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510 lines
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\hypertarget{prologue}{%
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\section{Prologue}\label{prologue}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Twenty-two: do not forget the rest of Creation in the pursuit of
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your nemesis. Small kindnesses are the seed of grand consequences. Evil
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stays, Good compounds.''}
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-- ``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', unknown author
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\end{quote}
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The entire Hirshwald, where she had once hunted with her cousins, was
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now painted grey. Teurshen and its lively muddy streets, Kleinach with
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its pretty green houses, Senken River where every spring people from
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miles away had come to fish. It was all grey.
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Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer, watched day by day as her
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realm died on beautifully painted map.
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Word trickled in from every front, following the scrying lines she had
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laid down through the Order of the Red Lion, and with every dawn the
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court painter drew a few more leagues of the Principate grey on the map
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at the heart of the Vogue Archive. Hannoven was now bare of life, likely
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beyond recovery in this lifetime. Her own Rhenia was entirely in the
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hands of the dead save for the besieged city-fortress that was its
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capital. Only its first two layers of defence had been lost, last she
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heard from her commander there, but scrying had since been cut.
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Twilight's Pass still held -- the Morgentor had been lost twice, but the
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Kingfisher Prince and Otto Redcrown had led daring offensives to take it
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back both times -- yet that was meaningless when the last fortresses of
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the Hocheben Heights had fallen and the dead were pushing deep in
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Bremen.
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Ashen grey, death's breath grey, spread through towns and villages that
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Cordelia had ridden through as a girl.
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``The north fell the moment the Heights did,'' the Forgetful Librarian
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told her the day the news came, bluntly but not cruelly. ``There won't
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be a living soul north of Brus come next winter.''
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Cordelia thought of striking her but held back. It was not untrue, and
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these days she had come to rely on the Librarian's propensity for brutal
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truthfulness. Most people would have held back when warning her of the
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effective end of her people as more than refugees and soldiers of
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fortune, but Cordelia no longer had time to spare for being handled.
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Clarity was a priceless luxury when every hour, every decision had lives
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on the line.
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Saale, a small fortress first raised under the Iron Kings. The seven
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adjoining villages called the Shwestern, which Cordelia had once
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developed with coin in the hopes that they might grow into a small city.
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The valley of Kaninchenbau. Grey spread on the map, like a maw opening
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to devour the world whole.
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``The refugees cannot stay in Brus,'' Cordelia said, watching the end
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times take shape.
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Her eyes had misted, when she'd heard that Frederic Goethal had opened
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his gates wide to all Lycaonese. Brus was not rich, its lands hardly any
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better than those of its northern neighbours', so the Prince of Brus had
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effectively bankrupted himself when he'd welcomed four principalities'
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worth of teenagers and children. More than that, too. Every piece of
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bread shared with her people could not fill the belly of his own, and
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these days no one had granaries to fall back on. He had sacrificed a
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great deal for innocents. \emph{A crown is not a privilege}, she'd once
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told Frederic when they'd been younger. Unsure of their power, of where
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they stood. \emph{It is a duty.} He'd not asked a damned thing for any
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of it, the Kingfisher Prince.
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Cordelia had known few men worthier of being a prince than Frederic
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Goethal.
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``Brus will soon begin seeing fighting,'' the Librarian agreed. ``The
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captains in Neustria sent too many reports of their fortresses being
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bypassed by raiders. We send your refugees further south, then.
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Segovia?''
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``The ships will make a difference in evacuating further south still,
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should the principality collapse,'' Cordelia mused, and so it was
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settled.
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The Highest Assembly had voted her emergency powers allowing her to
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settle refugees wherever she wished in the Procer, so long as part of
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the financial burden was shared by the high throne. She'd nearly faced a
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revolt in the Chamber over the motion, which stepped on the neck of all
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traditional conceptions of royal sovereignty, but they'd not quite had
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the nerve. Cordelia had unearthed too many of the skeletons her princes
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had buried for them to want to risk it. When she'd passed a measure
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allowing her to appoint superintendence supervising the collection of
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princely taxes, the First Prince had gotten a closer look at their
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finances than any of them were comfortable with.
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No wonder they'd been willing to fight her tooth and nail over the
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motion: a little over half of them had been cheating the high throne on
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taxes. In times of peace that would have been a minor scandal, but in
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times of war? Cordelia had the authority to have their heads for it, and
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that wasn't even the part that terrified them. All she needed to do to
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ruin them was spread word to the street: entire cities would riot,
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screaming for the blood of the traitors. The way she kept ramming
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measures through was making her no friends, and even losing her allies,
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but Cordelia Hasenbach was not reigning for pleasure or friendship. If
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there was enough of Procer left to rebel against her after the war
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ended, she would walk to the headsman's block with a smile.
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The Lafran Stretch, Belles Collines, Faudefer and Patrin. The last two
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had still been full of people when the dead tunneled under the walls.
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Grey spread across the map, and not only to the north.
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Cordelia's dying homeland was but a third of the war, if even that, and
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dooms never came alone. Hainaut had come out the best of it, irony of
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ironies. The Black Queen had stripped the principality of most her
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armies before retreating, but she had left her last general -- Lady
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Abigail Tanner -- in a solid defensive position at the Cigelin Sisters.
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The grounds won against the dead by the \emph{victory} at Hainaut had
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been promptly lost anew, the dead claiming them quicker than they could
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be defended, but the White Knight had broken the bridge to the north and
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so ended the immediate looming threat.
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The Chosen had followed that up by scoring an upset victory at Malmedit
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that collapsed the tunnels and anchored the eastern defence line before
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dedicating himself body and soul to the war on Keter. He had led regular
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sorties into enemy territory to break up their forces before they could
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mass in large numbers, to great success. The White Knight had in truth
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been so effective there'd been talk of trying to seize and fortify the
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ruins of the capital to secure the locked Hellgate there, though General
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Abigail had forcefully stamped out any such notions. Once Cordelia would
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have enjoyed the White Knight's successes, the way they proved Damned
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were not the only ones who could lead in dark times, but no longer.
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Hanno of Arwad had crossed a line in the Arsenal, when he'd made the
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choice to stand in the way of the preservation of Procer. If it had been
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only a moment of hard-headed principle divorced from the realities of
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the situation, in time Cordelia might have grown to forgive it. Trust
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would not have resumed, but wariness would have ebbed. But it was not as
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simple as that. Cordelia could not think of the way the White Knight had
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refused to negotiate, to compromise, without hearing in those terse
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answers the echo of another Chosen's voice. Laurence de Montfort, the
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Saint of Swords, feet on the table as she told Cordelia that the Procer
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must burn so something better might come of it.
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Would Hanno of Arwad let them burn too, for his principles? Cordelia
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found she was not sure of the answer, not anymore. There could be no
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trust there, no relying on the Chosen. As in so many things she stood
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alone.
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``The Heights were a body blow, but it's Cleves that will kill us if
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anything does,'' the Librarian sighed on a cold winter morning, sipping
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at a mug of tea.
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The third and last front, Rozala Malanza's. For years it had been the
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story of victory, the proof that the dead could beaten back that'd been
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so instrumental in keeping Procer from sinking into despair. And to her
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honour the Princess of Aequitan had stubbornly held even in the face of
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a Hellgate yawning open while she still suffered the siege of a great
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army of the dead. She could not be everywhere, though. The northern
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point of Cleves still held, and parts of the eastern shoreline as well,
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but Keter had swept out of Lake Pavin and devoured whole the western
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shore.
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Tertre, Sengrin, Lagueroche. Grey spread like a sickness in the blood.
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The walled city of Atandor was now under siege, and should it fall then
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the dead would have a way into the lowlands of Cleves. More terrible
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still, the forces of the Kingdom of the Dead would find nothing in their
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way as they spilled further south onto the plains of Brabant and Lyonis.
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And Atandor \emph{would} fall, in three months at the latest. Agnes had
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been clear on that, as clear as the Augur could ever be. Its defenders
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had not run out of valour, but they had run out of food.
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When the dead made it that far south, the war was over. Even if all they
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did was burn the crop fields before retreating, the ensuing starvation
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would collapse the Principate. Then even should the Kingdom of Callow be
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willing to starve itself feeding Procer, which was highly dubious, in
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practice the grain simply could not be moved and distributed quickly
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enough. There was a secret truth behind it all, though, one Cordelia had
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grasped in the wake of her uncle's death at Hainaut: the war was already
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lost. For Procer, anyway, if not yet the rest of Calernia. This was no
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longer about winning, it was about saving what she still could. Who she
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still could.
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``We will have to recall Princess Rozala and her army before Atandor
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falls,'' the First Prince said.
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It was giving most of Cleves over to the grey, but then it had already
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been made into a wasteland by Keter's Due when the Hellgate was opened
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near Trifelin. With so many of its best farmlands blighted, the
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principality could no longer feed itself.
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``If she puts up a defence line around Peroulet it could hold for a few
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months while the dead are still massing,'' the Librarian muttered. ``It
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won't be a popular decision, mind you, but it's the right one.''
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It was more than the army Cordelia wanted to salvage. Should she get
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assassinated -- and it was becoming more likely that she would be with
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every measure forced through the Highest Assembly -- then the only other
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royal in Procer that could feasibly be elected to the high throne
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without too much quibbling was Rozala Malanza. The Princess of Aequitan
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might be one of the finest generals left to Procer, but she was now
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simply too valuable to keep risking in Cleves. Malanza would hate her
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for the order, but what did it matter? She had hated Cordelia to the
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bone since the Great War, and there would be no mending a hatred born of
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a mother's death.
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``Gods forgive me,'' the Librarian suddenly said, ``but we're not going
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to win this war, are we?''
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Cordelia went still, for a heartbeat. She had not thought anyone else
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had noticed, not quite so soon. She needed a few months still before it
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became known, before panic and chaos spread-
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``It'll be out east it's decided, in Praes,'' the Forgetful Librarian
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continued. ``If the Black Queen can bring back diabolists and
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reinforcements in time for a strike at Keter to still be feasible.''
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The First Prince did not allow her relief to touch her face.
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``Catherine Foundling will do what she must to settle the East,''
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Cordelia said, dimly surprised to find she meant every word. ``We must
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simply keep Procer afloat until she returns and the last gamble of this
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war can be taken.''
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That, though, was a lie. There was one last gamble awaiting beyond that,
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if arms failed and it all came down to the spectre of annihilation
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looming over all of Calernia. The First Prince had found the funds and
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the men, ensured all that could be done was. The corpse that had been
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dredged up from the depths of Lake Artoise could be awoken, the priests
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had promised her. It could be used as a weapon. One that would destroy
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Procer, perhaps, but Procer was already halfway into the grave. If it
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all else failed, Cordelia Hasenbach was not only the First Prince of
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Procer: she was also the Warden of the West. She had a responsibility to
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ensure at least some of Calernia survived the Dead King's fury.
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And that responsibility, now, was as a finger laid against a trigger.
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---
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Alaya did not enjoy war.
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It'd surprised her when she had understood as much about herself, as
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she'd believed herself a harder woman than that. No tyrant had ever
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climbed the Tower to less than a stairway's worth of corpses and she had
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certainly been no exception, so she'd wondered what it was about war
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that made her balk. It was not the violence, surely, for Alaya was no
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stranger to the use of it. Rarely by her own hands, but to a Dread
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Empress of Praes assassination was no less a necessary tool of ruling
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than laws or taxes. Was it the magnitude, she had wondered? Edmund
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Inkhand had once written, in that sardonically pointed manner so typical
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of his journals, that men only disapproved of murder so long as it did
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not involve banners and great numbers.
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Yet though Alaya had enjoyed reading the old king's writings as a girl
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and then differently so as a woman, she simply did not have it in her to
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care for people -- strangers, people in the abstract -- the way that he
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so obviously had. Grief at the human condition was not burden she had to
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bear, so what \emph{had} been the source of her unease? It was the
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indiscriminate nature of it all, Alaya had later come to understand
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after decades of wondering. The Conquest had been one of the cleanest,
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most efficient wars in living memory: it had been largely soldiers that
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died during it, no cities were sacked and the countryside was not
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ravaged. And still the entire exercise had been like a stone in a shoe.
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War could not be controlled, not really. It could not be contained the
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way that assassination and intrigues could, risk and results balanced
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like lines of a ledger. To Alaya's eyes, using war to achieve one's ends
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was rather like setting fire to a house to kill a man: dangerous as much
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to you as the enemy. No without reason was it an old saying in the
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Wasteland that a lit blaze knew neither friend nor foe.
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Knowing all this about herself, Dread Empress Malicia found herself
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darkly amused that she had regardless spent the last five years and
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change at war with other powers to various degrees. Most ironic of all
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was the civil war that Praes was still in the throes of, which she had
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spent no small amount of effort to start and then maintain in order to
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preserve her interests and that of the Empire. Perhaps that was why even
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going from success to success had somehow only increased her unease.
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The dark-skinned beauty ran a finger across the obsidian table at which
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the Imperial council sat in session, admiring how it was all sculpted
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out of a single piece. Reputedly it was the work of Regalia II, carved
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when she'd been out campaigning in Callow. Given her death abroad it'd
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never been used by the empress herself: it was her successor, Maledicta
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II, who'd been the first to sit at it. In some parts of Praes there was
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even a turn of phrase about the tale: `carving an empress' table', which
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meant undertaking an effort that would benefit only your successor.
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Alaya was not particularly fond of the sculpted rim, which was a parade
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of twisting devils and kneeling foes, but she had fond memories of the
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table itself. She'd spent many hours seated at it during some of the
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best years of her life, those heady days after she had climbed the Tower
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and she had set to reforming Praes with the people dearest to her in the
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world. Back then the heart of her council had been made up of a trusted
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few: Amadeus, Wekesa and Ime. On occasion others had been brought in for
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a few months or years so that particular issues might be settled with
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their expertise, but they had always been temporary additions.
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Nowadays Alaya found her council was little like the old one, for all
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that Ime and a Black Knight still sat on it.
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The mirror above the ever-burning fireplace in the back subtly fogged
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over, the polished bronze growing clouded as the old enchantment bound
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to the hallways outside the council room were triggered. Malicia
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retreated towards the end of the table, ensuring she would be seated by
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the time the first of them entered -- she took the time to array herself
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in the throne-like seat, draping the folds of her bronze and green dress
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in a way that she knew lent her a regal air. Ime was the first to enter,
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as was her habit. Malicia's spymistress was visibly aging these days,
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the alchemies and spells that had slowed the ravages finally
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unravelling.
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It was not an unusual thing in highborn, who all suffered the same fate
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when their flesh inevitably grew inured to the alchemies and began
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rejecting the spells. Some became desperate and began dealing with
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devils then, but only the foolish dared and Ime was nothing of the sort.
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It was a graceful aging, too, for all that the spymistress resented it:
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though her hair was now turning white and her skin creasing, she
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remained in good shape and firm flesh. Not that Ime would see it that
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way, of course.
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Alaya was well aware that Wasteland aristocrats had an instinctual
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disgust towards the signs of old age, most of them having come to
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associate it with the lowborn as a consequence of being raised by
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ageless and seemingly forever-young relatives. It was a self-reinforcing
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shame, as highborn visible aging tended to retreat from good society to
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maintain the illusion of agelessness through their discretion. Malicia's
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spymistress offered a short bow, her modest blue robes whispering
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against the floor as she did, and wordlessly headed for the seat to the
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empress' left as she had for decades. The other woman she had been
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awaiting took longer to arrive, and took a different route.
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It was necessary, given that Malicia's current Black Knight was an ogre
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and so physically incapable of squeezing through most doors.
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High Marshal Nim -- raised above other marshals after coming into her
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Name -- was a very deliberate individual. The eastern door had been
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heightened and broadened for her but even so the ogre opened it slowly,
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as if she were afraid of slamming it into the wall. The Black Knight
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lowered her head to pass the threshold and only straightened when she
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was under the heigh ceiling of the council room, her plain armour of
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dark steel plate pulling taut against her. She wore no helm, leaving
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bare two dark braids framing a tanned face as the rest of her hair went
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down her back untied. Her large eyes were a pale brown that leaned into
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pink, and her face seemed pulled into a permanent frown that made her
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large nose even more prominent.
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She looked like something of a brute, as all ogres did, but Malicia knew
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better. Amadeus, on one of their evenings drinking terrible wine
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together, had noted that while Grem One-Eye was likely the finest
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general in the Dread Empire the ogre was a closer match to him than
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Ranker by a significant margin. Nim inclined her head and chest in the
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approximation of a bow, taking her prepared enchanted steel seat at the
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end of table facing Malicia. If there were others the Black Knight would
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have been seated at the empress' right, as was customary, but there was
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no need for such pageantry when it was only the three of them. There
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would be no fourth: Malicia had not allowed the honour of the Warlock's
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seat to any of the mages serving her.
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The empress opened the council herself, voice ringing out.
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``We have word from Foramen,'' Dread Empress Malicia said. ``The
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Confederation of the Grey Eyries was\ldots{} emboldened by news of the
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Black Queen's coming. They have resumed their attacks against Foramen
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and High Lady Wither.''
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Nim grimaced, thick lips pulling at thicker skin. All expressions looked
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exaggerated on ogres, by virtue of their size. It often made them seem
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foolish or stupid, so most who left the Hall of Skulls learned to school
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their faces into neutrality to avoid the impression -- and so now their
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kind was known as being inexpressive instead.
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``That tangles up the entire south for us, Your Dread Majesty,'' the
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Black Knight said. ``Wither won't move while the enemy is at her gate,
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and Kahtan will be looking to sink a knife in her back.''
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High Lady Takisha of Kahtan would no doubt phrase it differently,
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Malicia thought, but Nim was essentially correct. With Thalassina a
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blackened ruin and Foramen in goblin hands, Kahtan had become the last
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high seat in the hands of a Taghreb highborn and so incredibly
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influential among their people. High Lady Takisha was much more
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interested in putting that influence to use in reclaiming Foramen for
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one of her kin that fighting battles on Malicia's behalf, not that the
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empress had pushed hard for such contributions. Until recently, it had
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suited her for Kahtan to largely sit the war out: it lent credence to
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the perception of stalemate between Sepulchral and the Tower that had
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been the keystone of her diplomatic strategy. Malicia has bled Kahtan
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dry of gold and mages as recompense for the feet-dragging, too, both of
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which had been useful in pursuing her plans abroad.
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``High Lady Takisha has called her vassals to Kahtan,'' Ime shared.
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``Most Taghreb nobles in Praes will be there, considering she's the last
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human high seat in the south. We could skip her and attempt to muster
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them directly when they're gathered.''
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``It would be hasty to attempt as much,'' Malicia said. ``We're not
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intending on extended fighting against the Grand Alliance.''
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And once peace was made the empress would be able to use Takisha
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Muraqib's absence as a reason to draw heavily on her troops for the
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Empire's contribution to the war on Keter. It would weaken her
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significantly going forward, hammering down one of the last nails that
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might potentially stick up to challenge Malicia's authority in Praes.
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``We can settle this without the Taghreb,'' the Black Knight calmly
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agreed. ``The key is making sure the Black Queen doesn't end up backing
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Sepulchral for the Tower. That would be an alliance difficult to beat on
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the field.''
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|
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``From what we've intercepted of their correspondence,'' Ime said, ``it
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seems like the Grand Alliance is keeping High Lady Abreha at a distance.
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|
Not hostile, but hardly allied.''
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|
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``That could change,'' Malicia said, ``should we damage Foundling's
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armies too much. If Amadeus were there to back I could not fathom her
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choosing Sepulchral's candidature over his, but he remains in the wind.
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Incidents will have to be arranged to turn that distance into enmity.''
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|
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|
And sometimes Alaya did wonder if that wasn't the very reason Amadeus
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|
was absent: so that nothing could coalesce around him too early. If he
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|
was not putting pieces into place without binding himself to them,
|
|
getting forces in motion without himself needing to be at the helm. But
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|
if that was truly the case, where \emph{was} he? Even now, with his old
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|
apprentice at the gates, there was no hint of a plot in sight. Malicia
|
|
knew better than to believe a man like him would disappear quietly into
|
|
obscurity. It was worrying, that even Ime's best efforts had not been
|
|
enough to find his trail.
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|
|
|
``Assuming Callow begins by linking up with the deserters in the Green
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|
Stretch, as is most probable, I'll have infiltrators in place by the
|
|
time the Army of Callow begins marching north,'' Ime said. ``Given the
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|
positions our people in Sepulchral's ranks, arranging those incidents is
|
|
achievable.''
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|
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|
``It won't be enough,'' the Black Knight said. ``Foundling didn't fight
|
|
half a dozen wars to roll over for the Tower at the first sign of
|
|
trouble, Your Dread Majesty. We'll have to bloody her before she even
|
|
considers terms.''
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|
|
|
``It will take more than that,'' Ime frankly said. ``It's been personal
|
|
for her since the Night of Knives. If she's not forced to choose between
|
|
drastic consequences and dealing with us, it's my belief she will
|
|
absolutely keep pushing.''
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|
|
|
Neither of the two looked at her, even though the so-called `Night of
|
|
Knives' had been ordered by Malicia personally. It'd had unfortunate
|
|
long-term consequences, she would admit, but the notion had been sound
|
|
at the time. It'd been only tangentially a reprisal for Foundling's
|
|
assassination attempts of her in Keter, after all. The most important
|
|
motives had all been political in nature. After securing the Dead King's
|
|
aid to keep Procer in check, Malicia had believed that the last major
|
|
loose end to handle was Callow. She'd had allies in the Free Cities and
|
|
ways to collapse that alliance's coherence, meaning that the last
|
|
potential territorial threat to Praes had been a resurgent Kingdom of
|
|
Callow under Catherine Foundling.
|
|
|
|
Decapitating the small but skilled cadre of individuals that the young
|
|
queen had been relying on to rule her realm and carry out her reforms
|
|
had only been logical, and in that aspect worked exactly as intended.
|
|
Unfortunately, instead of returning home and licking her wounds the
|
|
Black Queen had instead disappeared for a year and re-emerged as high
|
|
priestess of the drow with a set of fresh armies at her back. There had,
|
|
in Alaya's opinion, been no way for her to really predict that. It had
|
|
effectively set the balance of power in the other direction and begun a
|
|
cascade of events that'd made Callow into the most influential member of
|
|
the Grand Alliance, which had in turn forced the empress to implement
|
|
drastic measures to compensate.
|
|
|
|
And it might have been dangerous, it might have been hard and Alaya had
|
|
more than once hesitated, but her plans had borne fruit. Foundling was
|
|
now here in Praes, on grounds Malicia had prepared for years and
|
|
desperate enough to accept terms when she was brought to the table. Now
|
|
Malicia only needed to walk the path a little further still and it would
|
|
all fall into place -- she was, in other words, in one of the single
|
|
most perilous positions of her entire reign. The last inch to the finish
|
|
line was always the most treacherous. Alaya would know, considering how
|
|
many people she'd killed there.
|
|
|
|
``I do not disagree,'' Malicia finally said. ``I naturally leave picking
|
|
the battlefield entirely to you, High Marshal. All of the Tower's
|
|
resources are opened to your office in the pursuit of bringing Foundling
|
|
to the table.''
|
|
|
|
``A great honour, Your Dread Majesty,'' the Black Knight said, bowing
|
|
her head.
|
|
|
|
Ime seemed about to speak when she suddenly closed her mouth, and a
|
|
heartbeat later there was a polite knock at the door. Malicia's
|
|
spymistress glanced at her and the empress nodded permission. Ime
|
|
slipped out a few moments and Malicia made small talk with Nim about her
|
|
eldest son, who had recently wed, until she returned. Both women gave
|
|
the spymistress their full attention when she did.
|
|
|
|
``The Black Queen has arrived in Praes,'' Ime said, closing the door
|
|
behind her.
|
|
|
|
Malicia smiled. Finally.
|
|
|
|
``How close to Satus did she gate out?'' the Black Knight asked.
|
|
|
|
Ime's lips thinned.
|
|
|
|
``She is not in the Green Stretch at all, High Marshal,'' the
|
|
spymistress said. ``The word came from High Lord Sargon: she's less than
|
|
a day's march away from \emph{Wolof}.''
|
|
|
|
Dread Empress Malicia went still. Wolof, which was on the other side of
|
|
the empire from any sort of ally of Callow's. Wolof, whose high lord she
|
|
held in her thrall. Wolof, where Malicia had laid seeds for a great
|
|
victory -- the filling of a fourth seat at this very table.
|
|
|
|
Someone had just made a mistake, and to Malicia's sudden disquiet she
|
|
was not certain whether it had been her or the Black Queen.
|