719 lines
33 KiB
TeX
719 lines
33 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-50-mores}{%
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\section{Chapter 50: Mores}\label{chapter-50-mores}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Villains often try to get clever, to stump me with philosophical
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questions like `what is evil?' To which I answer `generally, people
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asking me that question', which somehow they never see coming.''}
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-- Aldred Alban of Callow, the Prince Errant
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\end{quote}
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The moon hung above us like a nasty grin, the drop was precipitously
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close and past the lights of the stronghold below there was only a dark
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and desolate stretch: a proper backdrop for ominous talks with a woman
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that was neither a friend nor an enemy. The Scribe had picked her moment
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and her place with care, I decided, to frame this conversation in the
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way she preferred. And what did we do, when an opponent expressed a
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preference?
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``Eudokia,'' I warmly smiled. ``How \emph{lovely} to see you, it's been
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much too long. How have you been?''
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That's right: slit open its throat and set the corpse aflame. Scribe
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showed no visible sign of surprise and what little I could see of her
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from the corner of my eye, ink-stained hands and/
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/Gods Below and Everburning but I hated that fucking aspect. Even
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knowing about it the best I could do was work around the effect. Trying
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to remember anything about her was like clutching sand, with the same
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few grains left behind every time. Still, even though I might as well
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try to read emotion into a puff of mist the beat of silence that
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followed smacked of surprise to me.
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``I have been well,'' Scribe said, then paused. ``\ldots{} and you?''
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``Oh, you know, doing this and that,'' I drawled. ``Been thinking about
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getting another pair of boots, since mine are a getting worn, but I like
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the leather better soft.''
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Befuddled silence in the face of my boot-talk -- a real decision in need
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of making, actually, and one I'd be willing to hear her advice on --
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followed and I swallowed a grin. When I'd been a girl the Calamities had
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seemed like all powerful figures of legend, and by the time I'd learned
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better most of them had died. It was deeply satisfying for the kid I'd
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once been that the woman I now was could afford to screw with one of
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them like this.
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``I approached you to speak on matters of grave import,'' Scribe said.
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``It better not be the Dead King, then,'' I idly said. ``I won't stand
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for puns, Eudokia. Debated making them illegal once, you know, but it
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was a little too Sanguinia the Second.''
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What a brave soul, that one. I too would outlaw being taller than me, if
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it wasn't certain to lead to the rebellion of an insultingly large
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portion of Callow. Aside from the deep satisfaction inherent to pulling
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the leg of someone I was on less than decent terms with, I did have a
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purpose to this. Scribe had spent a very long time in Black's shadow,
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hidden by its span but also \emph{protected}. She'd been the monster in
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the night, or at least on its side, for so long she'd no longer be used
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to being toyed with.
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That was going to piss her off, I was betting, and anger always made you
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sloppy. If she was running a game on me, why shouldn't I run one on her
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right back?
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``Lack of discipline was always your greatest flaw,'' Scribe curtly
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replied. ``I came in good faith-``
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I clicked my tongue against the roof of my mouth.
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``You came here to use me,'' I easily corrected. ``And that's fine, so
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long as I also have a use for you. But don't pretend you're doing me
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favours, Eudokia. We both know coming here isn't your first choice.''
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A shot in the dark but one I was confident about. Black had decisively
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cut her loose from his service after learning she'd acted behind his
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back to ensure he would be forced to fight Malicia, and while I'd not
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forgotten the low he'd hit that night he wasn't one to walk back a
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decision so severe. At a guess, she'd tried to mend the bridge with him
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and been rebuffed. What interested me was what \emph{else} she might
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have been up to in the meanwhile: it'd been two years since the Salian
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Peace.
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If I'd been right about her relationship with my father remaining a
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wreck she didn't show it. With her first approach -- the one lending her
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importance, I now grasped, making her seem if not like an equal then at
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least someone of power and influence -- having stumbled, she smoothly
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pivoted to another.
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``If you are not interested in the information I have to bring, then you
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need simply say so,'' Scribe said. ``I can depart.''
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Transparent, but a ploy didn't have to be subtle to be effective. Likely
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she was well aware that the most I'd gotten out of the Wasteland was
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wild rumours and some of the ups and downs of the civil war between
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Malicia and Sepulchral. I was thirsting for news there, and she knew it.
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But she was after something too, wasn't she? Her first tack tonight had
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been one that leant her presence, weight, but that wasn't something
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she'd need if this was a simple transaction.
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She wanted something from me, something that perhaps I wouldn't want to
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give. So she'd puffed up like a bird trying to look bigger for a
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predator and hoped it'd give me pause. That made it clear what my answer
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needed to be to her challenge.
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``The closest gate is that way,'' I replied without hesitating, jutting
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a thumb west. ``If you hurry you'll have enough of a head start the
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Pilgrim won't bother to pursue.''
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Tension hung in the air in the moment that followed. It'd been a
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tactical mistake to make a bluff I was willing to call so early in the
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game. Now there was no recovering her position. I turned a sharp, toothy
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grin onto the Scribe.
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``Yeah,'' I murmured. ``I didn't think so. So why you don't you tell me
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what you came here to say, only without all the empty posturing.''
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Anger. I could hardly even look at her, much less read her, but I felt
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anger wafting off Scribe's silhouette like smoke. Whether it was at me
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for being bluntly high-handed or at herself for the missteps I didn't
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know, and probably didn't matter. The gesture stiff, she reached into
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her robes and removed three small letters. She handed me the first and I
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opened the fold, scanning the contents. It was tradertalk -- the eastern
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dialect of it, peppered with Aenian terms -- excerpts with translations
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into Lower Miezan.
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``Leo Trakas is dead and half Nicae a ruin,'' I frowned. ``The undead
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mentioned there, from Malicia's fleet?''
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Originally the war fleet of Nicae, but use of Still Waters had seen to
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that.
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``To an extent,'' Scribe replied. ``Supporters of Strategos Zenobia
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opened a gate in the night and let in her troops as well as a contingent
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of Helikeans under General Basilia herself. The conspirators promised
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them a bloodless victory, so when the wights attacked the Helikeans
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claimed treachery. In the chaos parts of the city were torched and
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sacked until Basilia restored order personally.''
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I hummed thoughtfully. The First Prince's diplomacy had borne fruit,
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then. I'd thought it drastic to condemn Leo Trakas as an ally of the
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Dead King, and only reluctantly voted in favour when the moment came,
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but Hasenbach had been right: it'd moved enough people to turn on him
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for the stalemate to turn in our favour without troops needing to be
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sent. Nicae falling wasn't only good news, though. Stygia had been
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quietly meddling to keep the wars within the League going, but with one
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of them settled the Magisterium might just come out swinging.
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``So Zenobia's crowning herself a princess?'' I snorted, reading the
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last excerpt. ``That's new.''
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That came an intercepted Nicaean courier, so it probably reliable. It
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was also noted that several of the Trakas from lesser branches had
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escaped Zenobia's attempted purge of the family after the fall of the
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city, which was a Name in the making if I'd ever seen one. I found it
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mildly amusing that she'd discarded the title of Strategos for something
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more royal, but it wasn't of great import: the office had essentially
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ruled Nicae like a royal house for decades, and I had doubts she'd make
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bloodline inheritance stick. Royalty wasn't unknown in the Free Cities,
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Kairos himself had been king of-
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I paused, then frowned.
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``Basilia still hasn't crowned herself queen, has she?'' I asked.
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``She has not,'' Scribe confirmed.
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Was she really \emph{that} ambitious? Zenobia had been backed to the
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throne by General Basilia, but when she'd given herself a royal title it
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had only been that of \emph{princess}. Why not queen, if she had royal
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ambitions?
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``Fuck me,'' I murmured. ``That's why Basilia doesn't care Stygia's an
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enemy, why she sent me all the letters making clear they're the
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provocative ones. She doesn't want to avoid that war at all, and she's
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not a queen only because she wants to be a bloody \emph{empress}.''
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Empress Basilia the First, with her vassal Princess Zenobia of Nicae and
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whoever she'd end up installing as puppets after she toppled the
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Magisterium and finished off Penthes. I was impressed but also
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skeptical. She'd managed the politics of this well, since no one in the
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Free Cities could really ally with her enemies without siding with
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either Stygian aggression or Malicia's southern meddling, but the Spears
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of Stygia were a fine army and the Helikean host bloodied.
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``If we survive Keter,'' I sighed, ``the next great war will come out of
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some damned foolish thing in the Free Cities.''
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I took the second letter when it was offered to me. Tradertalk again,
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but this time towards the Ashuran end of the stick. I couldn't parse the
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High Tyrian any better than the Aenian, but at least I got the Mtethwa
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loanwords. We'd known for some time that Magon Hadast, the ruler of the
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Thalassocracy was dead, that was old news. Killed by Assassin, if the
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Augur was to be believed. Bitter disagreements had since kept Ashur from
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recovering from its defeats at League and Praesi hands, but the nature
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of those had been opaque to even Cordelia's spies abroad, the Circle of
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Thorns. Not so for Scribe's people, it seemed.
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``So it's a glorified inheritance dispute,'' I bluntly said.
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``The dignitaries in the two camps often divide their allegiances by
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provenance from Arwad or Smyrna,'' Scribe noted. ``It speaks to a deeper
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divide in Ashuran society.''
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The Arwad committees mentioned tended to be from slightly lower tiers, I
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noted, and many sounded mercantile in nature. They were backing a
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distant relative of Magon Hadast for ascension to their highest
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citizenship tier by virtue of blood, since the main Hadast line had been
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extinguished. The man in question had married a noblewoman from Levant,
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though, which disqualified him in the eyes of the Smyrna crowd. They
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wanted instead to send a ship across the Tyrian Sea to import a ruler
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from Ashur's nominal overlord, the Baalite Hegemony.
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So far the conflict had seen no battles, only skirmishing in streets and
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countryside, but by the looks of it positions were hardening on both
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sides. I could not help but note that by the sounds of it an awful lot
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of people with the last name Hadast had died not too long after good ol'
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Magon himself.
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``Assassin's work?'' I asked.
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``Evidently, without orders he went\ldots{} somewhat overboard,'' Scribe
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said. ``He was caught and slain by the Blue Mage last year.''
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I rolled my eyes.
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``And I'm sure \emph{this} time it took,'' I drawled. ``Pull the other
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one. Where is he?''
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``I've not been in contact since he set out for Ashur,'' Scribe replied.
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I eyed her skeptically but let it go. If I was to start digging at that
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particular secret, it wouldn't be in so haphazard a manner. Without a
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word I was handed the third letter. This time it was Lower Miezan, and a
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simple phrase `the crown was obtained' along with a bell and day noted.
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I mastered my surprise, slowly folding the paper back. Fuck. I'd hoped
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we would keep the Eyes, if not entirely out of the Arsenal, then at
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least out of the most critical projects. I now had evidence otherwise.
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``It went well?'' I calmly said, as if this was not an unpleasant turn.
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``I had no eyes at the location,'' Scribe said, ``It was a scried report
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that was intercepted, and I expect it is making its way towards you as
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we speak. The ritual appears to have been a success and the nearby gate
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is still functional.''
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I pushed down the urge to snatch her by the throat and dangle her above
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the drop until I got names. It wouldn't accomplish anything, I reminded
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myself. Angering her was one thing, but an attack was another. I had no
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need to cement an enmity tonight. Not yet, anyway.
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``You've made your point,'' I noted. ``You know our allies better than
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we do, your people have access places where we don't and you have eyes
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even in the Grand Alliance's most guarded sanctum. Now that you've
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proved you have something to bargain with, what is it you want to
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bargain \emph{for}?''
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Scribe went silent for a moment.
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``I wish to sign onto the Truce and Terms,'' she said.
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I snorted, ignoring what I suspected was an unfriendly look my derision
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earned.
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``There was no need for the song and dance to get that,'' I said. ``And
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we both know signing won't open many doors for you.''
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The First Prince had not put a bounty on her head, but according to
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Vivienne she'd also put the matter of forbidding such a thing to the
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Highest Assembly and purposefully lost the vote. Both the Proceran House
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of Light and more than a few highborn wanted Scribe's head on a pike for
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the mess in Salia, and the Principate wouldn't stand for her gaining
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access to Grand Alliance secrets even as a signatory were I inclined to
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push for it. I was not.
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``You picked a fight tonight aiming for \emph{something}, Scribe,'' I
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continued. ``So out with it.''
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She sighed.
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``I was not picking a fight,'' the Webweaver replied. ``I was making a
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bid for a position.''
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My brow rose and I almost laughed until I realized she was deadly
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serious. Gods Below, I thought, how badly had it gone with Black for her
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to come to \emph{me}? We weren't exactly bosom friends, Eudokia and I.
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My reflex was to refuse her, and not politely, but I tamped down on it.
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``I have questions,'' I mildly said.
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``Understandable.''
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Interrogating one of the most skillful living spymistresses of Calernia
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would require skill and subtlety, I mused. Unfortunately I lacked those,
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so best swing the other way around entirely.
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``What have you been doing for two years?'' I bluntly asked.
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``Fighting for control of the Eyes of the Empire,'' she frankly
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admitted. ``I knew Ime would overtake me closer to Praes, so I
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concentrated on taking over the edges of the network and damaging
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records in the Wasteland so she wouldn't know what was lost. My agents
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were purged or suborned most places east of the Whitecaps, but elsewhere
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I have established control.''
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\emph{Fuck}, I thought. That meant Malicia was firmly back in control of
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the Eyes in Callow, not exactly great news. Still, at least I'd gotten a
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list of imperial agents in my kingdom from Scribe as reparations during
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the negotiations for the Salian Peace. Duchess Kegan had sent the Watch
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to purge everyone on it when I'd passed it on, so at least the foothold
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of the Empire would be damaged. It also meant that the leader of the
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largest spy network on Calernia not directly in service of a crown was
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standing next to me. Worth a second look, that.
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``If you're going to try to sell me you didn't reach out to Black,
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you'll need a better pitch,'' I noted.
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I felt her breathe in even if I didn't see it.
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``How casually you pick at the wounds of others,'' Scribe said. ``Of
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course I sought him out, Catherine. I still have the scar from where
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Ranger's arrow took me. Half an inch to the side of the heart. She likes
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to think she's funny, you see.''
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I shared a moment of silent appreciation with her about just how much of
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an asshole the Lady of the Lake was. I suspected she didn't even have to
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try, it just came naturally to her.
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``He was quite apologetic about the arrow,'' Scribe sighed. ``But there
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would be no making amends.''
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I frowned. That\ldots{} did not sound like Black. It was a half-done
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job, and he abhorred those. She was leaving things out. I said nothing,
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only cocking an eyebrow. Eudokia sighed again.
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``He said he had done me wrong, by taking me into his service,'' Scribe
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murmured. ``That his ambitions had devoured mine, and we'd both suffered
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for it.''
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I almost winced. That sounded more like my father, admittedly: genuine
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care, but handed out along with brutal honesty.
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``He won't have left it at that,'' I encouraged.
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``You must find your own way,'' Eudokia softly quoted, ``your own
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ambition. And I hope that, when you have, one day our paths will lead us
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to standing side by side again.''
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I breathed out in surprise. That walked the fine line between kindness
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and cruelty. And now, having eked out as much of a victory as she could
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in the war for the rule of the Eyes, Scribe had come here. A colder part
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of me noted she'd missed Black's point entirely, if she'd come looking
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for another master to follow. But cold wasn't always right, was it? My
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Winter days had made that much exceedingly clear. And my father could
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preach whatever he wanted, but he wasn't the one making decisions for
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Scribe.
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``You think we're going to head east, don't you?'' I said.
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I felt her smile.
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``Or the east will come to you,'' she shrugged. ``It makes no
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difference.''
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I thoughtfully hummed. I glanced down at the drop, leaning forward, and
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felt my stomach clench. There was a weight to the air tonight. Not a
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pivot, no. It wasn't enough for that. But this would\ldots{} matter.
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Reverberate. I let the fear of the fall sink into me, clear away all
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idle thoughts. It was refreshing, in a way. And it made how the choice
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needed to be made crystal clear.
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``Would you betray me to him, if the call came?'' I asked.
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``Probably,'' Scribe replied without batting an eye.
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I smiled.
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``Ah,'' I said, ``but would you betray me to anyone else?''
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She chuckled.
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``What would they have to offer me?'' the Webweaver asked.
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``Good,'' I said.
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I withdrew from the edge.
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``I expect you in my tent at Morning Bell,'' I said. ``I'll want a full
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report on the Praesi situation then. See Adjutant about signing onto the
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Terms and your assigned lodgings.''
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Her control wavered for a moment, overtaken by shock.
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``You do not jest,'' Eudokia stated, sounding surprised.
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I turned to her and gently smiled.
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``I'm not seventeen anymore, Scribe,'' I said. ``I'm already using
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people a lot more dangerous than you.''
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I turned my gaze back the night sky, the dismissal clear, and she
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quietly withdrew.
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---
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An hour before Morning Bell, my effective royal council these days sat
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around the sculpted table in my tent with steaming mugs in everyone's
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hands. It was early, so Indrani looked haggard even as she sipped at her
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Nicean blackleaf tea, liberally flavoured with honey. She'd been out
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drinking late, and though not hungover she was a little ragged. Hakram's
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own mug was filled with a fragrant gift of the First Prince -- Hasenbach
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had noticed he enjoyed her abominably spicy brews and sent him a small
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coffer full of assorted leaves -- and he'd deigned to share with Akua,
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who these days took more pleasure in scent than taste.
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I'd stood on a rooftop like an ass for an hour last night, so
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unsurprisingly I was now drinking Masego's personal brew for pain and
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hoping my leg wouldn't swell too much.
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``The Crows are keeping an eye out,'' I said, ``so we can feel free to
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talk.''
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``Ominous,'' Indrani grunted. ``What are we on about, Cat?''
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``Hakram already knows some of it,'' I said, nodding at the orc. ``Last
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night I was approached by Scribe.''
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Akua leaned back into her seat, looking interested,
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``News from the Wasteland at last?'' she said. ``I had wondered at the
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continued silence from the Carrion Lord.''
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``Not exactly,'' I said.
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``The Scribe has signed onto the Truce and Terms,'' Hakram said. ``Or
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she would have, if I'd then passed on the parchments properly. They were
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mislaid.''
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No one here bothered to comment how unlikely it was for someone with
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Adjutant's quite literally supernatural organisational abilities to lose
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anything this important.
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``You want to open her throat?'' Indrani asked, sounding surprised.
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``Thought you were keeping a light touch with the east.''
|
|
|
|
More like I couldn't afford to take a hard stance with the east,
|
|
considering that most of Callow's armies were abroad and wouldn't be
|
|
returning anytime soon. Vivienne and I had been clear with Kegan:
|
|
there'd be no rolling over for the Tower, but neither should she go on
|
|
the offensive. Considering the largest military force still in the
|
|
kingdom was the Duchess of Daoine's own army, she'd not been hard to
|
|
sell on that.
|
|
|
|
``Scribe requested a position under me,'' I informed them, though Hakram
|
|
had already known. ``No word was spoken of Callow in particular, and I
|
|
suspect that she is a great deal more interested by my position in the
|
|
Grand Alliance than my crown.''
|
|
|
|
``So you want our advice on whether to accept?'' Indrani mused.
|
|
|
|
Akua's golden eyes narrowed.
|
|
|
|
``She already has,'' dark-skinned shade said. ``She is simply uncertain
|
|
as to whether or not she meant it.''
|
|
|
|
I raised my mug in a toast.
|
|
|
|
``In an hour, the Scribe will enter this tent to give us a report on the
|
|
state of the Dread Empire,'' I said. ``I want your opinion on, when she
|
|
finishes, whether I should give her a position or slit her throat.''
|
|
|
|
That got me some surprise, but I thought more at the bluntness of the
|
|
statement than the morality inherent. I wasn't a fool, so there'd be no
|
|
talk of keeping Scribe prisoner and extracting information out of her --
|
|
she'd escape, sure as night, and be out for revenge. If I could not use
|
|
her, could not employ her within the frame of the Terms, then she needed
|
|
to die. Quickly, cleanly and without fuss. I let my words sink in for a
|
|
moment, then glanced at Indrani with a cocked brow. She sipped at her
|
|
tea a little longer, then snorted.
|
|
|
|
``Slice her,'' Archer frankly said. ``She's too dangerous, and she'll
|
|
never be loyal to you or anything you make. We can deal with that when
|
|
it's a nobody villain, but she ain't one of those. She's got spies and
|
|
gold and skeletons in people's closets -- best she's taken off the board
|
|
before you found your Cardinal. We don't really need her, anyway.''
|
|
|
|
``One can never have too many spies, Indrani,'' Akua chided her.
|
|
|
|
``Come off it, Dressing Ghoul,'' Archer replied, rolling her eyes. ``I'm
|
|
not going to pretend the Jacks are the sharpest operation out there or
|
|
that it's not awkward to rely on Procer for the goods, but what does
|
|
more sneaks really \emph{do} for us? It's useful, sure but it doesn't
|
|
bring anything new to the table.''
|
|
|
|
``According to the first reports she's fed us,'' Adjutant said, ``she
|
|
has eyes in Ashur. We yet lack those, and it is the same for the First
|
|
Prince.''
|
|
|
|
``Look,'' Indrani said, ``I'm not trying to be an asshole here. I've got
|
|
nothing against Scribe. But \emph{Ashur}, really? When the fuck was the
|
|
last time those guys mattered? It scratches our nosy itches to learn
|
|
what happens there, but the poor bastards are out of the war. Who cares
|
|
what goes on there? On the other hand, she's the godsdamned Scribe. You
|
|
let her into something like the Terms and she'll be handling half our
|
|
villains' money by the end of the year and reading the letters of the
|
|
rest.''
|
|
|
|
That was a fair point, I mentally noted. Scribe would take to the Terms
|
|
and their intended successor, the Accords, much like a fish to water.
|
|
That wasn't necessarily a \emph{good} thing. Archer as underselling her
|
|
value as an asset, though, in my opinion. Still, I'd decided before
|
|
starting this talk that I'd hold my piece until I'd gotten the advice I
|
|
asked for.
|
|
|
|
``The Carrion Lord ruled Callow for two decades without ever having a
|
|
formal capital,'' Akua said. ``I have been heiress to a High Seat and
|
|
Imperial Governess, so believe me when I say that is deranged. That such
|
|
a nomadic bureaucracy was even attempted is absurd, but that it
|
|
\emph{worked} is testament to the sheer use that can be had from someone
|
|
like the Scribe.''
|
|
|
|
``So she's real good at paperwork,'' Indrani said, sounding skeptical.
|
|
``Hooray. We get us a shitty, untrustworthy Hakram. There's a coup worth
|
|
the trouble, Gauzy Ghost.''
|
|
|
|
``We have not yet identified through what agent the Wandering Bard
|
|
managed to incite the Mirror Knight and his allies to head for the
|
|
Arsenal,'' Akua pointed out. ``The Jacks don't have the formation to
|
|
attempt an investigation like this, and the heroes have produced no
|
|
results on their own. That is already a use for the Scribe, and hardly
|
|
the only one there is.''
|
|
|
|
``She's expressed enmity for the Intercessor before,'' Hakram gravelled.
|
|
``I'd agree we can rely on her against a common enemy, at least.''
|
|
|
|
``Look,'' Indrani sighed, ``I'm not going to argue for an hour we need
|
|
to open her throat. It's starting to feel like I'm going after her, when
|
|
I don't particularly want her dead. You wanted my opinion, Cat, and you
|
|
got it: she's a risk, and I don't see what she brings to the table that
|
|
warrants taking it.''
|
|
|
|
I slowly nodded, drinking of my herbal brew, then turned an expectant
|
|
gaze onto Akua.
|
|
|
|
``Killing her would be unwise,'' Akua said. ``For one, it would have
|
|
consequences: villains would hesitate to sign onto the Terms, if they
|
|
knew being snuffed out was a possibility should they be judged unfit.''
|
|
|
|
``The Scribe attempted to infiltrate our camp before the offensive and
|
|
resisted when caught,'' Adjutant mildly said. ``We had no choice but to
|
|
kill her. In can have every written evidence otherwise burned within a
|
|
quarter hour and she's only dealt in person with the adjunct
|
|
secretariat. Secrecy is possible.''
|
|
|
|
``Hasenbach isn't going to argue with her corpse, that's for sure,''
|
|
Indrani snorted. ``She's dreamed of seeing it often enough. The Highest
|
|
Assembly might even throw us a parade.''
|
|
|
|
``The Dominion has no reason to care,'' Hakram added. ``And even less to
|
|
investigate. Praesi villainy is largely seen as our backyard, and ours
|
|
to deal with as we see fit.''
|
|
|
|
``The Terms are a covenant of Named, not nations,'' Akua replied.
|
|
``Belief in it has already been undermined by the second trial of the
|
|
Red Axe and the prior wave of betrayals in the Arsenal. Further fraying
|
|
the fabric of it without a decent motive, which I have yet to hear,
|
|
would be irresponsible.''
|
|
|
|
``She has a significant portion of the Eyes, Akua,'' Adjutant calmly
|
|
said. ``And we have no real understanding of what she wants, or what
|
|
loyalties she keeps. Her Name will thrive in the environment of both the
|
|
Terms and the Accords -- practically speaking, she represents an
|
|
immediate threat because she is a way for villains to gain and
|
|
consolidate power that we have no control over.''
|
|
|
|
``She did not approach as a contender for influence, Hakram,'' Akua
|
|
said. ``She requested a position \emph{under} Catherine. Scribe can and
|
|
should be considered a potential threat, but those are thin grounds to
|
|
kill on. Even more so when those very same qualities that make her a
|
|
threat also make her a potential asset of great worth.''
|
|
|
|
Which wasn't wrong. Unlike Akua, I'd actually ruled Callow. She
|
|
significantly underestimated how difficult it had been for Black to rule
|
|
the kingdom on the move, even with the imperial governors handling most
|
|
local matters. It was telling that our most comprehensive record of
|
|
Callowan laws and noble privileges wasn't the old Fairfax records that'd
|
|
survived the Conquest but a neat set of manuscripts titled with the
|
|
numbers I to VI in Scribe's personal handwriting. She'd put together the
|
|
records of half a hundred families and the House of Light so well that
|
|
even Kegan, who despised everything Praesi, was in favour of having the
|
|
books copied and used to govern.
|
|
|
|
``Thought you'd be all about strangling the viper before it could bite,
|
|
Akua, I'm not gonna lie,'' Archer frowned. ``This isn't about how we
|
|
picked you up, is it? Because that's not the same at all. Look, you were
|
|
a bloody horror back in the day and our resident Callowans are still
|
|
going to scrape you raw for it -- but you're not like \emph{Scribe}.''
|
|
|
|
She leaned forward, earnest.
|
|
|
|
``We wouldn't off you like that,'' Indrani assured her. ``It's been a
|
|
few years since we got past that. Hells, I'd probably miss you some if
|
|
you got your ass exorcised.''
|
|
|
|
Coming from Indrani that was actually a pretty warm endorsement.
|
|
|
|
``While I am touched, Archer,'' Akua drily replied, ``I am not so
|
|
confused or sentimental.''
|
|
|
|
``Refraining from killing her out of fear of it being outed \emph{is}
|
|
acting on sentiment,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``If not in the sense you
|
|
implied.''
|
|
|
|
``So is acting to kill Scribe out fear of what she might do,'' she
|
|
replied without batting an eye. ``We do not know her desires, what of
|
|
it? Few allies are so helpful as to tell us these outright, and we have
|
|
other Named just as dangerous in our menagerie of the damned.''
|
|
|
|
``If we come in conflict with the Carrion Lord, or he is made hostage-''
|
|
Hakram began.
|
|
|
|
``- would we not act in accord with the man regardless, or seek to free
|
|
him?'' Akua interrupted. ``Let us not pretend we seek enmity with the
|
|
Carrion Lord, or that in his own way he is not a reasonable man. Was he
|
|
not our candidate for the Tower, once upon a time? The scheme might have
|
|
faltered, but the underpinnings of it remain unchanged.''
|
|
|
|
Which was a solid point, and a reason I'd been willing to consider
|
|
taking on Scribe in the first place: what did I care if she'd betray me
|
|
to Black, if I never got in conflict with him? Eudokia wanted nothing to
|
|
do with either the Dead King or Malicia, my two most prominent enemies,
|
|
which was a major point in her favour. Unfortunately while I agreed with
|
|
Akua that she was a very capable woman, that only made it worse that I
|
|
also agreed with Hakram: we knew fuck all about what Scribe wanted, and
|
|
with that in mind I was very wary of letting her loose into the Truce
|
|
and Terms.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't worried about sabotage, if so she'd already be dead. But I was
|
|
letting a fox into the henhouse, there were no two ways about it.
|
|
|
|
``Let's not pretend we can take her in and not use her,'' Indrani
|
|
pointed out. ``We take her, she's not going to be a messenger girl: it'd
|
|
be dangerous to use her like that, spit on what her Name's worth. I
|
|
don't think it's much, but it's definitely more than that.''
|
|
|
|
``Her resources could be used in Mercantis to combat Malicia's
|
|
influence,'' Akua said, speaking directly to me. ``To hunt the
|
|
Intercessor's agents, to help provide the Arsenal with exotic assets,
|
|
and that is only the use of what she leads. As a Named, she can smooth
|
|
essentially any task she is assigned to. Are we not ever drowning in
|
|
disasters?''
|
|
|
|
Archer eyed her with surprise, as if she couldn't believe would care
|
|
enough about this to speak this vehemently. I was a little surprised
|
|
myself, to be honest. The Calamities had long been her enemies, and she
|
|
had no reason to love Scribe,
|
|
|
|
``If she does become what was described as a threat,'' Akua continued,
|
|
``That is, a banker and facilitator for villains, imagine how useful she
|
|
would be as such a broker yet in your service! It would be
|
|
\emph{wasteful} to kill her, Catherine. Consider whether the Accords you
|
|
envision, the Cardinal you would build, can really thrive if you are
|
|
afraid of letting in talent.''
|
|
|
|
That\ldots{} was another good point, actually. The counter-argument came
|
|
easy, that the Accords were years in the future while taking in Scribe
|
|
was a risk in the present, but that last tirade should have weight on
|
|
the scales. I'd heard from the other two, so my gaze moved on to Hakram.
|
|
He'd already served as a goad for the other two, so he was due to
|
|
actually speak his own mind.
|
|
|
|
``On purely practical grounds we should kill her,'' Adjutant calmly
|
|
said. ``Her death would leave a large segment of the Eyes leaderless and
|
|
easy to pick off for the Circle of Thorns. She would undeniably be
|
|
useful if properly employed, but that would involve giving her access to
|
|
our inner workings while she's not been proved to be trustworthy.''
|
|
|
|
I'd argue it was debatable how much access she really needed to be
|
|
given, if she'd learned about some details of godsdamned \emph{Quartered
|
|
Seasons} on her own, but otherwise his points stood. I cocked an
|
|
eyebrow, as we both knew he wasn't done.
|
|
|
|
``No one here is a saint, Cat,'' Hakram said. ``I won't pretend we're
|
|
above slitting her throat and disposing of the body, or that showing
|
|
kindness will make her one of us -- she already has a home, a cause. But
|
|
I hear us talk, sometimes, and wonder how often our words have been
|
|
spoken.''
|
|
|
|
He bared a hint of fangs, teeth like white knives.
|
|
|
|
``If Dread Empresses have not sat with their Chancellors and Knights,
|
|
with their Warlocks, they too deciding that someone needed to die just
|
|
so they could rest a little easier,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``Did we fight
|
|
all these years, Warlord, so that we could be just another spoke in the
|
|
same old wheel?''
|
|
|
|
I'd been an idealist as a girl, hadn't I? In my own way. Gods, I hardly
|
|
remembered what that felt like. Too many compromises since, too many
|
|
ugly choices, and I knew deep down that following principle once would
|
|
mean nothing. Change nothing. But I looked at Hakram of the Howling
|
|
Wolves, crippled in his wheelchair because of an ugly choice I had made,
|
|
and found I could not argue with him. Not for guilt, though that would
|
|
stay with me until I died, but because he was a reminder of a simple
|
|
truth: this had to be about more than just winning.
|
|
|
|
If it wasn't, it would all end as I stood victorious in the ruins of the
|
|
world.
|
|
|
|
And so when Scribe stood before us, come Morning Bell, I tossed her a
|
|
small painted iron pin, in the shape of a curled skeletal hand pointing
|
|
a finger.
|
|
|
|
``Congratulations, Scribe,'' I said. ``You are now officially a member
|
|
of the adjunct secretariat.''
|
|
|
|
Slowly she nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Good,'' I smiled. ``Now report.''
|