577 lines
26 KiB
TeX
577 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{malanza}{%
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\section{Malanza}\label{malanza}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``It would be a curse to be born Good. If virtue were easy, if
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doing right was painless, Creation would have no meaning: what worth is
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there in a trial that does not try you?}
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-- Extract from the `Truths of the Shore', a collection of the teachings
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of Arianna Galadon (considered holy text only in Procer)
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\end{quote}
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\textbf{I}
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The statue was titled `\emph{Lorenzo Triumphant'}.
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There were eleven statues of the famous Lorenzo Malanza within the city
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of Aequitan, and every single one depicted the man with long flowing
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locks and youthful good looks. Rozala, who had long admired the
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brilliant general who'd made the Malanzas into the rulers of Aequitan,
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had been disappointed to learn the depiction was something of a lie. By
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the time Lorenzo had been winning the great victories in Levant that
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ultimately raised him to princeship he'd been forty, balding and with a
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severe limp from a lance wound he'd taken in the leg.
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\emph{Lorenzo Triumphant} somewhat acknowledged the last detail by
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depicting a stylish bandage over the young conqueror's leg, but it only
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served to enhance the brimming heroism of the victor of Tartessos and
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Lazar Valley. The marble had been beautifully carved, though it was kept
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bare instead of the gaudy Free Cities painted manner, and the lance he
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raised manfully towards the sky was worked in gold leaf. Rozala had
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always hated the bloody thing, as it stood in the Shaded Courtyard.
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Where Mother made her wait on the bench near the wall until the Princess
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of Aequitan was finally ready to receive her.
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Rozala had never once been made to wait here except when she was about
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to be punished, so that cursed marble statue was as ill an omen as there
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could be.
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It was different today. Rozala had spent most of the last hour looking
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at the statue and the orange trees of the courtyard, wracking her mind
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to come up with a misdeed she'd done warranting punishment, but there
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had been nothing. She'd dumped worms in Hernan's pillows again, but the
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little shit hadn't caught on yet and now that he was nine he'd grown too
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proud to rat her out as eagerly as he used to. He'd asked for it,
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anyways, mocking her for having a hard time memorizing the first stanzas
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of the `Tragedy of King Konrad'. Reitz was \emph{hard}, and unlike her
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brother she wasn't getting any better at it.
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The day broke from precedent again when instead of one of Mother's
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attendants it was Mother herself who came to find Rozala. Aenor of
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Aequitan, Rozala thought with pride, was still known as one of the great
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beauties of the south even in her dawning middle age for good reason.
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She didn't need glittering jewels or powders to impress, just a
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well-done braid and an elegant silken dress. One day, Rozala promised
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herself, she would be just as beautiful. Mother offered her a lovely
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smile before sitting by her side on the bench.
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``Is there anything you would care to tell me, Rozala?'' Princess Aenor
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meaningfully asked.
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``Nothing at all,'' Rozala lied.
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The tanned princess looked faintly amused.
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``Your delivery needs work,'' Mother said.
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Rozala said nothing, primly looking ahead and hoping if she did not move
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the subject would be dropped. Her mother was a skilled interrogator when
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she put her mind to it.
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``But that is not why I sent for you today,'' Mother lightly added.
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The ten year old girl breathed out in relief.
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``May I know why I am here, if not to be punished?'' Rozala asked.
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``Most of your tutors will be dismissed this evening,'' the Princess of
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Aequitan said. ``I will be taking care of your education personally, at
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least in some regards.''
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Though thrilled, Rozala forced herself to remain calm.
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``Sister Lisella said last week that I was not yet ready for such
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tutelage,'' she said.
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Mother looked at her with approval.
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``I am hurrying the transition,'' the Princess of Aequitan agreed.
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``There are\ldots{} growing undercurrents to the Ebb and Flow, my
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darling. I've come to believe the years ahead will bring with them great
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perils.''
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``Through peril, rise,'' Rozala replied without hesitation.
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The words of the House of Malanza had been drilled into her since she
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could walk, along with the duty she had to her family and her people.
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Mother simply nodded, as if the answer had been a given.
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``There will be opportunities,'' Aenor Malanza agreed, eyes coming to
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rest on the statue of their famous forbear. ``Of the very same kind he
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found, I expect.''
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``It will be war, then?'' Rozala softly asked.
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``It might yet come to that,'' the Princess of Aequitan said. ``So let
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us learn the lessons of Lorenzo's life, yes?''
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Rozala turned attentive dark eyes onto her mother, waiting for the
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wisdom she had to impart.
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``Have you ever seen a statue of Juan Osuna?'' Mother asked.
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The young girl startled in surprise at the question. The last name she
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recognized -- how could she not, when the House of Osuna had preceded
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the Malanzas on the throne of Aequitan -- but the given name took her
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shamefully long to place. Prince Juan Osuna was mostly known as Juan the
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Abjurer', in the histories, for he had been the last prince of the Osuna
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and abjured his right to throne before fleeing east into Salamans.
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``I have not,'' Rozala admitted.
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``The question was a trick,'' Princess Aenor easily said, ``for you pass
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by such a statue every time your ride through the eastern gate.''
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The young girl blinked, and only then put the pieces together.
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``The Wicked Elder is meant to represent him?'' Rozala said, doubtful.
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``But the statue is of an old man, decrepit and\ldots{} impious.''
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There was something unsettling about the statue's gaze, and the unseemly
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face it stared out of. It was somehow ribald and heinous at the same
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time. The young girl frowned, drawing back a strand of hair.
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``I've been taught that Juan the Abjurer was fifteen, when renounced the
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throne,'' she added.
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``He was,'' Mother thinly smiled. ``And yet he lost, and so when he was
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still remembered at all it was as a hideous figure. While Lorenzo, who
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was nearly thrice his age, won and is now depicted as a golden youth all
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over the city.''
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The Princess of Aequitan continued to stare at the statue.
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``It is the victor who decides who was wicked and who was righteous, in
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the end,'' Aenor Malanza told her daughter. ``When that statue was first
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raised, my lovely, it was known as a lie. But who remembers it now save
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a few scholars?''
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Rozala almost shivered, though the afternoon heat was stifling even in
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the shade.
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``But we've lost wars, haven't we?'' she softly asked. ``In the years
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since. And it did not destroy us like it did the Osuna.''
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``Because we did not flee, my darling,'' Mother smiled. ``We abjure
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nothing, we Malanzas. When the sun dims, when hard ends find us, we
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embrace the dark. We survive, whatever the cost, and through peril-``
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``Rise,'' Rozala finished in whisper.
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``Juan Osuna fled east and ever returned, Rozala,'' Mother said. ``He
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might have won, had he fought. Had he had the \emph{stomach} for the
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fight.''
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Instead, Rozala thought, all that was left of the man was a
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half-forgotten lie. It was the first lesson her mother ever taught her.
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She did not forget it.
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---
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\textbf{IV}
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Cordelia Hasenbach had been crowned First Prince of Procer but there
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were some who argued, and not without reason, that it was Prince Amadis
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Milenan of Iserre who had won the Great War. What else could it be
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called but a victory, when without his lands having ever known war a man
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rose to become one of the great powers of the land? Prince Amadis did
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not hold the highest office in the Principate, but he had not beggared
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himself and his allies to seize it as the First Prince had. And down
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here, in the south, old blood knew the strength of patience. The
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Lycaonese despot would fall sooner or later, and when she did the Prince
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of Iserre would rise in her stead.
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Rozala Malanza, made Princess of Aequitan by her mother's decree before
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she drank the regal mercy, had heard much of this sort of talk in Salia.
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Not in the streets, of course, for the people were jubilant at the
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election of a First Prince and the end of the Great War, but behind the
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doors of great mansions in the city. Rozala had remained aloof, even
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when invited to attend dinners, preferring to study the currents at the
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capital from a distance. Hasenbach was not as weak as was argued, she
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saw, and there was wishful thinking clouding the judgements. She had the
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votes in the Highest Assembly, and the bite of her armies would not be
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soon forgot. For now, she had the run of the Principate.
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And she was comfortable enough in her seat to make gestures, such as
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refraining from contesting Rozala's acclamation as princess before the
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Highest Assembly. It was tradition, when a princess of the blood took
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the regal mercy, that their choice of successor not be challenged. Yet
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tradition was only that, not law, and Hasenbach had the strength to
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dispense with it should she wish it.
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It had burned Rozala like acid, kneeling on the floor of the Highest
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Assembly as she faced the cold-eyed savage that'd made her mother drink
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poison. The hate clung at her insides like a thousand hooks, and these
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days fear was beginning to do the same. For Hasenbach had been merciful,
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yes -- wasn't it the talk of city, the virtue and kindness of their
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fresh young ruler? -- but she had not been \emph{soft}. Rozala wore a
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crown but her young brother Hernan, the same little shit who'd tattled
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on her as a boy and tried to steal her throne as a man, was now a member
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of the First Prince's court in Salia.
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\emph{Tread carefully}, Cordelia Hasenbach's cool blue eyes had told
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Rozala as she knelt. \emph{Tread carefully, or else.}
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Yet she could not. Gods, how could she? Mother was dead and now the
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savage had put a knife at her throat. She would not be called to heel
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like a dog, browbeaten into obedience. Yet the House of Malanza had few
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friends, these days, for it had come close to the throne but in the end
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it had \emph{lost}. No one wanted to share the taint by association, not
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even those who had been her mother's most ardent supporters. And so
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Princess Rozala Malanza at last accepted an invitation to taste the
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latest Iserran vintages, finding herself seated across Prince Amadis
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Milenan. A handsome man, the Prince of Iserre, and well-spoken.
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``I'd despaired of ever having the pleasure of your company, Your
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Grace,'' Prince Amadis smiled, pouring her a second cup with a steady
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hand and offering it. ``Yet I suppose allowances must be made for
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grief.''
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Allowances, he had said. The chosen word was not happenstance. There was
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only one master in the alliance that Amadis Milenan was gathering under
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his banner, and he would not suffer any talk to the contrary. His
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protection, his help, would come at a price. It ate at Rozala's pride,
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and she almost turned back, but she could not. Rozala Malanza would not
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go into exile, abjure the death of her mother and the answer it must be
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given. \emph{She had the stomach for this fight.} And so she smiled,
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thanked the prince for his courtesy and took the cup she had been
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offered.
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\emph{Through peril, rise}, Rozala swore, and drank deep.
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---
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\textbf{II}
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The First Prince died and the Highest Assembly gave answer. Too many
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answers, in truth, and there lay the tragedy: seven growingly urgent
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sessions were held, and even at the end of the seventh no one had the
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votes to sit the high throne.
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Princess Constance of Aisne -- no true princess, not even born to the
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House of Groseiller but to a branch family of a different name --
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claimed regency and rule of Salia until a First Prince could be elected,
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claiming it her right under ancient laws as the closest kin to the
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buried First Prince. Rozala's mother laughed and walked out of the Hall
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of Assembly without another word, Dagobert of Lange and Fabien of Lyonis
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not far behind her. It would be war, then. Regretful, Rozala's mother
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said, but it'd all be settled in a few years after battles separated the
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serious contenders from the chaff and compromises were forced.
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The people bled. The people sang, growing quiet when riders neared. It
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was a new song, but in a sense it was also as old as the Principate.
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\emph{Princess said she had a right}, it went.
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\emph{Princess said it'd be a fight}
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\emph{Now princess are all aflight,}
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\emph{And the pot it is boiling.}
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Rozala Malanza learned war in the saddle as a girl barely grown, taking
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lesson from fantassin captains and highborn generals as she wore mail
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and rode under the banner of the House of Malanza. She took her first
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life at fourteen and Mother's smile when she returned bloodied was
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luminous.
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``You will be what I cannot,'' Aenor of Aequitan said, stroking her
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hair. ``I am no warrior, it is not in my nature, but you are taking
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splendidly to it.''
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One day mother would rule in Salia, Rozala at her side, and bookish
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Hernan would be made steward of Aequitan as Rozala herself was schooled
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to ensure the dawn of a Malanza dynasty on the high throne. But it was a
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golden dream, and the Gods ever laughed at such designs. First defeats
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in the east, as Constance the Usurper drove back an offensive into Orne
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at the Battle of the Swallows. It stung, but the war continued. And when
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the first of the Great Claimants was smashed up north, Fabien of Lyonis
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kneeling to another's rights, the armies of Aequitan and its allies
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marched north to prevent Dagobert of Lange from consolidating power.
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The Sack of Lullefeuille decimated Aequitan's army, cunning Prince
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Dagobert and his Goethal right hand penning it up in the city and
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smashing it piecemeal. Rozala broke the encirclement, leading out a few
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thousand haggard survivors, but it was an unmitigated disaster. Yet
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Aenor of Aquitan's tongue was silver, and her treasury overflowing even
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in defeat, so armies were raised again. The war was not over. When word
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came of the savage Lycaonese sallying south, it was considered an
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amusing anecdote. Then Brus fell. Then Lange surrendered, as Segovia and
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Lyonis knelt.
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The anecdotes were no longer amused.
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It still shook Rozala to the bone, when she saw that Mother was
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entertaining envoys from Constance the Usurper. Secretly, but the wind
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was turning and alliance was in the air. Only for so long, but this
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Cordelia Hasenbach -- who most of Procer had barely heard of a year ago,
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back then know only for the fanciful tales of Praesi manipulation she'd
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sent letters about -- was scaring the opposition. The Great War was
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entering its last stretch, and neither Aenor Malanza nor Constance
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Groseiller had broken a dozen armies to end up allowing some slip of a
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girl from the edge of the world to claim the high throne in their stead.
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``It will be done, my darling,'' Mother told her one night. ``The
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alliance is agreed upon, all that is left is haggling terms.''
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``I had twenty cousins when this war began, Mother,'' Rozala harshly
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replied. ``I now have three.''
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And these only because even Constance the Usurper would not blacken her
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name by having toddlers and newborn babes murdered.
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``You would break bread with the woman who ordered this?'' Rozala asked.
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``Share a cause with her?''
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The very thought was enough to make her sick.
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``I have not forgotten a single thing, Rozala,'' Princess Aenor harshly
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replied. ``But I am a princess, not a swaggering duellist: there are
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times when honour must be set aside. When the deaths are blindly dealt
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and so pride must be swallowed. Sometimes we make bargains with those we
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hate, when duty demands it of us.''
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---
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\textbf{V}
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Weeping Gods, but it had all gone wrong.
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The Army of Callow should have been in no state to fight after the
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bruising clashes of the previous day, but Rozala's belated suspicions
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had proved true: even as the dead rose from the water, hammering home
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the gravity of her mistake, the legionaries of the Black Queen had
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struck. Where the day before had been a dance of manoeuvres and daring,
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and the day before it a terrifying battle of Chosen and Damned, this one
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was nothing so clean. It was a blind melee, vicious and messy and
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chaotic. Exhausted and bloodied by the days of fighting, the Army of
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Callow and the crusaders went at each other like ragged dogs.
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And silently, eerily, the blue-eyed dead kept coming in waves.
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The Chosen had gone out into the waters to fight the Black Queen: ice
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raged in the swamp as spurts of sorcery lit up the morning sky and
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screams echoed from afar. Rozala would pray for their victory, but not
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count on it. The battle did not grow any less nasty as the hours
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stretched, she found, for while a desperate defence was mounted by the
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soldiers from Orne and the enemy kept from sweeping the camp, the Army
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of Callow settled into a brutal slugging match with the crusaders -- a
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slugging match Rozala could already see would turn in favour of the
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enemy eventually, for the dead were coming by the water and the lines
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holding the shore slowly buckling.
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Thrice she traded a charge with the Order of the Broken Bells, hoping
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her more numerous horse would shatter the enemy's knights and allow her
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to strike the flanks, but the Callowan knights were hardy and
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unflinching. She was forced to withdraw when the left flank of her
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shield wall, too close to the swamp, began to collapse and rout. Rozala
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rode there in haste and brought fantassin reinforcements, but all it did
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was restore the stalemate: her attempt at a push into the enemy's lines
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was swiftly answered with goblin munitions and heavy foot. Not long
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after some of the Chosen return to her side, the Pilgrim and the Saint
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foremost among them, while others went to bolster the army.
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It gave the men spine, Rozala saw, but it wouldn't win the battle.
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``Where is the Black Queen?'' the Princess of Aequitan urgently asked,
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shouting over the sounds of battle.
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If she was dead, then this could still be turned around. But before the
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Peregrine could say a word, a shape was glimpsed riding a winged horse
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above them and Rozala got her answer. The Enemy approached on graceful
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wings, bringing death with her, and the heroes at Rozala's side readied
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for the fight. Legends, both of them, and still they looked grim. Yet
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when the Black Queen threw herself down into a hard landing, it was not
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to fight.
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``Truce,'' Catherine Foundling claimed. ``I'm here to talk.''
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And the heroes hemmed and hawed over this, over continuing the fight
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even under truce flag, but all Rozala could think of was that there
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would be no winner today. In this brutal mess of mud and blood, no one
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would \emph{win}. No matter who claimed mastery of the field at the end
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of the day, both armies would be broken. And so, when the Chosen spoke
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pretty words to talk themselves into the killing, Rozala listened to an
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older voice speaking older words. She was a princess, not a swaggering
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duellist.
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``Stop,'' Princess Rozala Malanza ordered, and took off her helmet.
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It was a monster she was facing now, one it disgusted her to think she
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might strike a bargain with, but the Princess of Aequitan had a duty.
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--
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\textbf{III}
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The Great War ended on the fields of Aisne, not in the thunderous clash
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of arms but in the quiet hours that followed the end of the battle.
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Unerring, eerily precise, Cordelia Hasenbach's riders had found the
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princes and princesses fleeing the catastrophic defeat. Rozala took dark
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amusement in the way that Contance of Aisne and her party had been
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seized before the Malanzas were. The House of Malanza might not have won
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the war, but at least it could be said that their claim had outlasted
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that of their most hated rivals. The few months that followed were spent
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in comfortable but thorough captivity as Cordelia Hasenbach herself
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journeyed down from Rhenia to formally accept the surrender of her
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captives and the acclamation of her allies.
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Mother's attempts to get messages out without the knowledge of their
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captors had resulted only in two servants hanged and their party being
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stripped of ink and parchment, the Iron Prince not even bothering to
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tell them in person before giving the orders. The Lycaonese were living
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up to their rough reputation. Though Rozala insisted, screamed and then
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even begged, Mother refused to allow her to sit in on the conversation
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with Prince Cordelia -- who was not yet First Prince, for all her
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high-handedness. Aenor of Aequitan was subdued when she returned, sapped
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of her usual boundless spirit.
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The Princess of Aequitan formally surrendered the morning after and sent
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orders to her \emph{assermenté} in Salia to vote in favour of Cordelia
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Hasenbach's candidature to the high throne. After making a few public
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|
oaths, she was allowed to return with Aequitan with her household, no
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`escort' accompanying her or ransoms being demanded. Rozala found
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herself quite startled. These were very lenient terms of surrender
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Prince Cordelia had accepted, unlike what the Malanzas would have
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demanded were the positions reversed. The heiress to Aequitan found she
|
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rather admired the Lycaonese for her restraint, her mercy.
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That last word turned to ash on her, when they returned home and the
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real terms of surrender were unveiled. Aenor of Aequitan would drink
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|
poison, recalled early to the feet of the Heavens. The \emph{regal
|
|
mercy}, some called it.
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|
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|
Rozala boiled out with rage. She tried to raise the palace to war again,
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|
but the halls with empty with the losses of too many defeats and the
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|
eyes of the commanders gone gloomy. There was no stomach left for the
|
|
fight in Aequitan. And still Rozala raged, for what else could she do?
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|
But the march forward of fate was inexorable, and Mother now seemed
|
|
so\ldots{} tired. Rozala did not refuse the summons when they came and
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the servants led her to the ancient throne room of Aequitan. Mother sat
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|
the throne, a cup of wine in hand.
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|
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``You will have to be wary of your brother,'' Aenor Malanza said. ``He
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|
was raised to rule Aequitan for you as you followed me to Salia. That
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|
power is not a prize easily relinquished.''
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|
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Rozala nodded, mute from the grief that had snared her throat.
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|
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``It was the price for rule of Aequitan staying with our line instead of
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|
passing to a lesser branch, my darling,'' Mother gently said. ``And
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|
perhaps it is better this way.''
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|
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``There is nothing \emph{better} in this,'' the hard-eyed daughter
|
|
replied.
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|
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|
``There are deeds, days that demand an answer, Rozala,'' the Princess of
|
|
Aequitan said. ``The Ebb and the Flow rule us all, but sometimes\ldots{}
|
|
sometimes there are higher callings. Listen to them, my darling. Heed
|
|
them, and in time you will live up to what I see in you now.''
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|
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|
``Mother,'' Rozala begged, tears in her eyes, ``there must be another
|
|
way.''
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|
|
|
Her mother stroked her hand gently.
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|
|
|
``Through peril, rise,'' Aenor of Aequitan whispered. ``Go, Rozala.
|
|
While I still have the strength.''
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|
|
|
Aenor of Aquitan took the poison exactly a day after Constance of Aisne
|
|
was made to do the same. And with that cruellest of mercies, the last
|
|
defeated claimant to have fought in the Great War died. An era had come
|
|
to an end. \emph{Long live First Prince Cordelia}, the people shouted in
|
|
the streets. Rozala thought of the sound the doors of the throne room
|
|
had made closing, and polished her sword.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
\textbf{VI}
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|
|
|
Princess Rozala Malanza stood as the only princess, the only royalty of
|
|
her people, in all of Iserre.
|
|
|
|
This night, this graveyard of princes, had been a madness beyond what
|
|
the Ebb and the Flow could frame in understanding. Legends had died
|
|
who'd been legends for longer than Rozala had been alive. Angels had
|
|
touched the world, the Dead King been forced to stay his hand and some
|
|
magnificent eldritch realm had been born of trickery and sacrifice. And
|
|
of all the western crowns that had sat brows when steel was first bared,
|
|
only hers remained. Handed back to her by the Black Queen, terrifying
|
|
praise from a terrifying foe.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Rozala Malanza alone of seven did not flinch, when sacrifice was
|
|
asked}, the Arch-heretic of the East had said, eyes hard and judging.
|
|
\emph{For that, she keeps her crown.}
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|
|
|
It had been a grand gesture, the Princess of Aequitan thought. One made
|
|
for honour, not advantage, for there were other crowns that would have
|
|
been more useful for Catherine Foundling to preserve. So when in the
|
|
wake of the gesture Rozala's own kind had begun to squabble like dogs
|
|
worrying a bone over how the given grace could be traded and twisted,
|
|
she'd felt something deeper than disappointment course through her
|
|
veins. It'd been like scales lifted from her eyes.
|
|
|
|
She saw the contempt in the eyes of the Chosen, the way the Tyrant of
|
|
Helike grinned at them all with something akin to fondness. Gods, but
|
|
how petty they must all seem to those eyes. Arrayed against the
|
|
Principate were Theodosius the Unconquered's mad get and the greatest
|
|
warlord of their age, how was \emph{this} the best to be mustered
|
|
against them? Even their allies were led by the likes of the Peregrine,
|
|
royal blood hallowed by angels. Procer had been challenged to meet the
|
|
hour of doom thrust upon it, to match the calibre of the great men and
|
|
women standing with and against the realm.
|
|
|
|
And Rozala Malanza saw, in the eyes of those same people, that Procer
|
|
had failed to meet the challenge.
|
|
|
|
It burned that she could not deny it. Even as the hour grew late and the
|
|
Black Queen played them all for fools one last time, bringing back alive
|
|
a dead man. Even as the great lords of Levant swore oaths atop the hill,
|
|
straight-backed and solemn.
|
|
|
|
``Let it be remembered,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, shining bright with
|
|
pride, ``that when the Enemy came for the world, Levant did not shirk
|
|
its duty.''
|
|
|
|
Rozala grieved the sight, for what had Procer done to warrant such
|
|
friendship? Nothing and less. It burned still, that feeling she could
|
|
now name as \emph{shame}. Because she knew the honour of tonight might
|
|
be betrayed in years to come. That her people might live up to the worst
|
|
of themselves instead of the best. Was that not the nature of the Ebb
|
|
and Flow? \emph{So I beg you, Merciful Gods, could we not rise above
|
|
ourselves?} \emph{Even if only one, just once.} But the Heavens did not
|
|
answer any more than they had when she'd been but a girl stewing in
|
|
grief and rage. Silence. But there were days, deeds that demanded an
|
|
answer.
|
|
|
|
And if the Gods would not give it, then she would. So Rozala's fingers
|
|
closed around the hilt of the same sword she'd once polished, dreaming
|
|
of how it would cut through Cordelia Hasenbach's neck.
|
|
|
|
Princess Rozala Malanza bared her blade and heeded a higher calling.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
\textbf{VII}
|
|
|
|
Once she'd marched on Trifelin and suffered a stinging defeat.
|
|
|
|
The second time she'd marched there, she'd eked out a bloody victory.
|
|
|
|
Now the Princess of Aequitan watched the endless spread of the dead
|
|
marching against \emph{her}, a shambling tide of steel and darkness.
|
|
Slowly she unsheathed her sword and raised it, thousands answering her
|
|
with glittering steel and torches.
|
|
|
|
``Through peril,'' Rozala Malanza screamed.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Rise},'' the people screamed back.
|
|
|
|
She had been a slow learner, in many ways, but Rozala had never ceased
|
|
to learn. And the third battle of Trifelin would be hers body and soul,
|
|
this she swore.
|
|
|
|
One day she would teach her daughter about it.
|