these cannot be charges,'' Hanno told
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her.
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``They are not, Lord White,'' she calmly replied. ``If I may?''
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The dark-skinned knight nodded.
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``Christophe de Pavanie has involved himself with the royal family of
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Cleves, the House of Langevin,'' Cordelia said. ``He has taken for a
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lover the daughter of Prince Gaspard Langevin and become associated with
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the plots of that line, though his exact degree of awareness there has
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not been made clear.''
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The drow hadn't seen him backing the plot to knife them in the back,
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that much was true -- if Sve Noc had that kind of leverage, they would
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have given it to me. But he'd not outright refused either.
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``Neither taking a lover nor the plotting of others is something that
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the Mirror Knight can be castigated for,'' Hanno replied, just as
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calmly.
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Yeah, no one was going to get anywhere trying to get the Sword of
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Judgement to spice up a sentence according to political necessities. You
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might as well ask Archer to settle down or the Pilgrim to deal in casual
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cruelty.
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``Ignoring the full circumstances when passing the sentence would be
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dereliction of duty,'' I said instead. ``You've clearly established the
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man to be lacking in judgement through your charges, his association
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with known schemers has to be taken into consideration when addressing
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the consequences of that lack of judgement.''
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``Well said,'' the First Prince of Procer added. ``Justice dealt without
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thought to consequence is no more than the arithmetic of law.''
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A little rich coming from a woman famous for her mastery of using the
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Highest Assembly's procedural laws against her rivals, but I'd not
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answer wind in the sail by poking a hole in the damned thing. Yannu
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Marave's face had gone cold, though I noticed only when he leaned
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forward.
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``You both seem in agreement that Gaspard Langevin is scheming,'' the
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Lord of Alava. ``What is the nature of this scheme?''
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I cast a look at Cordelia, silently ceding her the right to speak. I was
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the closest thing the Firstborn had to a representative in this room,
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but the House of Langevin was \emph{her} headache -- and a little
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goodwill gift now and then helped grease the wheels of this
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relationship, anyway.
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``Designs have made on lands that were promised to the Empire Ever Dark
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for its contributions to the war,'' the First Prince said. ``Though the
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plans remained imprecise, and no concrete measures were ever taken.''
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If the Lord of Alava's expression had been cold before, it was now
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\emph{freezing.}
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``That such an honourless man still lives, much less still wears a
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crown, is repugnant,'' Lord Yannu spelled out with excruciating care.
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``With this scheming against allies he dishonours not only Procer but
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this entire alliance.''
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I said nothing, less than inclined to take that bolt for Procer when I
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pretty much agreed with the man.
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``Measures are being taken,'' Cordelia evenly replied.
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``Then let them be taken soon,'' Yannu of the Champion's Blood replied.
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``I will not lead my captains in the defence of such a man and his
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holdings, First Prince. We will not die by the hundreds so that your
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hungry princes can sink their teeth into new lands.''
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It would have been inappropriate to let out a whistle there, but I was
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tempted. The Lord of Alava was being heavy-handed, but given how much
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honour mattered to the Blood he might be genuinely offended by what he'd
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learned. Or, I mused with Vivienne's words in mind, Careful Yannu might
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just be preparing the grounds for our common offensive at dinner
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tonight. He was in full face paint today, which made reading his
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expression rather harder.
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``We have strayed from the purpose of this deliberation,'' the White
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Knight said.
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With that call to order we let the subject drop, though it would not
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soon be forgotten. I'd said what I'd wanted to and the First Prince had
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proved true to her word by actually addressing the Langevin troubles, so
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when the deliberations were called to an end I did not argue against.
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The Mirror Knight was brought back in and Hanno called for
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recommendations to be made by the tribunal.
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``A public lashing and four fingers,'' Lord Yannu flatly said.
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The Mirror Knight paled but did not speak.
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``Reassignment to Twilight's Pass until the end of the war, subordinate
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to another,'' the First Prince suggested instead. ``After his deeds
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being made known among all Named and a month in a cell.''
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He made an uglier expression at that than the prospect of losing
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fingers, which I supposed said much about how other heroes would respond
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to his action. A month was a fairly specific length of time to ask for,
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though. I suspected that it would line up very well with a sentence
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under Procer law, by mere happenstance of course.
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``I'll second Twilight's Pass and the subordination,'' I said. ``As for
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the rest, I'll trust in your judgement.''
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A month in a cell would be a waste, so I'd not argue in favour of it,
|
|
but I was actually in favour of making it known Christophe had tried his
|
|
hand at a coup. It would bottom out his reputation while the way Hanno
|
|
had handled him would gild his own. Given the silence of the Choir of
|
|
Judgement, the occasional reminder that the White Knight was not someone
|
|
to fuck with had its uses. I didn't want to be seen arguing for the
|
|
public shaming of an opponent, though, so it was best for Cordelia to be
|
|
the one doing that -- not that I'd missed she was trying to send her
|
|
inconvenient native hero up in Lycaonese lands, where her support ran
|
|
strongest, and squarely under the Kingfisher Prince's military command.
|
|
|
|
My eyes stayed on the White Knight, though, whose serene face I found
|
|
unreadable.
|
|
|
|
``Christophe de Pavanie's breaches of the Terms will be made known to
|
|
all Named,'' Hanno said. ``He will offer apology and restitution to all
|
|
those harmed by his actions, after which he will be apprenticed to the
|
|
Grey Pilgrim for the span of a year so that he might learn from his
|
|
mistakes.''
|
|
|
|
My brow rose. Was that all? I was relieved when he began talking again.
|
|
|
|
``After the year has passed, the Grey Pilgrim will give his opinion on
|
|
whether further action is required,'' Hanno asked. ``If he believes it
|
|
to be so, this tribunal will be assembled again so that appropriate
|
|
sanctions might be considered.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out shallowly. Fuck me, but he'd stepped in it there. From
|
|
the corner of my eye I saw Hasenbach's back go straight as a spear, and
|
|
the fact that her anger was that that visible meant she must be
|
|
\emph{furious}. From a Named perspective, Hanno's sentence was solid
|
|
work: Tariq, for all his flaws, had mentored dozens of heroes over the
|
|
years and had an aspect that would allow him unearthly insight into what
|
|
needed to be mended in Christophe. Honestly, after a year under Tariq I
|
|
fully expected the Mirror Knight to come out of the experience a better
|
|
man. But the Grey Pilgrim had also butchered an entire village of
|
|
Proceran civilians in order to catch Black, back before the Salian
|
|
Peace, which Hasenbach still despised him for. Now a brewing threat to
|
|
her authority was being sent to learn at the foot of the same Peregrine.
|
|
It\ldots{} wasn't a good look.
|
|
|
|
``Wisdom was shown,'' Lord Yannu commented.
|
|
|
|
Yeah, none of the Blood were going to argue with a sentence that put the
|
|
Pilgrim in charge of a problem child. He had a steady hand with those.
|
|
Was this enough for me, though? From the corner of my eye I watched
|
|
Cordelia and saw clouds looming on that horizon. Time to throw her a
|
|
bone, maybe.
|
|
|
|
``I give no objection to this, so long as the Principate is also
|
|
satisfied,'' I mildly said.
|
|
|
|
The First Prince glanced at me, accepting the gesture for what it was --
|
|
a largely symbolic one, but not entirely without meaning. If she wanted
|
|
to fight this, I'd lend a hand. Within reason. A long moment of silence
|
|
passed, the Mirror Knight visibly getting uncomfortable the longer it
|
|
lasted, until the First Prince finally spoke.
|
|
|
|
``I will accept this sentence, if the Grey Pilgrim sends monthly reports
|
|
to the high officers on the subject of this `apprenticeship','' the
|
|
fair-haired princess said.
|
|
|
|
Hanno mulled over that a moment, then nodded.
|
|
|
|
``That is reasonable,'' he replied. ``It will be so.''
|
|
|
|
And so the trial of the Mirror Knight came to a close, having lasted not
|
|
even a half hour from beginning to end. It didn't take long afterwards
|
|
to agree that the Red Axe's own should be tomorrow, though late in the
|
|
evening.
|
|
|
|
And yet, for all the smoothness, I could not help but feel there was the
|
|
scent of a storm in the air.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was an amusing novelty to be more at ease in a diplomatic situation
|
|
than Cordelia Hasenbach.
|
|
|
|
When the Lord of Alava had said he'd make the arrangements to receive us
|
|
for dinner, I'd not expected him to actually throw what looked like a
|
|
genuine Levantine meal. One of the nice halls put together in the
|
|
Proceran manner had been stripped of its decorations, painted shields
|
|
having been hung up in their stead. The heraldries had been skillfully
|
|
painted, I found. My own Crown and Sword had been perfectly presented in
|
|
black and silver, while the golden towers on blue of the House of
|
|
Hasenbach drew the eye with their neat arrangement. The colours of the
|
|
Valiant Champion's Blood were red and orange, but to my understanding
|
|
the pattern changed from ruler to ruler. Yannu Marave's own was simple
|
|
but elegant, bold strokes of orange evoking a helmet with a smiling
|
|
slice beneath it.
|
|
|
|
The First Prince was clearly familiar with Levantine ways, so she'd come
|
|
dressed in a fine brigandine of Rhenian colours with a sword at her hip
|
|
and her hair pulled back in a long three-strand braid. I'd kept to a
|
|
simple grey tunic myself, though paired with bracers and greaves, and
|
|
brought a short blade at Vivienne's recommendation. Hasenbach was the
|
|
first to hand over her sheathed sword to the Lord of Alava when he
|
|
welcomed her, only to have it handed back as gesture of trust, and
|
|
though she did not fumble handling the weapon I'd noticed she was not
|
|
used to having it at her hip when she walked. My own blade was returned
|
|
with the same formula of `your honour is known under this roof', which
|
|
while mostly symbolic was still nice to hear.
|
|
|
|
Unlike the elaborate affair of when the First Prince had entertained me
|
|
over dinner, this was to be a simpler arrangement. Levantine ways in
|
|
some ways reminded me of those of the Taghreb, in the sense that
|
|
hospitality mattered a great deal to them and that courtesy was
|
|
demonstrated personally instead of through formal etiquette. It was an
|
|
honour, for example, that there would be only the three of us at the
|
|
table and no servants to pour or serve. The Lord of Alava would do so
|
|
for us himself, showing much more respect than if a stranger were doing
|
|
it in his stead. The fare was simple but tasty: slices of dried pork
|
|
ham, a mix of beans, chickpeas and eggs touched with spices and oil,
|
|
good white bread with some sort of tomato paste.
|
|
|
|
Lord Yannu was generous in pouring wine, strong red stuff from southern
|
|
Levant, which did wonders for my appreciation of the meal. Conversation
|
|
started light and stayed there for some time as we dug in.
|
|
|
|
``Do you actually know how to use that?'' I eventually asked Hasenbach,
|
|
flicking a glance at her sword.
|
|
|
|
She'd kept drinking, bound by the rules of courtesy, so I believed the
|
|
flush on her cheeks to be entirely genuine.
|
|
|
|
``I can hold a wall, if need be,'' the Lycaonese princess replied, ``I
|
|
\emph{am} a Hasenbach. My skill is middling, however. I was always
|
|
better with a bow.''
|
|
|
|
Didn't have the callouses of someone who shot regularly, though, I
|
|
couldn't help but notice. Probably didn't have the time with her duties
|
|
in Salia.
|
|
|
|
``Good bowmen are always useful,'' the Lord of Alava said in approval.
|
|
``It is unfortunate they are not as useful against the undead as the
|
|
living.''
|
|
|
|
``Swords for the Dead, arrows for the Plague,'' Hasenbach quoted.
|
|
``There is a proper use for all things.''
|
|
|
|
That was as good a segue as we were going to get, I suspected, and I
|
|
wasn't the only one to figure that out.
|
|
|
|
``Some weapons are best left in the sheath,'' the Levantine lord said.
|
|
``And there are some who even sheathed cause the wise to be wary.''
|
|
|
|
The First Prince wasn't an idiot, and not interested in pretending
|
|
otherwise, so instead of playing off the comment she dabbed her lips
|
|
with the cloth and washed down the last of her pork with a small
|
|
mouthful of wine. Only then did she answer.
|
|
|
|
``There are many wise in Levant, I imagine,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``I have known this to be true,'' Yannu Marave said, face pleasant but
|
|
eyes cool.
|
|
|
|
The First Prince glanced at me.
|
|
|
|
``I don't claim wisdom,'' I said, ``but wariness is dear as a sister to
|
|
me.''
|
|
|
|
``It pains me to see my allies troubled,'' Hasenbach mildly replied.
|
|
``Though I am wary, myself, of troubling the princes sworn to me.''
|
|
|
|
``Your princes trouble \emph{me},'' the Lord of Alava replied,
|
|
dispensing with the pretence. ``I have broken bread with Gaspard
|
|
Langevin, never knowing he was plotting betrayal of an ally. I will
|
|
never share a table with any of that line again.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Godsdamn}, I thought. While I was fairly sure he was feeding the
|
|
flame some, the spark at the heart of it struck me as a genuine thing.
|
|
The twist of those lips was just a little too tight for it to be
|
|
otherwise.
|
|
|
|
``You've expressed concerns about the reliability of Bestowed,'' I said,
|
|
``and perhaps not without reason. You can understand, then, our concerns
|
|
about an \emph{ealamal} possibly falling in the hands of less honourable
|
|
elements within Procer.''
|
|
|
|
She didn't like it, I could tell, but she couldn't afford to antagonize
|
|
Procer's only two allies by brushing us off. It must not have been a
|
|
pleasant turn, I thought, to be the one on the outside for once. I was
|
|
rather enjoying being the one with backing, though. I could get used to
|
|
this.
|
|
|
|
``Let us discuss then,'' Cordelia Hasenbach said, ``how all our concerns
|
|
might be allayed.''
|
|
|
|
After that, all that was left was bargaining over terms.
|