1028 lines
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1028 lines
48 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-10-parley}{%
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\chapter{Parley}\label{chapter-10-parley}}
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\epigraph{``Diplomacy is as sailing, catching the way the wind blows.''}{Ashuran saying}
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There was something deeply disorienting about waking up after having
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been knocked out. It wasn't like falling asleep, there was this sense
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of\ldots{} confusion, when where you were didn't match what you last
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recalled. So when my eyes opened, I made myself breathe in and out
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slowly as I forced myself to be calm. I did not know this bed, or these
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sheets -- silk -- or this room around me, lit with magelights and open
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windows giving a beautiful view of Wolof spread out below.
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I rose from the cushions I'd been leaning on, soft and plump and
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exquisitely embroidered, and to my surprise my limbs did not pain me. I
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could feel my left arm was tender, the skin pulled taut in that way it
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was after mage healing was used on flesh, but even the ever-present dull
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ache in my bad leg had been made quiet. My clothes were not the ones I
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had last worn, loose yellow cotton trousers and a matching robe
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patterned in green, but they were a comfortable fit. I padded onto the
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stone floor barefoot, finding that a beautifully carved cane of red
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mahogany awaited my hand. I tried it out and it fit perfectly, the
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spread wings of the ravens sculpted on the handle comfortably matching
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my grip. Leaning on the cane, I cast a more elaborate look around.
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It was a square room, and though the floor beneath my feet was covered
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in tiles and my surroundings were panelled in wood I caught it was all
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stone beneath it. Ignoring the slippers -- was that \emph{lion's fur}?
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-- that'd been laid out for me, I ignored the rich furnishings of what
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was no doubt an elaborate prison cell and limped my way to the windows.
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Three large glass panels, open just slightly but enough that I could
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feel the faintest breeze coming through. I flicked fingers at them and
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was not surprised in the least when the illusion flickered and a flat
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panel of bronze covered by a book's worth of runes was revealed for a
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heartbeat. The illusion resumed the moment my fingers ceased contact
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with the bronze, returning the false but beautiful view of Wolof under
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afternoon's light.
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I reached for the Night knowing what awaited, and I'd been right: I
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could not quite grasp it, layers and layers of wards preventing me from
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drawing it close. The Sisters reached out towards me as well, and though
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our metaphysical fingers failed to connect their presence was a manner
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of comfort.
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``Is my mind intact?'' I asked them in a murmur.
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Andronike sent a sense of reassurance, and from Komena I felt only cold
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anger at the thought that mere mortals might have tried to meddle with
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their First Under the Night. I let out a soft breath of relief. My
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thoughts and memories were still my own, then. I remembered fighting in
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that secret passage, keeping close to the wall to prevent the mages from
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getting a clean shot at me, but after the first few lives I'd taken it
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was\ldots{} something of a blur. I'd been knocked unconscious at some
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point, presumably, and brought here. I drummed fingers against my cane,
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letting out a small hum. Had I held long enough for Akua and Indrani to
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escape? \emph{Yes}, I decided after a moment. I should have gotten them
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enough of a head start if the guards had needed to dig me out with
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swords.
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The goddesses in me withdrew, as if coming close had been an effort, and
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I offered the illusion of Wolof a wan smile. I'd not planned for this
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little venture to end in my being a prisoner, but I could deal with the
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change of plans. If Akua had grasped what I'd meant with those few
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words, near the end, then my sappers were already digging at the
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foundation of my captivity. Why, I just needed to bet it all on the
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strength of the understanding of myself between a woman I hated as much
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as I loved -- and who would, before the moon's turn, betray me sure as
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the coming of the Last Dusk. Until then, though? My gaze swept the room
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again. My captivity came with a small rack of wine bottles at least, I
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found, not to mention bowls of assorted nuts and fruits.
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I found a pair of books, too, atop a pretty cabinet. One was a book by a
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Mistress Adad titled `Great Works', which a quick thumbing revealed was
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about ancient Soninke architecture. The other, to my reluctant
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amusement, was a Praesi highborn etiquette guide. Fair. Following the
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teaching of my Callowan forbears, I picked the book about architecture
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out of contrary spirit and limped to the table. Huh, was that a
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fully-stocked writing desk too? Nice. I picked up a bottle of wine on my
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way, refusing to take one of the gold-rimmed crystal glasses by
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principle, and wrenched open a bottle of what looked like a Nok red
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before dropping into a seat and cracking open the book.
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It ought to tide me over before Sargon came to talk, I figured.
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---
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The time of the day displayed by the illusion did not match what my
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sixth sense told me of the passage of time. It would have been a clever
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trick to disorient me, otherwise. Before I saw either hide or hair of
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High Lord Sargon or Malicia -- who would be coming sooner or later, I
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knew -- I first encountered servants. Veiled and silent they came thrice
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a day to bring out delicious four-course meals, fill my wine rack, empty
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the enchanted water cabinet in the corner. Heated water for washing was
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in the morning, after breakfast, and not once did any of them even
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twitch at anything I said. I even shouted at the top of my lungs once,
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to see if I'd at least get a reaction, but nothing. They might have been
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deaf, I thought, or at least bespelled for deafness.
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I found had little to do but eat, read and drink for a whole day. Though
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I got restless before the first bell had passed, in a way this was
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also\ldots{} relaxing. There was only so much I could do from in here,
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and how long had it been since I'd had so few demands on my time? Still,
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I wouldn't simply resign myself to it either. I inspected my cell but
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found no opening to it save for the hidden door the servants used, which
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led to a stone passage I only ever saw lead to a closed steel gate. I
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wasn't going to be popping that open with a cane, I knew, though it
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might be worth checking if I could touch Night while in the passage.
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Somehow I doubted it, but why leave the question unasked?
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On the second day of my captivity, before I could find a good
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opportunity to try the passage, a servant in Sahelian livery came. No
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veil on this one, and unlike the others he was feeling chatty.
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``This one bears the words of High Lord Sargon Sahelian, Queen of
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Callow,'' the man said.
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``I'm listening,'' I replied, cocking an eyebrow.
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Sargon was asking whether I'd agree to have my midday meal with him, as
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it turned out. I was tempted to decline just to see what would happen,
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but I held back. I wasn't sure if he'd left me to stew in the room for a
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day just to make sure I'd be inclined to talk, but if so I had to admit
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it'd worked. I took him up on the offer and was promptly afforded the
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services of a tailor, which I bemusedly agreed to. The clothes I'd been
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provided were comfortable enough, tunics in green or yellow with a
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Callowan cut, but I wouldn't turn down free clothes. Deciding to indulge
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a whim I ended up wearing a soft yellow sundress, paired with a short
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frock in pale green and comfortable shoes. Alas, Sargon was warned well
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in advance so I did not get to see a look of surprise on his face but
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the momentary blankness was enough to have smiling as he sat across the
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table in my cell. He was not so ornately dressed as when we'd last met
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either, his white and red tunic rich and well-cut but otherwise
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unremarkable.
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He was dressed in that way that those whose family had been rich for
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generations got dressed, when there was no longer a need to trumpet
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about the wealth.
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``We will be having fey fowl as the main plate,'' the High Lord of Wolof
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amiably told me. ``One was caught last month a few miles to the south.''
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``I'm going to assume we're not eating an actual fae,'' I replied,
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cocking an eyebrow.
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He chuckled.
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``We are not. The birds are descended from experiments of Dread Emperor
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Sorcerous' that his successor loosed into the wilds,'' Sargon said. ``It
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is said he was attempting to infuse birds with the powers of Arcadia,
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but only ever succeeded with the basest of their kind. The first
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specimens were highly toxic, but not so their progeniture.''
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``Huh,'' I said. ``They taste any good?''
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``Delicious when braised and served with zaze sauce,'' Sargon smiled.
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``I don't believe you've ever had it before.''
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The man kept a damn good table, I'd give him that much. The first two
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plates were warm herbal bread served with sauces and a spicy but
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refreshing broth, followed by the fowl-on-rice with the zaze sauce that
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proved exactly as good as he'd boasted it would be. It ended with a
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creamy, sweet pastry that tasted of eggs and cinnamon I found paired
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well with my wine. And none of it was poisoned, an additional point in
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its favour. The conversation had been enjoyable but light, the two of us
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pretending I wasn't a prisoner in Wolof and discussing what I'd read in
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`Great Works' -- I suspected his enthusiasm there was not feigned in the
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slightest -- and a few anecdotes about the city itself. All of it very
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tame.
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When a servant brought me a pipe stuffed with wakeleaf and refilled my
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wine, though, I knew the real conversation was about to start. Sargon
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gallantly struck the match for me and lit it, himself indulging instead
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in a small cup of an amber liquor that smelled strongly of peaches.
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``This morning I threatened to have you executed should your army not
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retreat,'' Sargon conversationally said, ``but your marshal declined
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rather rudely.''
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``Juniper knows an empty bluff when she hears one,'' I shrugged, pulling
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at my pipe.
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Praes couldn't afford to kill me right now. Much like I was pulling my
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punches fighting them, as I wanted the Empire's martial strength
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mustered against Keter, they too had to pull theirs. If Malicia killed
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me, there was a very real risk that the western fronts would outright
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collapse -- and much as she liked to pretend otherwise, the empress
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didn't actually want the Dead King to want any more than we did.
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``Sadly,'' Sargon sighed.
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I breathed in deep of my wakeleaf as he sipped at his drink.
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``I have been advised to torture you publicly in order to force
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compliance, naturally,'' he conversationally added.
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I blew out a small ring of smoke, shaping it by making my lips pop. I
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did not answer. He chuckled, revealing that slightly crooked smile
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again.
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``I know better than to attempt such a thing, of course,'' High Lord
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Sargon said, ``though you do not seem worried in the slightest.''
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``I had my soul eviscerated by lesser gods once,'' I idly replied.
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``Came out of it mostly sane. Not a lot of torture than can beat that,
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even if you get inventive.''
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And neither Juniper nor Vivienne would fold at the sight anyway. They
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both knew I'd tan their hides if they did. All it'd win Sargon was my
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genuine enmity, which he was taking pains to avoid earning.
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``I would not dare claim that I can imagine,'' the golden-eyed man
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amiably replied. ``You will understand, naturally, that holding the head
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of a host besieging my holdings prisoner is something of complicated
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situation.''
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Meaning some of his people wanted me dead or at least with fewer things,
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and that refusing them while my army was camped outside the gates did
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him no favours. Amusingly enough, it could be argued that in several
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ways his position had been \emph{worsened} by capturing me.
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``Must be frustrating, having Malicia dictate to you in a way that goes
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against your interests,'' I said.
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He thinly smiled.
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``Not executing you is in my interests as well, Your Majesty,'' Sargon
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replied. ``Greater implications as to the fate of Calernia aside, should
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I murder the most distinguished Queen of Callow in two centuries I will
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have heroes coming for my head every spring until I die.''
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He sipped at his liquor, sighing.
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``I expect several of my more short-sighted cousins are pushing for your
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execution in the very hope that the Woe will murder me in turn,'' he
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admitted. ``Yet I would argue that my greater frustration in all this
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affair is that I would much prefer to be at peace with you, Queen
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Catherine.''
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``That's easy enough,'' I frankly replied. ``Turn on Malicia. You're
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only in my way so long as you're one of the pillars propping her reign
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up.''
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The dark-skinned man laughed, the merriment of it lighting up his eyes.
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Akua's cousin, yet so little like her. Even at her most carefree she
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held something of herself back but Sargon Sahelian was\ldots{} less
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restrained. He allowed himself to feel more genuinely, I decided. Would
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she had been like that too, if she'd not been raised to be the monster
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of monsters among this most terrible of families?
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``I will be honest with you, Queen Catherine,'' Sargon grinned, ``as
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every report my spies have brought me insist that it is the approach you
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best respond to.''
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The worst part of it, I thought, was that even knowing what he was doing
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I still found my lips twitching. Sargon Sahelian might be a monster, but
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he was a \emph{charming} one.
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``I find it saves times,'' I shrugged. ``By all means, my lord of Wolof,
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lay it on me.''
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``I am not a good man, Queen Catherine,'' Sargon indifferently shrugged.
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``So long as my city is left to me, so long as my domain is unmolested?
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I do not much \emph{care} what happens to Praes, or even Calernia at
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large.''
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Much as I would have liked to damn him for petty apathy while the world
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was falling apart a mere two nations west, I held my tongue. How much
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worse was he than Proceran princelings, in truth, or even the squabbling
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League of Free Cities? I doubted he was any better than them either, but
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I would not pretend that the careless disregard on display here was some
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unrivalled pit of evil.
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``My support of Dread Empress Malicia rests on two pillars,'' Sargon
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continued. ``The first is that, for all her flaws, she remains the
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individual in Praes best able to deliver a resumption of order.''
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She was at least half the reason order needed resuming in the first
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place, as far as I was concerned, but that was why he'd begun this by
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making his indifference clear. What did Sargon care that much of this
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was on Malicia's hands, if she were still the woman best placed to
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ensure it wouldn't spill over anywhere that mattered to him? I puffed at
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my pipe, blowing out a stream of smoke to the side.
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``And the second is that she has your soul in a box,'' I finished.
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``Indeed,'' he politely agreed. ``I am loyal to her in the sense that a
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noble of the Wasteland is loyal to anything or anyone -- that is, only
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so long as the balance of consequence and convenience is not greatly
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moved in disfavour of continued loyalty.''
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The unspoken part was that an army outside his gates, on top of the
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messes that my presence kept heaping on his lap, was pushing on that
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balance noticeably.
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``Which leaves one important question before this conversation
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proceeds,'' Sargon Sahelian said. ``Can your patronesses free my soul,
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Black Queen?''
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I'd known that was coming. It was an obvious bribe to approach him with,
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a good way to flip a High Lord against the Tower without much military
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power needing to be exerted. Which had been why I'd first asked Sve Noc
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as much months ago. It'd not been a coincidence that I'd not made the
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offer.
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``Not from here,'' I said, ``and not without a price.''
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The Crows were sure his soul was being held in the Tower, and they
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weren't going anywhere near that place if they could help it. I honestly
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wasn't sure even a Choir would be able to bring the seat of Praesi power
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down -- it'd taken the armies of two thirds of Calernia and entire
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\emph{battalions} of heroes to get it done, last time.
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``Unfortunate,'' the High Lord of Wolof murmured. ``It would have
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simplified this all a great deal. I am, alas, not eager to trade a
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single mortal mistress for a pair of immortal ones.''
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``You'd find the payment much more agreeable than expected, I'm sure,''
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I easily replied. ``But that is your right. We will speak again should
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an opportunity arise.''
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``Of course,'' Sargon said, inclining his head. ``And so while we remain
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so refreshingly bound to honesty, I am compelled to ask-''
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He leaned slightly forward, drink in hand.
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``- what is it that you \emph{want}, exactly?''
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I snorted.
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``There's a broad question,'' I said. ``Right now? Vale summer wine. Or
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maybe the journal of the warlock your ancestors placed at the side
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Theodosius the Unconquered.''
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``I can have the latter brought easily enough,'' Sargon waved away.
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``And as you no doubt grasped, I mean to ask what is it that this entire
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Wasteland campaign of yours is trying to achieve. You've not the
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strength or inclination to occupy Praes, that much is plain, so what is
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it you \emph{do} want?''
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I set down my pipe, amused at the boldness, and smiled at him over the
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rim of my glass before taking a sip.
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``Arguably, as one of Malicia's backers you're one of the last people I
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should tell,'' I pointed out.
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``On the contrary,'' Sargon said, shaking his head. ``Unless you intend
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to purge the empress' supporters among the nobility, I am one of the
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individuals you most need to convince. Even if you kill the woman in
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question, Queen Catherine, what she \emph{represents} does not
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disappear.''
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``And what does Malicia represent, exactly?'' I asked.
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``A strong Tower with no taste for foreign adventures. Power being
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concentrated in Ater through the Imperial Court and the bureaucracy,''
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Sargon replied without hesitation. ``It comes at the price of curtailing
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many of the old privileges and ennobling greenskins, but many still
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consider it an acceptable trade.''
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``Nok was sacked,'' I flatly said. ``Thalassina is dust. Foramen is held
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by High Lady Whither, the Grey Eyries outright seceded, the Steppes are
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in civil war and two of the High Seats are openly backing another Dread
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Empress. Half the army that's supposed to serve her \emph{deserted}. You
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call this a strong Tower?''
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``The Dread Empire of Praes turned back the Tenth Crusade with
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Thalassina as its sole permanent loss,'' Sargon countered. ``Foramen was
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brought back into the fold bloodlessly. Sepulchral's rebellion has
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stalled and the only reason it ever gained grounds was that the Carrion
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Lord's attempted coup -- which failed, half the Legions staying loyal to
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the Tower even after decades of other loyalties being cultivated among
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their officers.''
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My eye narrowed. They were blaming the messes on Black. \emph{Of course
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they would}, I thought. \emph{He's Duni, the nobles despise him and
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they're not wrong about him having added to the chaos in the first
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place.} I wondered how much of this was decades of hatred between my
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father and the aristocrats given voice and how much of it was opinions
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Malicia had seeded herself. It would hardly be the first time she blamed
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the unpopular parts of her reign on Black and the tactic tended to be a
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successful one.
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``As for the Clans, Queen Catherine,'' he continued, ``that they would
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war on each other is only to be expected when some among them were
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raised above others. Strong Lords of the Steppes will emerge from the
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violence, able to ably discharge the duties that were passed onto
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them.''
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I hummed. There was no point in arguing this with him. I wasn't even
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sure he believed in the first place, anyway.
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``Let's say I buy that, for the sake of argument,'' I shrugged. ``She
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still needs to go. She's been an aggressive ally to the Dead King while
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the rest of Calernia has been fighting for survival. She fucked us in
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the League and in Procer, and even before she antagonized \emph{every
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single other ruler} on the continent the grab she made for the doomsday
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fortress that was made of Liesse made it clear she can't be trusted to
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remain in power. Nobody wants the Tower with a weapon that makes
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Hellgates, Sargon. \emph{Nobody}.''
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``Considering all the nations so antagonized have been at war with the
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Empire for years,'' he drily said, ``one might argue she was in fact
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rather rest-''
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``You're being obtuse,'' I flatly interrupted. ``Even if there weren't a
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hundred reasons to put her head on a pike, and you know there are, at
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the end of the day she had to die because we can't allow the
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\emph{precedent}. If the Grand Alliance doesn't cut her head off then
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we're telling the world that we can be backstabbed while fighting
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existential threats without there being consequences. And there's not a
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single signatory that's willing to swallow that, Sargon.''
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``This is a compelling argument,'' Sargon Sahelian mildly said,
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``largely for people who are not Praesi.''
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I sipped at my wine to hide my expression. That was a decent point,
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actually. We didn't actually have a lot to offer people who weren't
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already rebelling against Malicia. The truth was that the people
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currently backing her reign \emph{would} lose out when she got deposed.
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They wouldn't gain from what I wanted to achiever here in Praes. One the
|
|
other hand, the fact that those same people couldn't give less of a shit
|
|
that Malicia's plots abroad had caused thousands of deaths and risked
|
|
the annihilation of Calernia didn't particularly endear them to me. They
|
|
didn't get to pretend they were being unfairly victimized after turning
|
|
a blind eye to that. If you threw stones at bears for long enough, you
|
|
got mauled.
|
|
|
|
There was no deep lesson behind that except that you shouldn't fucking
|
|
throw stones at bears.
|
|
|
|
``We're a few knives in the back past lectures from your side, Sargon,''
|
|
I flatly replied.
|
|
|
|
``Praes would be a silent place, if that were the case,'' the High Lord
|
|
laughed. ``Though you have me curious now, I'll admit. Who is it that
|
|
you mean to replace Her Most Dreadful Majesty?''
|
|
|
|
I cocked an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``The Carrion Lord?'' Sargon tried. ``He is disappeared, if not dead.
|
|
And Sepulchral is unlikely to remain a steady ally to your Grand
|
|
Alliance for long, for all that she now courts your friendship.''
|
|
|
|
Abreha Mirembe being a snake was hardly news to me, but the first half
|
|
of that was rather amusing.
|
|
|
|
``It never ceases to fascinate me,'' I said, ``how large of a blind spot
|
|
you highborn have when it comes to Amadeus of the Green Stretch. It's
|
|
like we're talking about different men.''
|
|
|
|
``Half the High Seats would rebel at the mere idea of Duni ruling over
|
|
them,'' Sargon said, eyes narrowed as he studied me. ``Yet you know
|
|
this, I think. And so I wonder if you do not play a longer game than any
|
|
of us had considered.''
|
|
|
|
I leaned back into my seat.
|
|
|
|
``Oh?'' I said. ``What game would that be?''
|
|
|
|
The dark-skinned man raised his glass, the last wisps of amber liquor
|
|
swirling.
|
|
|
|
``Mile thaman, Sahelian,'' the High Lord of Wolof toasted.
|
|
|
|
I smiled and spoke not a word. If he wanted to believe I had come east
|
|
to raise Akua Sahelian as empress, let him. He drained the cup.
|
|
|
|
``It would be an interesting time to live in, if you got your way,''
|
|
Sargon admitted. ``It is almost a shame you will not.''
|
|
|
|
``I've heard that before,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
He looked faintly amused.
|
|
|
|
``I've a great deal of respect for your abilities, Queen Catherine, but
|
|
this once luck was not on your side,'' the golden-eyed man said. ``There
|
|
is little you can do from captivity.''
|
|
|
|
I met his eyes with mine, baring my teeth in a malicious smile.
|
|
|
|
``Before the week's end,'' I said, ``I am going to walk out of the front
|
|
gates of Wolof with everything I want. And the both of you are going to
|
|
let me.''
|
|
|
|
So ended my first meal with Sargon Sahelian.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
He sent the journal, as he'd said it would. Made for interesting
|
|
reading, with a surprising amount of steamy bits between the battles and
|
|
commentaries. Kojo Sahelian had gotten around and not been shy in
|
|
writing about it. I sat and read and waited, knowing this was only
|
|
beginning.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
When Malicia came she did not bother with charm.
|
|
|
|
She knew better than to believe relations between us could be mended, I
|
|
supposed. It was the following morning, shorty after breakfast, that she
|
|
was announced by a servant in livery. I didn't bother to study the last
|
|
meat puppet she'd decided to wear in any great detail -- what would be
|
|
the point? She wore a woman's form, Soninke and tall, and besides that I
|
|
did not bother to take her in. I stayed standing as she stepped in, cane
|
|
in hand as I leaned against the wall. The illusion of Wolof behind me
|
|
showed an early afternoon, so the light came through at my back. It'd
|
|
make it hard to look at me properly. The Dread Empress of Praes sat
|
|
gracefully at the table, not waiting for my invitation, and set a single
|
|
parchment scroll on the table. She said nothing, waiting. After a bit I
|
|
snorted.
|
|
|
|
``You know, I figure I could play that game,'' I mused. ``Ignore you or
|
|
insult you, the works. But it just sounds \emph{tiring}.''
|
|
|
|
I pushed off the wall.
|
|
|
|
``Say your piece,'' I simply said, ``and get the fuck out.''
|
|
|
|
``Your manners have not improved,'' Malicia calmly replied.
|
|
|
|
``Could I beat you to death with my bare hands before they came in to
|
|
restrain me?'' I asked. ``I'm not sure. If you test my patience, though,
|
|
we'll find out.''
|
|
|
|
I'd lied, of course. If I was to kill her puppet, I'd definitely use the
|
|
cane.
|
|
|
|
``It would avail you nothing,'' Malicia said. ``You were captured,
|
|
Catherine. This particular game you have lost.''
|
|
|
|
``It's Queen Catherine to you,'' I smiled, all pretty and friendly and
|
|
utterly false.
|
|
|
|
``If I gave you the courtesy, would you return it?'' Malicia said. ``I
|
|
think not. Yet I will overlook your many and varied insults, as I have
|
|
for some time, for you have once again made yourself into an important
|
|
enough piece you cannot simply be ignored.''
|
|
|
|
Implying that I should treat her the same way. \emph{Good luck with
|
|
that}, I drily thought.
|
|
|
|
``I'm still waiting to hear what you want,'' I said. ``To be honest,
|
|
this is being something of a bore.''
|
|
|
|
``We had a conversation, some years ago, that I believe you must have
|
|
forgot,'' Malicia said. ``Not so long before Akua's Folly. You asked me
|
|
about Still Water for the first time.''
|
|
|
|
I did recall that, more or less. I'd warned her that if she'd been
|
|
behind all of it then she had best watch her step from now on or there
|
|
would be blood. We'd discussed politics abroad, too, but what did any of
|
|
it have to do with this? It'd been the Hierarch and the Tyrant that'd
|
|
been the thick of the talk, and one was pissing off an entire Choir
|
|
while the other was years dead.
|
|
|
|
``I told you why Wekesa insisted on trials, that he believed they would
|
|
revolutionize our understanding of rituals,'' she prompted.
|
|
|
|
I frowned, scrounging through my memories. I had pretty good recall, but
|
|
it'd been years and my Name memories weren't as crisp since the Sisters
|
|
had brought me back from the brink.
|
|
|
|
``I asked if it really had,'' I slowly said, ``and you replied\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``That what he learned would allow us a fighting chance against the Dead
|
|
King, should he ever wage war upon us,'' Malicia calmly replied.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Ah}, I thought. And there it was. The way she believed she could
|
|
barter herself out of the grave she'd dug. She had a weapon, maybe even
|
|
more than one, that she thought could win us the war. Cordelia and I
|
|
might despise her, but we were pragmatic women at heart: we'd choose
|
|
survival over hatred. But that went with the assumption that we needed
|
|
Malicia herself to have those weapons. That my father becoming Dread
|
|
Emperor wouldn't get us all of it anyway without all that it would cost
|
|
us to let an empress who'd knifed us at every opportunity walk away with
|
|
a slap on the wrist. Malicia was no fool, I thought, and so she would
|
|
have seen the flaw in that plan.
|
|
|
|
``So what did you do?'' I asked. ``What poisonous little precaution did
|
|
you take so you could threaten us with it?''
|
|
|
|
She'd already done it before, after all, when she'd spread word that by
|
|
the terms of her treaty with the Dead King so long as she lived the dead
|
|
could not invade Callow. Taking her own life as hostage was a favourite
|
|
trick of hers, the kind of signature that Name tended to take on after
|
|
years of settling into their Role.
|
|
|
|
``There was no need for anything too elaborate,'' the Dread Empress
|
|
said. ``My death would result in all the necessary knowledge burning
|
|
green, that is all.''
|
|
|
|
Which just meant she had to be taken alive. Had she prepared
|
|
contingencies for that too? Probably, but I figured there simply wasn't
|
|
a lot anyone could plan against having Sve Noc peel open your mind
|
|
before rummaging about for the useful stuff. We'd just have to be quick
|
|
and careful.
|
|
|
|
``It's all on the scroll, I take it?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Indeed,'' Malicia smiled. ``Along with a possible solution to the
|
|
Hellgates issue as suggested by a mage in my service.''
|
|
|
|
``Good,'' I said, ``good.''
|
|
|
|
I moved quickly enough that the cane caught her on the side of the mouth
|
|
before she saw it coming, but though she fell it didn't make her bleed.
|
|
Ugh, she'd come decked out in artefacts. I tried to strangle her, but
|
|
soldiers poured in and wrestled me down before I could get it done. She
|
|
was ushered out, breathing hard, and I waved mockingly.
|
|
|
|
``There's always next time,'' I cackled right before the door closed
|
|
behind her.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I read the scroll that very afternoon.
|
|
|
|
It was in Malicia's interest ton exaggerate what her weapon could do,
|
|
but she also had to know that Masego would be able to see through
|
|
anything to egregious in a matter of moments. To my distaste, this might
|
|
actually work. Wekesa the Warlock had been a brilliant man, and Still
|
|
Waters had only been used in its most straightforward of applications so
|
|
far. He'd believed that his creation would be able to turn the tide in
|
|
two ways.
|
|
|
|
The first had been that soldiers fighting the Dead King would be made to
|
|
ingest the alchemical compound and then prepped with the right spell so
|
|
that when they died they would immediately rise as undead in the service
|
|
of the Dread Empire. He'd believed that with the right dosages and
|
|
sorcery it was possible to keep those soldiers largely the same as
|
|
before their death, nothing like the mindless wights I'd fought at the
|
|
Doom of Liesse. It would make armies that, even when slain, would rise
|
|
against just as tireless as their foe and significantly better trained.
|
|
|
|
The second was more of a gamble. By modifying the alchemical compound so
|
|
it could enter through the skin, Warlock had believed that necromancers
|
|
could potentially \emph{usurp} control of corpses from the Dead King.
|
|
The strength of Still Water was that it wasn't really a ritual, that the
|
|
active magic was simply an ignition while the alchemy did all the heavy
|
|
lifting. Which meant if it worked as Warlock had thought it might, we
|
|
might be able to steal entire armies in moments. I doubted it would go
|
|
that smoothly, but the prospect of finally having a way to turn the
|
|
Hidden Horror's endless numbers against him was deeply attractive.
|
|
|
|
And given that we were well past the days where anything but a direct
|
|
strike on Keter could win us this war, what was written on this scroll
|
|
could be an edge that made the difference between the life and death of
|
|
nations. Malicia was not one to come to a bargaining table poorly armed.
|
|
|
|
What I read of the proposed solution for Hellgates was largely gibberish
|
|
to me, and so likely meant for someone better schooled in magic to read
|
|
over. The only part that was understandable was the one that talked
|
|
about raising fortresses over the gates after the first rituals were
|
|
done, to make sure they wouldn't open again. That and the estimates for
|
|
the number of mages that would be required, which was around two hundred
|
|
per gate. There simply wasn't anyone but Praes left who could field that
|
|
many well-trained practitioners, especially since there would need to be
|
|
some able to use High Arcana.
|
|
|
|
Another pointed reminder by Malicia that we needed her.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
On the third day, mages sworn to Wolof came into my cell.
|
|
|
|
It was all done very properly and politely, but I was still bound while
|
|
a dozen men and women inspected every inch of me with spells and tried
|
|
to access the Night. One got bold and tried to see into my mind, but the
|
|
Sisters took offence to that and melted his eyes. I complained about the
|
|
smell after they dragged him out, mostly to fuck with them, but several
|
|
of the mfuasa actually \emph{smiled} and one cast a spell to clear the
|
|
air. They left after a few hours, carrying back to Sargon Sahelian the
|
|
answer he'd been hoping they would not give him.
|
|
|
|
They had not found a way to access the Night through me.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I decided that, since I had so much time to spare, I might have a crack
|
|
at writing my memoirs.
|
|
|
|
You know, for posterity. Sadly after a single page about my years at the
|
|
orphanage I got horribly bored and started sketching out the troop
|
|
movements for the Battle of Three Hills instead. It was pretty hard
|
|
stuff, memoirs, I was impressed Aisha had gotten so far in hers. In the
|
|
end I dropped the subject entirely and instead wrote a scathing critique
|
|
about the defences of the Vaults, with a particular eye about how easily
|
|
heroes could have gotten through some of those. I doubted it'd ever
|
|
amount to anything, but it did make me feel oddly satisfied.
|
|
|
|
It also allowed me to sharpen a quill until a weapon could be made of it
|
|
and secrete it away.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
On the fourth day, I had supper with High Lord Sargon Sahelian. The meal
|
|
was delicious, he was a delight to talk to and he'd somehow gotten his
|
|
hands on a bottle of Vale summer wine. Once more wakeleaf was brought to
|
|
me and I duly indulged, leaning back against the very comfortable seat.
|
|
|
|
``I offered Princess Vivienne to ransom you back,'' High Lord Sargon
|
|
said. ``She declined.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, she would have,'' I faintly smiled.
|
|
|
|
``You do not seem displeased,'' he said, sounding wary.
|
|
|
|
My smile broadened.
|
|
|
|
``What is it you asked for -- the artefacts or the books?''
|
|
|
|
A moment of silence.
|
|
|
|
``The artefacts,'' he finally said.
|
|
|
|
Ah, it'd been Malicia's idea then. The books would have been more
|
|
important to him.
|
|
|
|
``When I named Vivienne Dartwick my successor,'' I said, ``I didn't pick
|
|
her name out a hat.''
|
|
|
|
And that was all I said on that. His polite sideways inquiries about my
|
|
accepting my own ransoming for his library back were just as politely
|
|
ignored.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
One the fifth day there was something of an incident.
|
|
|
|
Or at least so I assumed, as around noon forty armed guards crammed
|
|
themselves tight in my cell and wards were put up to prevent anyone
|
|
coming in or out. I finished my meal and, because I was never one to
|
|
miss an opportunity to be a wretch when it was on the table, I took up
|
|
Kojo Sahelian's journals and began reading them aloud with great
|
|
enjoyment -- especially the explicit bits, which by the looks of it made
|
|
more than a few of these nice soldiers uncomfortable. An hour and a half
|
|
later they left, but the guard remained doubled and from now on even the
|
|
veiled servant came in flanked by an armed pair.
|
|
|
|
Idly I wondered who it was that'd tried to rescue me, and how close
|
|
they'd gotten. It was only going to get worse for Sargon from now on.
|
|
That was the trouble when you couldn't kill your prisoner: people would
|
|
keep trying to free them, knowing there couldn't really be any
|
|
consequences for it.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
One the sixth day they were desperate, which I knew the moment Malicia's
|
|
puppet walked in.
|
|
|
|
Why else would she be here again? Four soldiers came with the empress,
|
|
faces hidden by helmet, and they had shackles that I was expected to put
|
|
on nicely. I had last time, when the mages had come to poke and prod
|
|
looking for a way into the Night. I knew why the Dread Empress was here,
|
|
though, and I wasn't going to be anywhere as nice. I pretended to
|
|
cooperate, at first then the quill I'd sharpened days ago went into the
|
|
slight gap between helmet and armour and got the first man in the
|
|
throat. Another I broke the neck of, smashing him into the table, but
|
|
Malicia ran out before I could get my hands on her.
|
|
|
|
My \emph{cell}, and for all the gilding it had never for a moment been
|
|
anything else and never had I fucking forgot that, my cell was flooded
|
|
with guards and mages. They got me after I nearly smashed the last of my
|
|
table legs on scale mail and broke my hand on a helmet. The got the
|
|
shackles on me and did not heal me. Again there were only four when
|
|
Malicia came back, face a blank mask.
|
|
|
|
``Well,'' I smiled at her through bloodied teeth, ``there's always next
|
|
time.''
|
|
|
|
She went still for half a beat but it was enough. I might be the one
|
|
bleeding, but I wasn't the one afraid.
|
|
|
|
``This brings me no pleasure,'' Malicia said, looking down on me. ``It
|
|
is of your own making.''
|
|
|
|
She did not speak a word, not with her lips anyway. The world pulsed
|
|
with the echo of it anyway. \emph{Aspect}, my instincts whispered. And
|
|
in the instant that followed a power seized me by the throat. I gasped
|
|
out, writhing in my shackles, as a will tried to wrest mine into
|
|
submission. I was being ordered to do something. Deep inside me the
|
|
Sisters stirred, their anger a cold and burning thing. They were jealous
|
|
goddesses, my Crows. But it was not them that calmed me. My fingers
|
|
clutched at thin air, but still they caught something. Fur, deep and
|
|
matted and warm. I laughed, dragging myself up by pulling at nothing.
|
|
Malicia took a step back, eyes wide.
|
|
|
|
I felt a great maw open by my head, fangs being bared. My Name had not
|
|
taken kindly to being given an order. No, more than that. It was not one
|
|
that recognized the rule of another over me.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Mistake},'' I hissed at her in Mthethwa.
|
|
|
|
The guards were moving, but they didn't get it. They moved to restrain
|
|
my limbs, to push me down, when they should have gone for my mouth. My
|
|
eye found Malicia's and I grinned red even as she opened her mouth.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Be silent},'' I Spoke.
|
|
|
|
Her mouth closed. The guards forced me down, but I laughed.
|
|
|
|
``You overstepped,'' I told her. ``I wonder, does it work only on this
|
|
body or your real one too? How long are you going to be fighting-''
|
|
|
|
Finally one of them covered my mouth, shortly before I was gagged, but
|
|
no matter. The damage had already been done.
|
|
|
|
It was almost over now.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The first time I'd heard about soulboxing, that evening I'd wondered why
|
|
Dread Emperors did not force it on every High Seat at their coronation.
|
|
There was, of course, an answer.
|
|
|
|
On the seventh day, after I had breakfast the veiled servants came and
|
|
laid out different clothes for me. Black trousers, a black tunic, a
|
|
black cape and a black eyecloth: all exquisite and embroidered with
|
|
silver thread. And with them came a circlet of silver, an elegant crown
|
|
displaying flying crows. Matching silver shackles too, little more than
|
|
bracelets, but still a symbol of my captivity. I was helped into the
|
|
clothes by attendants after being informed that I was to be give
|
|
audience in the Empyrean Hall, and before long I was leaning on my cane
|
|
and limping down the halls of the palace where I had been held all this
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
Forty soldiers armed to the teeth escorted me, in plate and capes. Ten
|
|
mages kept an eye on me, amber stares unwavering and their magic so
|
|
close to them I could taste it in the air. Limping across marble tiles I
|
|
breathed in the air, stretching under my cape, and I felt Sve Noc reach
|
|
out for me greedily. I let the Night billow out of me even as shouts
|
|
echoed across the hall. Swords left their sheaths as the soldiers spun
|
|
into a circle, runes of light filling their air as incantations
|
|
reverberated. I closed my eye, smiling, and struck the ground with my
|
|
cane once.
|
|
|
|
Shadows spun close, threading themselves through my clothes until it was
|
|
not mere dark cloth I wore but darkness itself. My foes had thought to
|
|
dress me, to measure me, but my patronesses had willed it otherwise. I
|
|
opened my eye, studying my escorts. They were still as stone, but there
|
|
was a scent in the air I was most familiar with. Fear.
|
|
|
|
``Ah,'' I smiled. ``\emph{Much better}. Take me to your lord, now.''
|
|
|
|
And they did, wary but obedient. I'd thought the halls I'd run through
|
|
at night had shown me the splendour of the enchanted ceiling for which
|
|
the palace was named, but I had been wrong. The Sahelians had kept the
|
|
heart of the wonder for where they received guests and supplicants, a
|
|
great hall that was as another world. I stepped across the span of the
|
|
noonday sky, clouds beneath my feet as my cane cracked against the
|
|
enchanted stone. The Sahelians had aptly named their hall: I stood here
|
|
as if I was striding the very Heavens, the sun above and the world
|
|
below.
|
|
|
|
On the sides, hidden behind veils, people stood. Sargon's court.
|
|
Golden-eyed nobles even more beautiful than their clothes, lesser nobles
|
|
of military turn and even those who wore their sorcery as their
|
|
signature. Guards, too, and war mages whose eyes missed nothing. I
|
|
advanced with my escort around me, all leading to the man at the end of
|
|
the sky. It was against the laws of Praes for any but the Tyrant in the
|
|
Tower to sit a throne, and so the Sahelians had followed the letter of
|
|
the law: though Sargon sat a great seat of stone atop a dais, roughly
|
|
hewn into the shape of roaring lions, further steps still led to a great
|
|
ornate seat of gold where none sat.
|
|
|
|
That one was the throne, of course, which meant Sargon's was a mere
|
|
seat.
|
|
|
|
No sign of Malicia, I thought. Was she hidden, or had it struck even
|
|
deeper than I thought when I Spoke? I looked forward to finding out. My
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escort led me to the feet of the thrones before spreading out, thin
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invisible barriers that could only be wards separating me from Sargon
|
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Sahelian. I stood alone in the silent court until a woman with a
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beautiful speaking voice broke the stillness.
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``Her Majesty Catherine Foundling, Queen of Callow, First Under the
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Night.''
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Sargon's face was as a clay mask, all thought and emotion smoothed away.
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I hummed the first few notes of \emph{Two Dozen Snakes A Knot Do Make},
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casting an unimpressed look around. How many of the watching snakes were
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Sahelians, I wondered? Had to be at least a couple dozen. All of them
|
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\emph{hungry}, waiting for the man on the lion throne to falter.
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``Quaint,'' I drawled out.
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Oh, they didn't like that at all. But that didn't matter, because even
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as they murmured their disapproval and glared I kept close to me the
|
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answer to a question. Why \emph{didn't} Dread Emperors soulbox all their
|
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high nobles the moment they climbed the Tower? Sure they'd be hated for
|
|
it, and it was certainly tyrannical, but what would most of those madmen
|
|
have cared? They'd know that the greatest threat to them was the High
|
|
Seats, that it was well worth the hatred of a few who would likely seek
|
|
to kill them regardless. The answer was around me, watching the High
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|
Lord of Wolof rather than the queenly captive brought before him. The
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two dozen snakes that made a knot. The Sahelians were a family, not a
|
|
man.
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|
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|
And none of them would tolerate Wolof being made a tool for the sake a
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|
single man, one whose seat they craved like a drowning man craved the
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|
shore.
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|
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|
``You are summoned to speak terms of trade, Queen Catherine,'' High Lord
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Sargon said.
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|
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|
See, for all their many flaws the Wasteland high nobles they
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\emph{loved} their family. Not their actual kin, the institution of the
|
|
family. The High Seat of Wolof, here, and the power that came with it.
|
|
They were willing to sacrifice a lot to preserve the power of their
|
|
family, its importance. For all that the great bloodlines of Praes
|
|
constantly murdered each other for power, they'd also keep a breeding
|
|
program going for centuries -- they knew how to think \emph{long term}
|
|
in a way that few actual royal dynasties could. It was bred in them,
|
|
taught to them. They were Sahelians, and only the power of the Sahelians
|
|
mattered. Nothing else.
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|
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|
I hummed, cane clacking against the floor as I moved and the guards
|
|
moved with me -- like minnows around a shark.
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|
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|
``What need is there for that, High Lord Sargon?'' I replied. ``If you
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|
seek terms, I already gave them when last we parleyed.''
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|
``They were frivolously given,'' Sargon said, voice thundering.
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|
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|
I laughed in his face. Just because he was charming, did he think I'd
|
|
forgot he was my enemy? That I would safeguard his reputation anymore
|
|
than I would some other leech's?
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|
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|
``Then let me repeat them, since you have been slow in learning this
|
|
lesson,'' I drawled. ``I want your treasury. I want your granary. And I
|
|
want to walk out the open gates of Wolof.''
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|
|
|
Now the thing was, Sargon didn't want to take this deal. At the start,
|
|
he'd not actually been worried about what I had stolen and put away in
|
|
the Night. Sure it was missing right now, but he held me captive and he
|
|
could wait out the conflict. When I was forced to make a treaty with
|
|
Malicia, she'd bargain on his behalf for all of it to be given back.
|
|
Except that they hadn't counted on Akua. Beautiful, clever Akua who had
|
|
heard me ramble a few sentences and understood everything I meant. See,
|
|
we weren't threatening to torch the library and the artefacts. That
|
|
would have been bad enough, but it wouldn't have lit a fire under them
|
|
like this did.
|
|
|
|
Akua had reached out to High Lady Takisha Muraqib of Kahtan and offered
|
|
to \emph{sell} her the entire private library of the Sahelians. Because
|
|
High Lady Takisha was a supporter of Malicia and the last Taghreb high
|
|
noble in all of Praes, if we actually did sell those books to her
|
|
Malicia \emph{wouldn't actually be able to get them back later}. It
|
|
would be a guaranteed rebellion of the entire south of her realm. The
|
|
Taghreb noblewoman would not doubt have been skeptical, but I was
|
|
guessing that the Crows had gotten out a book or two for Akua and they'd
|
|
been sent as a token of goodwill.
|
|
|
|
The step just past that had, naturally, been to make this known to
|
|
Wolof.
|
|
|
|
I could see the layout of it in my mind, clear as if it were ink on
|
|
parchment. On the third day of my captivity, I thought, Malicia had
|
|
learned of the offer. It was why the mages had come to look at me, try
|
|
to get at Night. On the fourth, Sargon had. It was why he'd tried to
|
|
ransom me to Vivienne and probed my interest in such a deal. On the
|
|
fifth day, the Woe had tried to free me. It had put the pressure on
|
|
them, made it clear that sooner or later my people would get me out and
|
|
they'd be even worse off. On the sixth day, I thought, word of the offer
|
|
had spread through Wolof widely enough that Sargon's situation had
|
|
become \emph{dangerous}. And so he'd gotten desperate, agreed that
|
|
Malicia should try to force me to spit out my loot with an aspect. But
|
|
that'd failed, badly, and so now here we were. The High Lord of Wolof,
|
|
the man who'd usurped Tasia Sahelian, looked down at me with burning
|
|
eyes.
|
|
|
|
And I knew what he was going to say before he opened his mouth, because
|
|
if he didn't he was going to die.
|
|
|
|
``Your schemes ran deep, Black Queen,'' High Lord Sargon Sahelian
|
|
snarled. ``We will bargain. Arrangement can be had, should you sign the
|
|
proper pact.''
|
|
|
|
``My word isn't enough?'' I grinned, badly faking surprise. ``Oh dear. I
|
|
suppose I could sign a pact, if you insist.''
|
|
|
|
The only bone I'd throw him, just enough that he could do this without
|
|
\emph{entirely} losing face. Humiliating him entirely would just serve
|
|
to corner him enough he might do something stupid. He was already going
|
|
to have a rough few months ahead of him. See, the reason that Dread
|
|
Emperors didn't soulbox all the High Seats was that no family strong
|
|
enough to be one of those would ever tolerate being led by a pawn. The
|
|
moment the High Lord went against their family's interests, they got
|
|
their throat slit. And what I'd stolen? It was the foundation of
|
|
Sahelian power. The secrets that kept them one step ahead of everyone,
|
|
that kept the finest mages of Praes in their service.
|
|
|
|
And instead of burning them, I'd threatened to sell them to the High
|
|
Seat that was the \emph{second} best at magic in the empire.
|
|
|
|
The artefacts that kept their rivals wary, their enemies from picking
|
|
fights? Akua had offered to sell them to Dread Empress Sepulchral,
|
|
demons and all. Even Malicia had to have found that an unpleasant
|
|
surprise. No matter how many spies she had in that camp, three boxes
|
|
holding demons and enough materials to make a dozen more artefacts was
|
|
going to be trouble.
|
|
|
|
And so the Sahelians were looking at Sargon looking at me, because not a
|
|
single one of those golden-eyed monsters was willing to ruin the power
|
|
of their centuries-old family to keep High Lord Sargon in his seat. He
|
|
could accept my terms, or he could have his throat slit before one of
|
|
his cousins accepted them in his stead. And Malicia would bend here, not
|
|
just because otherwise the other woman claiming to be Dread Empress
|
|
would buy a terrifying arsenal but because if she \emph{didn't} bend
|
|
then Sargon would die. And she would not have the soul of the next High
|
|
Lord of Wolof in a box.
|
|
|
|
``One day, Black Queen, this day will come back to haunt you,'' High
|
|
Lord Sargon coldly said.
|
|
|
|
I eyed him up and down, then snorted.
|
|
|
|
``I beat Akua Sahelian,'' I said. ``Should I now tremble at the shadow
|
|
of her shadow?''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
On the seventh day, I walked out of the gates of Wolof with everything I
|
|
wanted and they let me.
|