622 lines
31 KiB
TeX
622 lines
31 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{epilogue}{%
|
|
\section{Epilogue}\label{epilogue}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{quote}
|
|
\emph{``And so Maleficent the Second said: `If I must burn half the
|
|
realm to save the rest, then kneel before the empress of ashes.'\,''}
|
|
|
|
-- Extract from the Scroll of Restoration, fortieth of the Secret
|
|
Histories of Praes
|
|
\end{quote}
|
|
|
|
The Vogue Archive did not sleep and tonight neither could Cordelia
|
|
Hasenbach.
|
|
|
|
Numbly, she walked down the mostly empty hall past the great tables
|
|
bearing maps of the realm she ruled and the smaller bureaus -- where, at
|
|
hours other than the middle of the night, some of the finest minds in
|
|
Procer tended to its regions. There were a few mages of the Order of the
|
|
Red Lion tucked away in corners, having retreated after greeting her and
|
|
now again simply waiting to be of use, but aside from them the
|
|
oft-crowded hall was quiet. Fewer than a dozen men and women were within
|
|
it, sometimes reading through the odd reports that had come in the night
|
|
but more often tidying up the numerous scrolls and reports that'd poured
|
|
in during the day.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia made for the back of the hall, the raised dais where her
|
|
handpicked analysts were charged with sifting through a sea of ink and
|
|
parchment so that they might find the catastrophes on the Principate's
|
|
horizon in time for them to be averted. The First Prince had chosen five
|
|
such individuals, but at this hour there was only one awake and present:
|
|
a woman of an age difficult to parse, rather dowdy in appearance and of
|
|
generally unremarkable looks. The sole eye-catching part of the
|
|
Forgetful Librarian's appearance was her oddly beautiful eyelashes, as
|
|
if they had been borrowed from a more striking woman and set on this
|
|
one's face.
|
|
|
|
She looked, Cordelia had come to realize, rather like the manifest ideal
|
|
of someone's reclusive, scholarly aunt. It was an appearance that would
|
|
invite dismissal from many, hiding the sharp mind and utter lack of
|
|
morals of the Damned. The Librarian was an exceptionally talented woman
|
|
as both a scholar and an advisor, the First Prince had learned, but she
|
|
was best used as part of a larger council that would temper the ruthless
|
|
pragmatism of the solutions she tended to propose. The other woman did
|
|
not rise as Cordelia approached, remaining engrossed in a book as she
|
|
cradled a steaming cup of chamomile.
|
|
|
|
It was a small slight the Damned liked to give, one of the little games
|
|
she seemed unable to stop herself from playing even when there was no
|
|
conceivable benefit for her to gain, but it had remained an irritant.
|
|
Usually the First Prince took the time to consider whether a threshold
|
|
had been reached where the other Proceran needed to be reminded of the
|
|
hierarchy between them, but not tonight. The disrespect slid off her
|
|
like water off a duck's back. It seemed such a small, petty thing to eve
|
|
spare thought for after the news she had received.
|
|
|
|
The First Prince of Procer instead slid into one of the seats she'd had
|
|
brought here, exemplars of comfort given the long hours they would be
|
|
used for, and leaned back. She closed her eyes, wondering if the Heavens
|
|
would take pity on her and let her fall asleep instead of remaining
|
|
like\ldots{} this. Numb and exhausted, feeling as if she was somehow too
|
|
tired to sleep. There was a muted clap as the Forgetful Librarian closed
|
|
her book -- though not before placing a bookmark, the parts of Cordelia
|
|
that never rested noted, which was interesting given that most Chosen
|
|
and Damned seemed to have enhanced memory -- and set it down, sipping
|
|
with uncouth loudness at her chamomile.
|
|
|
|
The Librarian was Alamans and of good birth, meaning she was being
|
|
unpleasant very much on purpose.
|
|
|
|
``Long night?'' the Damned idly asked.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia did not answer for a very long time, yet she did not hear the
|
|
book creak open.
|
|
|
|
``I have been told,'' the First Prince finally said, ``that no less than
|
|
three Hellgates were opened across the breadth of Procer.''
|
|
|
|
And that was not why she grieved, for sorrow was a nation's due but
|
|
grief could only ever be personal, but it was an answer of enough
|
|
gravity that it would obscure what was truly moving her. The Forgetful
|
|
Librarian breathed in sharply but did not answer. Cordelia opened her
|
|
eyes, finding herself being closely studied.
|
|
|
|
``All three were temporarily sealed,'' she continued, ``though at the
|
|
cost of the lives of every Gigantes that came to our aid.''
|
|
|
|
The villainess hesitated, for though she was not a moral woman neither
|
|
was she the manner of monster that bargained with devils for the lives
|
|
of thousands.
|
|
|
|
``And Keter's Due?'' the Librarian asked.
|
|
|
|
In proper Proceran scholarship the phenomenon was known instead as `the
|
|
desolation', but since the Arsenal had begun to train wizards the Praesi
|
|
terminology had seeped through. It could not be denied that Proceran
|
|
sorcery had a rather religious turn to it, and as Cordelia understood it
|
|
the `desolation' was considered to be as much theological in nature as
|
|
it was magical -- a punishment by Above for the ruinous overreach of
|
|
mortals. \emph{What disgusting idea}, the Lycaonese thought. To punish
|
|
thousands for the crimes of one, who would not even be moved by the
|
|
sight of such cruelty regardless. The very definition of pointless
|
|
suffering. No, Cordelia would take no issue with the use of `Keter's
|
|
Due' at all.
|
|
|
|
``There are reports from both the Hierophant and the Grave Binder that
|
|
suggest the effects of the Due were purposefully worsened,'' the First
|
|
Prince evenly said. ``In each case, most of the surrounding region was
|
|
blighted.''
|
|
|
|
The curse had flooded outwards. To the north the losses were acceptable,
|
|
for Twilight's Pass had already been bare rock while the swaths of
|
|
western Hannoven and southern Rhenia that had been lost had been poor
|
|
farmlands. In the case of Hainaut, where the blight was said to have
|
|
spread down to a natural fortress named Lauzon's Hollow, the loss was
|
|
one still to be felt: those lands had been in the hands of Keter for
|
|
most of the war. In Cleves, however? The Hellgate had been opened at the
|
|
fortress of Trifelin, where Rozala Malanza had won a great battle mere
|
|
weeks before, and the Due slain a few thousand soldiers out in the open
|
|
where there had been too few wards. That had been the least of the
|
|
losses there in truth.
|
|
|
|
The blight had also swallowed most of the fine lands along the length
|
|
candle road, snuffing out the principality's breadbasket.
|
|
|
|
That meant that Cleves would have to be fed by southern principalities,
|
|
which where already buckling under the strain and rebellious besides. It
|
|
meant dozens of thousand of refugees forced to flee south into lands
|
|
grown increasingly hostile to them. It means that Procer would have to
|
|
either beg for parts of the harvest of the Kingdom of Callow which it
|
|
could not afford to buy -- not with Merchant Prince Mauricius having
|
|
clearly laid out there would be no more loans until some unacceptable
|
|
conditions were met -- or there would be starvation in the heartlands of
|
|
the Principate. Hannoven was ash and ruin, ruled by the dead. Of her own
|
|
Rhenia no lands save the city-fortress itself remained, her own people
|
|
huddling in the dark beyond those impassable defences while death roamed
|
|
the countryside. Now Cleves and Hainaut as well were a ruin.
|
|
|
|
The armies that had been supposed to turn the war around, to push the
|
|
dead back into the lakes, had delivered instead one of the bloodiest
|
|
stalemates in the history of Calernia. And Cordelia's own uncle had died
|
|
in some ill-fated last charge without the break between them ever having
|
|
been mended, nothing but harsh words left to part on. She forced herself
|
|
to breathe slowly and steadily, else she knew she would tear up. There
|
|
were too many people looking. There were \emph{always} too many people
|
|
looking, and she could not afford to show weakness after having forced
|
|
the hands of the Highest Assembly the way she had.
|
|
|
|
``Was Hainaut a defeat, then?'' the Librarian quietly asked.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia Hasenbach allowed herself a bitter smile.
|
|
|
|
``The Black Queen won the field, though the field was but a smoking ruin
|
|
and many died,'' the First Prince replied. ``Among them the Grey
|
|
Pilgrim. The White Knight broke the Dead King's great bridge in the
|
|
north, so the campaign can still be settled in our favour.''
|
|
|
|
She knew better than to name such an outcome a victory, however. Nearly
|
|
half the Army of Callow was gone, the Lycaonese forces on the front
|
|
mauled and leaderless and general casualties had been atrocious for
|
|
everyone save the Levantines. Who had not been spared, either, though in
|
|
a different way. The Dominion was in uproar, as at least a few hundred
|
|
of its Blood had died turning to ash without warning on the evening of
|
|
the Battle of Hainaut. Cordelia's spies believed that everyone who could
|
|
have a feasible claim to being an Isbili had died, around the time the
|
|
Peregrine himself had died and brought down the pilgrim's star on
|
|
Hainaut.
|
|
|
|
With the Holy Seljun dead, no legitimate successor in sight and all
|
|
remaining major nobles up north fighting Keter the resulting chaos
|
|
already promised to be crippling. Another nail in the Principate's
|
|
overly burdened coffin, she thought, for the Dominion had been one of
|
|
the last few nations with which Procer could trade to keep afloat: the
|
|
coming tide of squabbles and `honour wars' would strangle those routes
|
|
soon enough.
|
|
|
|
``Trouble in Levant,'' the Forgetful Librarian frowned, tracing the rim
|
|
of her cup with a finger. ``I'm not so sure we can afford that --
|
|
economically speaking, anyway. We will have to lean on Helike and her
|
|
dependents to compensate.''
|
|
|
|
``It will not be enough,'' Cordelia tiredly replied.
|
|
|
|
General Basilia, who was now quite openly mulling claiming the title of
|
|
empress after having so long deferred taking up the queenship of Helike,
|
|
had made great strides forward with precious little outside help.
|
|
Cordelia herself had served mostly as a diplomatic broker in the matter
|
|
of settling hostilities with Stygia, and now that Basilia had most of
|
|
the western Free Cities under her and a sworn peace with Atalante her
|
|
rise seemed difficult to stop. Luck was even on her size, as word was
|
|
that Bellerophon had once more declared war on Penthes, belatedly
|
|
seizing an opportunity to attack their old rival that the People had
|
|
failed to recognize. It further tipped the balance in General Basilia's
|
|
favour, though given the fluidity of wars in the League there was no
|
|
certain outcome. Not that Cordelia expected the war to continue much
|
|
longer.
|
|
|
|
Delos was too great a fortress to easily fall, but it would not stand
|
|
alone against three cities and the priests of Atalante had no yearning
|
|
to break a holy oath freshly sworn. It might not be that Basilia would
|
|
hold all of the Free Cities, as the Republic of Bellerophon at least
|
|
would fight to the death over submission, but it seemed likely that a
|
|
tributary empire centred on Helike would be emerging from the aftermath
|
|
of that war. Given that Basilia was friendly to the Grand Alliance and
|
|
hostile to the Tower as well as eager for trade to resume, this seemed
|
|
like a saving grace for Procer's ailing coffers. Except, of course, that
|
|
General Basilia had spent two years ravaging the Free Cities with her
|
|
wars.
|
|
|
|
Trading with a broken land not yet recovered from the last civil war
|
|
that'd ravaged it was not going to be sufficiently profitable in the
|
|
immediate future, not when the only Free City whose coffers had swelled
|
|
was Mercantis and it was hoarding the wealth. In a year, perhaps two,
|
|
this could be the miracle that Cordelia needed should the nascent empire
|
|
of Basilia not collapse.
|
|
|
|
The Principate of Procer did not have a year to spare, much less two.
|
|
|
|
``Shall I send for the others, then?'' the Forgetful Librarian asked.
|
|
``If there was ever a reason to wake them in the night, this would be
|
|
it. I have refined my proposal for the invasion of Mercantis as a
|
|
stopgap solution, besides, so it might be the time for Your Highness to
|
|
genuinely consider it.''
|
|
|
|
She still believed, it seemed, that there was room to maneuver. That
|
|
there was still a game afoot.
|
|
|
|
``One year and twenty-eight days,'' Cordelia Hasenbach softly said.
|
|
``That is how long we have before the seals on the Hellgates break.''
|
|
|
|
And what could be done in so little time? Queen Catherine had left one
|
|
of her foremost generals, Abigail the Fox, to handle matters in Hainaut
|
|
with the returning White Knight and bluntly informed Cordelia that she
|
|
saw only one solution: she was headed for east, for Praes. She would be
|
|
taking the Marshal of Callow and the remains of the Second Army with
|
|
her, as well as the reassembled First. A few Chosen and Damned as well,
|
|
as she intended on settling the war for the Tower and returning west
|
|
with mages in large enough numbers the Hellgates could be handled by
|
|
Praesi magics. The Black Queen had not pretended that anything Cordelia
|
|
could say might sway her form that decision, but the part that had truly
|
|
cut had been the seemingly heartfelt condolences about Uncle Klaus.
|
|
|
|
It had seemed obscene to Cordelia that the Queen of Callow had spoken
|
|
more to him than she had, this last year. That she\ldots{} The First
|
|
Prince mastered herself, evenly breathing. The east was beyond
|
|
Cordelia's grasp, it was no longer her trouble. She would see to the
|
|
west as much as she still could, to her last breath, even though she
|
|
knew in the deepest of her heart that the outcome was already decided.
|
|
Procer would fall because it was simply no longer capable of standing.
|
|
If the war was not won soon it was going to break, and the war would not
|
|
be won soon. In truth it might be that victory was no longer possible,
|
|
Cordelia admitted to herself. Or that if it were achieved, the
|
|
Principate Procer would not live to see that achievement.
|
|
|
|
And facing that brutal truth was part of her duty, to plan for it. So
|
|
Cordelia Hasenbach's mind slowly stirred awake from the numbness,
|
|
considering how any part of Procer might still be saved from the coming
|
|
onslaught -- how its \emph{people} might be saved. And there was a
|
|
darker duty still, one that she despised but must consider anyway.
|
|
Should the Enemy triumph, should it all come to the worst of all
|
|
ends\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
``Send for the others,'' the First Prince of Procer finally said, tone
|
|
steady. ``And for mage of the Red Lions as well, if you please.''
|
|
|
|
The Forgetful Librarian slowly nodded, then rose to her feet to see it
|
|
done. Cordelia would need to speak with a man she had hoped she would
|
|
not see again before the war was at an end. Not out of distaste for him,
|
|
but because of what she had sent him to guard: the ancient corpse that
|
|
had once lain in the depths of Lake Artoise, and the weapon that had
|
|
been made of it. For Cordelia was a Hasenbach, in the end.
|
|
|
|
If it came to it, she would do what she must: better that some of
|
|
Calernia survive than none at all.\\
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was a delicate balance to maintain, to keep a civil war going without
|
|
ever being at genuine risk of losing it.
|
|
|
|
Malicia liked to think of it as painting with her own blood, drawing on
|
|
the famous turn of phrase by Maleficent the Second. Every success in
|
|
guiding the war according to her design came at the expense of carving
|
|
away a sliver from the pedestal of her perceived superior position, and
|
|
should the game be kept going for too long -- or defeats not of her own
|
|
making be inflicted upon her -- then she ran the risk of that pedestal
|
|
truly being toppled. It had not come to pass, of course. The Dread
|
|
Empress of Praes had begun to prepare for this conflict several months
|
|
before the first sword was drawn, and she'd had contingencies in place
|
|
regarding civil war for decades prior.
|
|
|
|
Agents seeded and left to grow, traitors and assassins and impostors.
|
|
Bribes and blackmail, debts to call on and more highborn in the palm of
|
|
her hand than anyone alive might suspect. High Lady Tasia Sahelian had
|
|
seen through parts of the preparations, in olden days, but now Tasia was
|
|
dead and Wolof ruled by a young man she had personally seen soulboxed.
|
|
High Lord Sargon Sahelian was, amusingly enough, one of her most ardent
|
|
partisans well beyond the influence she could truly exert on him. He had
|
|
bloodied Wolof taking it from his aunt, so he now craved years under the
|
|
protection of a greater power to rebuild his domain in peace.
|
|
|
|
And, for all that Abreha of Aksum -- Sepulchral, as she now styled
|
|
herself -- remained breathing, east of the Wasaliti there was no greater
|
|
power than Dread Empress Malicia. \emph{So long as I do not slip}, Alaya
|
|
reminded herself, studying the board before her. She'd always enjoyed
|
|
shatranj, even when she had still been her father's daughter and not a
|
|
prisoner in a golden gaol. It was a game of logic and sequence, of
|
|
anticipating the movements of your opponent, which had always appealed
|
|
to her. Wekesa had enjoyed the occasional game with her when he'd
|
|
visited Ater, the two of them spending more time playing and gossiping
|
|
over their common companions over wine than attending to the matters of
|
|
state Alaya had claimed the time for.
|
|
|
|
These days, though, Malicia played mostly against herself. The Dread
|
|
Empress of Praes considered the lay of the pieces, the disarray of black
|
|
and white that signaled the tail end of a match closely fought, and slid
|
|
her last black mage down a diagonal. Soft footsteps told her that Ime
|
|
had joined her without the need for the empress to look away from the
|
|
board. This was not her bedchambers, simply a study, but her spymistress
|
|
was one of the very few people who had access to the enchanted secret
|
|
passage whose door opened behind her.
|
|
|
|
``Speak,'' Malicia said.
|
|
|
|
``Our people in Procer confirmed that Queen Catherine is headed for
|
|
Praes,'' Ime said. ``Already orders have been sent to Laure by the Black
|
|
Queen to prepare the supplies for a campaign in the Wasteland.''
|
|
|
|
Malicia cocked an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``They cannot afford one,'' the empress said.
|
|
|
|
The intricacies of the internal politics of the Grand Alliance aside,
|
|
Alaya was speaking to the plain realities of hard coin. Callow was not
|
|
flush with gold, having already spent most of the coin it had received
|
|
for brokering a peace between the dwarves and the drow, and Procer was
|
|
so beggared these days that it was often resorting to paying in goods
|
|
rather than gold for the Callowan grain and cattle it so desperately
|
|
needed. In practice, the Kingdom of Callow was simply not wealthy of
|
|
enough to afford a war on a second front. It did not have the steel, the
|
|
gold or the manpower to attempt such an enterprise. That had been part
|
|
and parcel of Malicia's strategy to contain the Black Queen from the
|
|
very start: make dealing with the Tower a choice between diplomacy and
|
|
bankruptcy.
|
|
|
|
``They're pulling out the First and Second Army from Procer,'' Ime
|
|
replied. ``As for coin, Duchess Kegan was instructed to borrow from the
|
|
northern barons if need be.''
|
|
|
|
They'd have wealth tucked aside, Malicia reluctantly admitted in a
|
|
mental calculation. The lands under the baronies of Harrow and Hedges
|
|
had been only lightly touched by the Tenth Crusade and their rulers had
|
|
made a tidy profit selling their goods to a beleaguered south during the
|
|
reconstruction of Callow after Second Liesse. More than that, they would
|
|
be willing to lend. The barons were not unaware that their adversarial
|
|
relationship with Catherine Foundling had barred them from the Callowan
|
|
halls of power, so they would be eager to get a foot in -- particularly
|
|
if the debt was to be ultimately shouldered by the much more friendly
|
|
Vivienne Dartwick.
|
|
|
|
No doubt a few handsome spare sons would be sent along with the coin,
|
|
bearing hints that a newborn Callowan dynasty could do with an infusion
|
|
of fresh noble blood. Malicia was not unfamiliar with the tactic, her
|
|
hand having been sought with varying degrees of aggressiveness over
|
|
decades. Organising particularly painful deaths for those who dared to
|
|
insist too much had been one of the few instances in which Malicia had
|
|
worked closely with the Scribe. Eudokia was no friend of hers, but the
|
|
other woman had inherited that very Delosi penchant for meticulous
|
|
punishment of the contemptible.
|
|
|
|
``Who will hold command?'' Malicia asked, eyes still on the board.
|
|
|
|
She moved a pale knight, venturing deep behind an arrant line of pawns.
|
|
|
|
``Abigail the Fox has been left in command of the Third Army in Hainaut,
|
|
so she'd dredging up Marshal Juniper herself,'' Ime said, tone wary.
|
|
|
|
The empress was not so affected.
|
|
|
|
``She is a skilled tactician,'' Malicia calmly said, ``and a general to
|
|
take seriously, but her reputation is exaggerated. Rozala Malanza would
|
|
have beaten her decisively in Iserre if the Black Queen had not
|
|
intervened at the last moment. Marshal Nim should be her match, if it
|
|
comes to that.''
|
|
|
|
Given a decade perhaps the `Hellhound' would fully grow into her
|
|
talents, having been seasoned by the Uncivil Wars, but for now the
|
|
experience of the commanders that had served since the Conquest was
|
|
difficult to match for such a young woman. It would tell, particularly
|
|
in treacherous grounds like those of the Wasteland. Still, Malicia did
|
|
mourn that such a talent had been stolen away from the Empire. It had
|
|
been a stroke of terrible luck, that General Istrid would die during
|
|
Second Liesse and so leave her daughter adrift and her old legion easily
|
|
led astray. Not the greatest misfortune to come out of that battle by
|
|
any measure, but a misfortune nonetheless.
|
|
|
|
``She will be coming personally, Your Majesty,'' Ime quietly said. ``The
|
|
Black Queen. And she pulled away two of her armies from the war on the
|
|
dead, against our expectations. She is taking a much harder line than we
|
|
believed she would.''
|
|
|
|
Her spymistress was not incorrect, Malicia thought as she moved a black
|
|
tower near the centre of the board. The Dread Empress did not find it
|
|
entirely surprising that after what the Callowans had quaintly named the
|
|
`Night of Knives' their queen would balk at a diplomatic resolution of
|
|
their disagreements, but she \emph{had} expected that Cordelia Hasenbach
|
|
would push for such an initiative. The burdens of the war should have
|
|
rent Procer asunder by now and forced the First Prince to seek terms,
|
|
even if behind the Black Queen's back, but out of Salia there was only
|
|
silence. Scribe had seized the reins of the remaining eyes in Procer,
|
|
which meant information trickled east only at a glacial pace. Alaya slid
|
|
a white mage, taking a pawn.
|
|
|
|
``She cannot afford a battle with either the Tower or Abreha,'' Malicia
|
|
said. ``The ensuing casualties would make impossible an assault on
|
|
Keter. It is posturing, Ime.''
|
|
|
|
``She thinks us weak,'' Ime said.
|
|
|
|
``Which will make all the stronger an impression on her when it is
|
|
revealed otherwise,'' Malicia said. ``I have no intention of offering
|
|
onerous terms to turn on the Dead King, the shock and an amenable
|
|
bargain will see us through.''
|
|
|
|
The priority would be dismantling the Grand Alliance as continental
|
|
power. So long as Callow was leveraged to leave it after the war Alaya
|
|
expected that old rivalries between it and Procer would resume, most
|
|
likely through competing commercial interests, and it would be child's
|
|
play to cause incidents at the border between Procer and the Dominion.
|
|
Her plans had not all gone perfectly, of course. The matters down south
|
|
had turned against her and she would admit that the Stygian coup had
|
|
been a complete surprise, but General Basilia's victories brought
|
|
opportunity with them. Sponsoring an eastern alliance within the Free
|
|
Cities to rival the western Helikean bloc would check Grand Alliance
|
|
influence in the region.
|
|
|
|
Already the Secretariat was willing to privately entertain her envoys,
|
|
worried that Delos would be gobbled up by the victorious marauding
|
|
general.
|
|
|
|
``Or she could try to enthrone another in your place,'' Ime murmured.
|
|
|
|
Alaya's fingers tightened around a black knight. Malicia cocked an
|
|
amused eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``He has no armies, little practical support and fewer allies than I
|
|
have fingers,'' the Dread Empress of Praes said. ``Amadeus has not
|
|
returned to my side, but he has not raised a rebel flag beyond that
|
|
unfortunate lapse at the Peace of Salia.''
|
|
|
|
Reconciliation might still be possible, she left implied. And Amadeus
|
|
was in Praes, that much had been confirmed, but her once Black Knight
|
|
had not made many visible waves. He had not sought allies within the
|
|
highborn, reached out to the self-proclaimed Dread Empress Sepulchral or
|
|
even come out of the woodworks to lead the deserter legions in the Green
|
|
Stretch. The last in particular was a shame. It would have simplified
|
|
things a great deal in some ways. Malicia was inclined to believe that
|
|
Ranger had been an anchor around his neck, this time: for all that she
|
|
was a fearsome force of violence, at the moment the half-elf was also
|
|
being hunted by the Emerald Swords.
|
|
|
|
So long as she remained his companion, Amadeus could not come into the
|
|
light without having those ten monsters coming for wherever he dwelled.
|
|
Alaya released the knight, turning to meet her spymistress' eyes. Ime
|
|
looked troubled, as she often was these days. She was growing old, for
|
|
all that rituals still kept the worst ravages of time away, frailer in
|
|
both body and mind than the bold woman she had been in their youth.
|
|
|
|
``You have concerns,'' Malicia said.
|
|
|
|
``In understand why we cultivated the perception of our weakness,'' Ime
|
|
said. ``So long as we were a genuine military concern for the Grand
|
|
Alliance, I agree that we ran certain\ldots{} risks.''
|
|
|
|
Like Catherine Foundling gating in through the Twilight Ways and
|
|
beginning to drown cities, driven to hard measures by the fear of the
|
|
Grand Alliance buckling under a war being fought on two fronts. Much
|
|
easier for Praes to be beset by civil strife, a threat still but only a
|
|
distant one. Not urgent, an enemy that outright threatened the survival
|
|
of Calernia. Not that Malicia herself did not genuinely believe that the
|
|
Dead King had any real chance of winning, for Evil did not win wars, but
|
|
then it was not her soldiers dying in droves. She had ensured that the
|
|
Praesi civil war under her watch was to be largely bloodless, mostly
|
|
fought through raids and maneuvering.
|
|
|
|
``Yet that perception may yet come back to haunt us,'' Ime continued.
|
|
``She despises us, Malicia. She might refuse to deal with the Tower even
|
|
if it's the safer path, so long as there is another path at all. Another
|
|
credible candidate.''
|
|
|
|
Malicia studied her spymistress. It was not assassination being alluded
|
|
to here, of course. Ime had argued for it in the past but Alaya was
|
|
still unwilling. Such an attempt would be laughably unlikely to succeed,
|
|
besides, so long as he had Ranger by his side. Why even consider the
|
|
option, with that in mind? No, it was a different sort of measure that
|
|
Ime was arguing for. Alaya looked down at the board and rested a finger
|
|
atop the black knight she had left behind, thinking for a moment.
|
|
Sometimes childish dreams had to be let go of, she thought. Even when it
|
|
was painful. There would be no returning to the way things used to be,
|
|
and pretending otherwise was embracing the noose.
|
|
|
|
She tipped over the knight with a flick of her finger, the ebony piece
|
|
clattering against the board.
|
|
|
|
``Your advice has merit,'' Dread Empress Malicia said. ``Send for
|
|
Marshal Nim.''
|
|
|
|
Her spymistress watched her carefully.
|
|
|
|
``You'll do it, then?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' the Dread Empress of Praes said. ``I will recognize her as my
|
|
Black Knight.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was a pleasant night out, especially with a bottle of wine and stolen
|
|
roasted chicken to gnaw on.
|
|
|
|
The hinterlands of Aksum seemed perpetually doomed to being set aflame,
|
|
Amadeus of the Green Stretch mused, since a mere few decades after he'd
|
|
torched them on his way to besieging the city the High Lord of Wolof was
|
|
now doing the same. Young Sargon was also abducting people to fill up
|
|
the city that his aunt had mutilated on her way out, however, which
|
|
Amadeus found an interesting variation on the usual Praesi civil war. It
|
|
was important to keep those things fresh, he felt, and Gods knew that
|
|
the Dread Empire had a great deal of practice bleeding itself. The
|
|
dark-haired man chewed on his second chicken leg thoughtfully, watching
|
|
the smoke rising in the distance. Another village burned. They ought to
|
|
get moving soon, he figured, else they would risk running into raiders.
|
|
|
|
Amadeus wasn't exactly afraid of the outcome that would ensue, but it
|
|
wouldn't be subtle and that lack was a lot more dangerous than those
|
|
raiders could ever hope to be.
|
|
|
|
He wasn't even halfway through the leg when he first glimpsed Hye coming
|
|
up the path, noticing the splash of red blood on her sleeves when she
|
|
got closer. Ah, fruitful talks then. She'd always been such a skilled
|
|
diplomat, if one with a particularly narrow repertoire. He let himself
|
|
drink in the sight of her for a moment, the long locks framing the high
|
|
cheekbones and those clever dark brown eyes. Amadeus had seen her in
|
|
everything but bare skin and moonlight to mail and cloak caked in filth,
|
|
and even after all these years the faint note of wonder had yet to fade.
|
|
The love of his life approached, taking a long look at him and narrowing
|
|
her eyes.
|
|
|
|
``You ate both legs, you jackass,'' Hye Su, who some knew as the Ranger,
|
|
noted.
|
|
|
|
``So I did,'' Amadeus, cheerfully replied. ``You should have stolen your
|
|
own chicken, if you wanted the choice cut.''
|
|
|
|
Though he had once been known as some manner of knight, he'd never
|
|
bothered with chivilary: to add insult to injury, he also tossed the
|
|
bones of the first leg he'd eaten at her and watched as she easily
|
|
dodged. Her lips twitched, though.
|
|
|
|
``I should leave you hanging for this,'' Hye complained.
|
|
|
|
``You won't,'' Amadeus smiled. ``You got to kill something, it always
|
|
puts you in a chatty mood.''
|
|
|
|
``I don't get \emph{chatty},'' Hye denied, deeply offended.
|
|
|
|
``Of course you don't,'' Amadeus pleasantly smiled.
|
|
|
|
He had to duck a chicken bone, but it was a victory in every way that
|
|
mattered. Though huffing while she did, she dropped at his side and the
|
|
both of them sat back against the tall milestone that some ancient High
|
|
Lord of Aksum had raised on the hill near the road. Hye naturally helped
|
|
herself to the rest of the chicken, producing a knife so she could pop
|
|
the juicy but cooling pieces into her mouth, and the two of them sat
|
|
closely together under the night sky.
|
|
|
|
``So I was talking with this fae,'' Hye said.
|
|
|
|
``As one does,'' Amadeus amiably agreed.
|
|
|
|
``He had this friend that knew a friend,'' Ranger mused. ``And
|
|
\emph{they'd} heard that the Black Queen, out west, she's headed our
|
|
way.''
|
|
|
|
``To clarify,'' he said, ``was this helpful rumour shared before or
|
|
after you started stabbing him?''
|
|
|
|
``Eh,'' Hye said. ``You know how it is with fairies. There's stabbing
|
|
and then there's \emph{stabbing}.''
|
|
|
|
Sadly, Amadeus of the Green Stretch did know how it was with fairies. It
|
|
was only marginally better than dealing with Wasteland highborn,
|
|
something that had driven him to some fairly infamous bouts of stabbing
|
|
over the years.
|
|
|
|
``Shouldn't be a long journey through the Ways,'' he said. ``Two, three
|
|
months at most.''
|
|
|
|
``Sooner, if Indrani's guiding her,'' Hye said. ``She's always been a
|
|
natural at pathfinding.''
|
|
|
|
Amadeus hummed, amused at the understated pride in her voice. Though Hye
|
|
did not visibly play favorites among her pupils, she'd always favoured
|
|
those who used bows slightly over the rest.
|
|
|
|
``It is time for us to surface, then,'' he said. ``We need to get the
|
|
last pieces in place before my own former pupil arrives.''
|
|
|
|
Hye grinned, all teeth and malice, and he felt his heart skip a beat.
|
|
Even now, after all these years\ldots{} well, he was not as young as
|
|
he'd once been, but she did not seem to mind so what did he care? If
|
|
anything she seemed to like the grey in his hair, which he had not known
|
|
he was worried about until he felt relieved she did. It had been some
|
|
years since Amadeus had last felt insecure, even unknowingly, and he had
|
|
found it almost refreshing.
|
|
|
|
``Finally,'' Ranger said. ``I've been enjoying laying low, Amadeus, but
|
|
sometimes you just need to bite down on something you know?''
|
|
|
|
``I do,'' he replied in a murmur. ``And this is long overdue.''
|
|
|
|
He looked east, where in the distance waited the gargantuan shape of the
|
|
Tower jutting out from Ater, and he raised his half-empty bottle of wine
|
|
in a toast. When was he to settle his accounts, if not the end times?
|
|
|
|
If the song refused to leave him, then he would \emph{silence} it.
|