722 lines
33 KiB
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722 lines
33 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-22-advent}{%
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\section{Chapter 22: Advent}\label{chapter-22-advent}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Every crisis is an opportunity, Chancellor. Mostly an
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opportunity to die, but occasionally other things as well.''}
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-- Dread Empress Malevolent II
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\end{quote}
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``I always forget how ridiculously huge Ater is,'' I said.
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In the distance the tall ramparts of the City of Gates loomed, crowned
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with bastions atop the inner walls and the gargantuan silhouette of the
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Tower rising to touch the clouds. It was an impressive sight, the kind
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that gave you pause even if you knew -- as I did -- that it was rare for
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the Dread Empire to actually have enough military strength in the city
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to man the entire set of walls properly. The capital was so large that
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if it were not so terribly fortified it might actually be indefensible,
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though another school of thought back in the College had argued that the
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size was actually part of the defences. Tyrants in the Tower had never
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been shy about drawing their opponents into abandoned districts before
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setting them aflame.
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``Surely Salia is even larger,'' Arthur ventured. ``It was raised in
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fertile lands near a river, not at the heart of the Wasteland.''
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``In size Ater is larger,'' I noted. ``Entire sections of it are usually
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abandoned, though, and Salia definitely has more people in it.''
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The Squire eyed the capital of the Dread Empire with a skeptical look on
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his face, which had me smothering a smile. Back when I'd first come to
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Ater I'd been too wrapped up into myself and what Amadeus was teaching
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me to really take it in properly, but arriving as part of an invading
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army was giving my fellow orphan a bit more perspective.
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``I don't see how they can feed that many people,'' Arthur admitted.
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``Or even have enough drinking water. Is it an underground source like
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Hainaut?''
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``Five different underground lakes,'' I confirmed. ``The Miezans built a
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bunch of enchanted funnels when they first took over the city that feed
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a system of fountains anyone can take from, but there's been works
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since. Dread Emperor Vile made aqueducts and cisterns when the
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population got too large and Dread Emperor Tenebrous-''
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``Isn't that the one who turned into a giant spider?'' the Squire asked,
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sounding amused.
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``Allegedly,'' I snorted. ``No knows for sure, though there sure are a
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lot of them under the city nowadays. Anyhow, Tenebrous made an enormous
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reservoir to catch rain and freeze it, a reserve for when the city is in
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drought.''
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It was a pleasant change to be able to tell when Scribe was approaching.
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Like a touch in the back of my mind, a star I could see shining in the
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black whenever I closed my eyes. One of many.
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``Vile's cisterns were dismantled under Dread Emperor Venal,'' Eudokia
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said, standing right behind Arthur.
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Who nearly jumped out of his skin, swallowing a curse. It was a
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nostalgic sight: she used to do the same to me back when I was the
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Squire.
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``That's the one who thought Ater was a shithole and tried to build his
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own capital, right?'' I asked.
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``Indeed,'' Scribe agreed. ``The cisterns were lined with silver for
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purity enchantments, he had them broken down to use the metal in
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coinage.''
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Well, the man had come by his regnal name honestly.
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``They were never replaced?'' Arthur asked.
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``Much later,'' Scribe replied. ``Maleficent the Second had the silver
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statues in Delos' great library melted down and used for replacements
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after the Secretariat tried to refuse her access to their histories.''
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She'd had a way with insults, Maleficent the Second, when she wanted to
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make a point. It was said she'd had the third of the Magisterium that'd
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refused to surrender to her enslaved and forced into the Spears of
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Stygia as an admonishment.
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``So thirst isn't going to make them surrender,'' Arthur said. ``What
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about food, though?''
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I cocked an eyebrow at him.
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``Do you want a lecture on how the imperial tax system works?'' I drily
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asked.
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``Is it murder?'' the boy drily replied. ``I'm guessing murder is
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involved.''
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``Ater has the largest granaries in the country,'' I told him. ``They're
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massive, the size of palaces.''
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``Even with the field ritual gradient and rotations introduced under
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Nefarious, the fields around the city can only feed a little under half
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of Ater,'' Scribe said. ``The remainder comes from taxes. High Seats are
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charged with collecting a tenth of the harvest in their lands and that
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of their vassals, which is then sent to Ater.''
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``Independent lords can have harsher or lighter burdens, depending on
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whether or not the Tower likes them,'' I added, ``and the freeholders of
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the Green Stretch are bound to sell a third of their harvest to the
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Tower at a fixed price.''
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Less than it was worth, usually, but it was part of the terms they
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leased the land from the Tower at.
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``Malicia improved the yields for Ater significantly during her reign,''
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Eudokia admitted, ``by changing the laws so that lords could pay part of
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their monetary taxes to the Tower in food instead. Poorer lords with
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good years leaped at the opportunity, and with Callowan grain pouring in
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all the while there is a truly prodigious amount of foodstuffs in the
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city at the moment.''
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``We're not going to starve them out,'' I summed up. ``They've got six
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months in them, at least, and maybe as much as a year if they ration
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severely enough.''
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We did not have six months, I kept to myself. Cordelia believed that
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Procer would finally break in five, but we had to leave Praes before
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that: it'd take us at least a month and a half to return west and half a
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month to muster for the attack on Keter. We had three months here, to be
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generous, but that'd be a razor-thin margin. Two was more realistic, two
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and maybe the odd week tossed it on top of it. Which meant we would need
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to either force a surrender or take the city by force, storming the
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walls. I was very much trying to avoid the latter, because the last of
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the Legions would bleed us dry for it. The entire city was a fucking
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deathtrap of old artefacts and half-buried monstrosities. If we didn't
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get several demons tossed at us before this was over I'd eat my crown. I
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cast a look at Scribe.
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``You needed me for something?''
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She nodded.
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``There is word from the High Lady of Kahtan,'' Eudokia said.
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Takisha Muraqib was the leader of the largest chunk of enemy troops
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outside the city, so I'd made a point of trying to approach her for a
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settlement the moment I could. If she turned on Malicia a lot of nobles
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would follow her example, which might well take the city for us without
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an assault. Loyalty in Praes was a lot like horse racing: people loved a
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winner, but if the champion limped all bets were off.
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``We'll talk later,'' I told Arthur. ``Sit down with Apprentice and
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figure out tactics for fighting the Black Knight indoors or on a street,
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it's where you're most likely to run into her. If you come up with
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something solid, we'll try it out on Named.''
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I already had several particularly vicious exercises in mind. As far as
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I was concerned, you'd never really had to deal with a proper ambush
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until you tried grounds that the only son and pupil of Wekesa the
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Warlock had been given an hour to trap. Last time he'd temporarily ended
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gravity in a warded circle, which had been spectacularly amusing to
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watch on top of being very humiliating for the kids.
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``I will, Your Majesty,'' the Squire swore. ``We've been talking over
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ideas on the march.''
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``I'll look forward to it, then,'' I said.
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The kid -- young man, really, but it was hard to think of him that way
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-- left promptly to get to it, which left me weathering Scribe's mild
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gaze. I raised an eyebrow at her. The one over the dead eye, I was
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trying to train myself into doing that. It drew attention to the eye
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cloth, made the faint-hearted uncomfortable.
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``Mentorship is not without danger,'' Scribe said. ``Especially
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mentorship of a hero.''
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``I don't teach him myself,'' I said. ``Been careful about that. All
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I've done with him is talk, never so much as a spar.''
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``Given your own teacher, I would have thought you aware that the
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\emph{talking} is the most important part,'' she replied.
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``Named can learn from others without being pupils,'' I said. ``It's not
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like every time you pick up a trick or a bit of tactics from someone
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you're wedded to them as mentor and apprentice. I've learned things from
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Malicia and Captain. Hells, I learned from the Pilgrim once or twice.''
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Not that he'd ever gone out of his way to teach me anything. Besides,
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I'd been careful to give neither tricks not tactics to Arthur Foundling.
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If I ever ended up on the other side of the field from the kid, I wanted
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as much of my repertoire still up my sleeve as I could fit.
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``It's a fine line,'' Scribe noted. ``I do not seek to scold, to be
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clear. It is your choice to make, and you have drunk from deeper wells
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of namelore than I ever did.''
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``Always thought that was weird, to be honest,'' I admitted. ``The
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Calamities were around for almost sixty years in one form or another, it
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seems strange most of you never picked up more. Malicia too, I guess,
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but her I can understand. It's not like any hero made it to the Tower in
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her lifetime.''
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``It was always Amadeus who saw to those tactics,'' she said, ``so in a
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sense most of us never considered it any more necessary to acquire skill
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in this area than we would have thought to rival Wekesa or sorcery or
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Sabah in strength.''
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``You still survive decades and decades as Named,'' I said. ``You had to
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have learned \emph{some} things.''
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``I suppose in detail my experience outweighs yours,'' Eudokia mused.
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``Prior to the Truce and Terms being founded I'd encountered many more
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Named. But you've no doubt realized by now that there is no truly
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reliable method to deal with Named opponents.''
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``Swords tend to work,'' I drily said, ``but I catch your drift. The
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same story you can ride to kill someone will get you killed against
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another.''
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``I imagine I've read more stories and studied foreign myths than you
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have,'' Scribe said, ``for the same is true of Amadeus, but I do not
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have the\ldots{} knack. I can make a plan and execute it, but I find it
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difficult to improvise and adapt a victory the way you did against the
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Arcadian courts, for example, or at the Princes' Graveyard. It requires
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a mindset that I struggle with, as do most Named.''
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``A lot of us tend to specialize,'' I agreed.
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``It narrows our understanding of the world and the way we seek
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victories,'' Scribe said. ``In that sense you are anomalous, though not
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unique.''
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Yeah, I had no delusions there. My father's way of using stories was
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different than mine but no less dangerous, and there'd been several
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points in the Tenth Crusade where Tariq had come very close to either
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killing or shackling me. Kairos had been up there too, the mad bastard,
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using the methods of the Old Tyrants with prescient skill. I also
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figured that Ranger had to be good at reading stories, to have survived
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this long antagonizing the amount of Named she had. Nobody acting like
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that lived as long as she had without being able to tell when a story
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was going to get you killed.
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And there was, of course, the patron goddess of namelore waiting above
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it all: the Wandering Bard, the Intercessor. Who had declared war on me
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in Wolof only to disappear into thin air. I would have liked to call it
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impotence on her part, but that was the kind of delusion that'd get me
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killed. If I hadn't seen her it'd been because she was moving her pieces
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into place, preparing her killing stroke. And since there was only one
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part left to this campaign, the fall of Ater, inside the City of Gates
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would be where she waited for me. I shook my head free of the thoughts.
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``So what did High Lady Takisha reply?'' I asked.
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``She is willing to meet,'' Scribe said. ``Yet I would temper your
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expectations: Princess Vivienne believes Takisha won't move unless we
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promise to back her for the Tower.''
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``Is there anybody in this fucking country who doesn't want me to back
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them for the fucking Tower?'' I growled. ``Any moment now some hell will
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spit out Traitorous so he can bloody well ask me too.''
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``It is unusual that you would be so sought, in my opinion,'' Scribe
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noted. ``You have dealt with or rule over every major amalgamation of
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power east of the Whitecaps, an amount of influence that I some ways
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surpasses what Malicia wielded after the Conquest.''
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I clenched my fingers and unclenched them. I'd made a claim, before
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raising High Lady Abreha from the grave. One of authority over others.
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Creation was moving to meet it. I was finding it easier to parse out
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what people wanted -- my instincts already whispered that Vivienne was
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right, High Lady Takisha would not move without the Tower as a prize --
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but that was the lesser part of it. I could feel Named, now. When I
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closed my eyes, I could see them like stars shining the dark. Only it
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wasn't all of them. Most heroes I couldn't make out. Vivienne yes, and
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the Squire when he was close, but never the Silver Huntress. Authority,
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I thought. It was about authority.
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And the clearest part of it was that Below smiled on me herding their
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own, a warden to villains.
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``Influence doesn't always pay off,'' I finally said. ``Let's go talk
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with Juniper, Scribe. See what our options are before meeting up with
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High Lady Takisha.''
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---
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The Marshal of Callow wasn't one to mince words, so she came out with it
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bluntly.
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``Depends if they're stupid about it or not,'' Juniper said.
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Our maps of Ater were accurate, as there hadn't been any major works
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done in the capital since they'd been drawn, but they were unreliable in
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the sense that they'd didn't tell us what parts of the city were being
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inhabited at the moment. Malicia had taken in refugees by the thousands
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so a lot of the empty districts would have filled up, but which and by
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who was anybody's guess. Scribe and the Jacks had a few people in the
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city, but it was a drop in the bucket for a place that large. I doubted
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even the Tower had a full accounting to use, and for all her faults the
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empress had built up a prodigious bureaucracy in her seat of power.
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``I'm not going to stand here and defend the stock of Praesi
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aristocracy,'' I said, ``but let's assume they \emph{won't} make the
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worst possible choices.''
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``Then we're in a tricky position,'' Juniper said. ``When it comes down
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to it, Ater isn't really a city that can be sieged the traditional way.
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It's the incarnation of a logistical pit: to surround a city this large
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with any real strength, enough to keep away sorties, you need an army
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large enough it's impossible to feed in this region.''
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Which meant massive supply lines stretching over some of the most
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dangerous lands on Calernia, in constant danger in collapse before enemy
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soldiers even got involved. If you were a foreign army, anyway. The High
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Seats are much more manageable wars on their hands, which went some way
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in explaining why so few external enemies had been successful against
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Ater compared to internal ones.
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``That much we're agreed on,'' I said. ``We're not going to try, and by
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the looks they're well aware of that.''
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Our eyes moved the map between us. Ater had nine gates, massive things
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that had once needed specially bred monsters to be opened or closed
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until they were replaced by gear mechanisms a century or two back. Of
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those nine gates, three were currently still open. The Army of Callow
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was encamped to the west of the capital, near an abandoned town that had
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large and deep wells, but the three gates on the eastern side of the
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capital were wide open. Which only made sense, given that a gaggle of
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nobles from all over Praes had brought around thirty thousand men from
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various private armies and encamped there. They'd not entered the city,
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as it was against the laws of the Empire to bring troops inside the
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capital without permission and no one was yet ready to move against
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Malicia, but our scouts confirmed there was constant movement through
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the gates.
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``High Lady Abreha is but a week behind us,'' Scribe noted. ``Her army
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tips the balance of power in our favour.''
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``Eh,'' I hedged.
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``We can likely beat the noble armies on the field,'' Juniper agreed.
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``They have no unified command structure or proper organization.''
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``And they've got a lot of household troops, but they've also got a
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large proportion Taghreb tribal levies,'' I said. ``Good raiders and
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irregulars, not so great in a shield wall. In a stand-up fight on
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plains, we'll smash that army to pieces.''
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``It will not give us that fight, I take it,'' Eudokia ventured.
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``They'll retreat into the capital,'' I said. ``Use us as leverage for
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getting their troops inside without officially rebelling against
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Malicia. Given that her trustworthy forces are running thin, she'll
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likely have to bend.''
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``The remaining Legions are around eight thousand strong,'' Scribe
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noted, ``but even my people never got a good read on the total number of
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Sentinels. Too many of them never leave the Tower.''
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``You gave us a floor of eight thousand so I'm assuming at least ten,''
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I noted. ``I'm skeptical how good they'll be in a fight, considering
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their heads are supposed to be fucked to the Hells and back to make them
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perfectly loyal, but it shouldn't matter anyway considering most of them
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will be tied up keeping the city from falling apart. I'd be surprised if
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Malicia can shake loose more than two or three thousand to throw at
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us.''
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``Pickler believes she can breach the capital's walls, and if she does I
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believe we can take Ater after High Lady Abreha reinforces us,'' Juniper
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said. ``But that holds only if the nobles stay out of it. Otherwise
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they'll bog us down in the outer districts and we'll be forced out by
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spellfire.''
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We were at a massive magical disadvantage here, even with Masego
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weighing heavily on the scales. The sheer amount of mage cadres we'd be
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facing if the enemy got to mobilize fully against us was pretty
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daunting. There were at least a few hundred mages capable of High Arcana
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in Praes, and almost all of them would be shooting at us. And that was
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without even getting into diabolism, which I saw as pretty much
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inevitable. It was a historical staple of Praesi getting cornered.
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``Keeping the nobility divided and unable to coordinate defences seems a
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priority, then,'' Scribe said. ``Should I begin arranging
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assassinations?''
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``Not yet,'' I said, then bit my lip. ``Assassin, could he get High Lady
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Takisha?''
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If she got killed, her High Seat would tear itself up over succession
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and Kahtan would no longer be able to serve as the banner under which
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all the lesser Taghreb nobility gathered. And the Taghreb were where the
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manpower was at, right now. The Wasteland had bloodied itself with
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continued civil war, while the Hungering Sands hadn't really seen any
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action aside from raids since Foramen was seized by surprise. If we
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broke up the southerners into smaller squabbling blocs and then hit Ater
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before someone could step into the power vacuum, it was possible they'd
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stay out of the fight.
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``Takisha is remarkably paranoid when it comes to her personal safety,''
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Scribe admitted. ``Three layers of amulets at all times and frequent
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body doubles. Even odds Assassin would get to her, being conservative.''
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``We're holding back on that, then,'' I said. ``Look up targets that
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would destabilize the coalition behind her, but I'm not pulling the
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trigger on that yet.''
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If we took a swing and missed it'd make negotiating with her pretty
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awkward afterwards. Praesi didn't take this sort of thing as personally
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as most people would, but it certainly wouldn't win me any favours.
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``None of that matters when we haven't addressed the dragon in the
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hut,'' Juniper said. ``There's an army as large as all of ours combined
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marching on Ater as we speak.''
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``Three weeks away, at the current pace,'' Scribe said. ``Matters could
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be resolved here before it arrives.''
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``I'm not sure that'd be an improvement,'' I admitted. ``Until we know
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who the warlord leading the Clans is I'm not keen on punching a hole in
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the walls of Ater.''
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Juniper snorted.
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``Let's not take the fucking city only to have to hold its busted walls
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against one hundred thousand orcs,'' she summed up. ``The military
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wisdom of the College shines in us still, Catherine.''
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I grinned back at her.
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``Wisest heads of the age, Hellhound, that's us,'' I replied.
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Scribe let out a little choking sound but did not go as far as
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contradicting us.
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``We've sent scouts their way and I know Hakram's still alive,'' I said.
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``I'm inclined not to think the worst.''
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I could feel his Name, see its star out in the black.
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``If Dag Clawtoe had been elected, Hakram would have scried us by now,''
|
|
Juniper retorted. ``I don't like it.''
|
|
|
|
``If the Blackspears were in charge they'd be burning Nok by now, not
|
|
approaching Ater,'' I pointed out. ``I won't pretend I'm not concerned,
|
|
Juniper, but Adjutant will bring this home. He always does.''
|
|
|
|
``We should prepare for the eventuality that they are foes, at least,''
|
|
the Hellhound pressed.
|
|
|
|
I grimaced and thought it over. It'd split our focus, but to be honest
|
|
at the moment there wasn't much for the Army of Callow to do. We were
|
|
preparing an offensive for when Abreha -- and High Lord Dakarai of Nok,
|
|
who'd joined her with a small retinue -- arrived with her troops, but it
|
|
would be Pickler and her sappers handling the most of that. Charging
|
|
into a breach wasn't the kind of fighting that required extensive
|
|
preparations, just guts and steel.
|
|
|
|
``Do it,'' I finally said. ``But make sure the general staff knows it's
|
|
theoretical. I don't want half our camp convinced we're going to be
|
|
fighting the Clans.''
|
|
|
|
Fighting a warlord -- maybe even just rumours we would -- might actually
|
|
cause desertions from the part of my armies that'd been the steadiest
|
|
through several wars. As far as I knew, the loyalty of the Legions had
|
|
never been tested in this manner and I suspected it was for good reason.
|
|
A lot of orcs put loyalty to the Legions or the Army of Callow higher
|
|
than allegiance to abstract things like the Tower or my crown, but I
|
|
wasn't so sure that loyalty would win out if it was their own clans on
|
|
the other side of the field.
|
|
|
|
``I'll keep it quiet,'' Juniper said.
|
|
|
|
``Which leaves only one force unaccounted for,'' I said. ``Amadeus of
|
|
the Green Stretch.''
|
|
|
|
Scribe studied me.
|
|
|
|
``You're sure he's here?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``I know Ranger's in the city,'' I said. ``And they've stayed together
|
|
until now.''
|
|
|
|
I'd actually learned a little something courtesy of the Lady of the
|
|
Lake, aside from her rough location: whatever it was that bound me to
|
|
Named, it was possible to cut it. Temporarily, at least. The\ldots{} tie
|
|
began to reform after half a day had passed, more or less, and from what
|
|
I could feel Ranger was becoming increasingly irritated at having to cut
|
|
it off again and again. \emph{I bet Sever would have done it
|
|
permanently}, I thought with some amusement. I'd have to remember to
|
|
tell her when we ran into each other, along with a pleasant question
|
|
about how it felt to be inferior to inferior to the Saint even
|
|
posthumously.
|
|
|
|
``He's a dangerous man, Catherine, but he doesn't have an army,''
|
|
Juniper said. ``There's only so much he could do.''
|
|
|
|
I winced at that, and so did Eudokia. There was a moment of silence, the
|
|
two of us waiting for something brutally ironic to happen, but nothing
|
|
showed up save an increasingly puzzled look on the Marshal of Callow's
|
|
face.
|
|
|
|
``Don't repeat that,'' I finally said. ``It might end up costing us.''
|
|
|
|
She still looked skeptical, but in matters of namelore she knew better
|
|
than to contradict me. I dragged myself to my feet, massaging my upper
|
|
leg to press down on a cramp. Had I taken herbs today? I couldn't
|
|
recall. I'd gotten too used to Hakram arranging these things for me.
|
|
Might as well have another cup if I was going to be riding Zombie.
|
|
|
|
``A short detour and we'll get moving,'' I told Scribe. ``Let's go find
|
|
out what High Lady Takisha has to tell us.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Scribe despised riding horses even though she'd been doing it for
|
|
decades, which I never ceased to find hilarious. Zombie disliked having
|
|
to stay on the ground to keep up with the other Named and my escort of
|
|
knights, but she perked up after I promised her meat when we returned to
|
|
camp. She was unsettlingly fond of pig guts, which she ate very messily
|
|
before grooming herself for hours. A truly vain creature, my mount. I
|
|
approved. At this point I'd been through these little meetings often
|
|
enough that I wasn't surprised when the Praesi came in dressed richly
|
|
enough to pay for a bridge across the Hwaerte and I didn't bother to
|
|
take it in the way I had with the Sahelians. No, this time it was a
|
|
smaller detail I got stuck on.
|
|
|
|
I'd arranged a meeting only with High Lady Takisha, but there were
|
|
\emph{three} great aristocrats waiting for me.
|
|
|
|
The first was Takisha Muraqib, a handsome dark-haired woman in her
|
|
fifties with a dignified air and enough gold on her it'd likely add up
|
|
to several ingots if melted down. Arguably now the second most powerful
|
|
in Praes, as the fall of Foramen to goblin hands had led all the Taghreb
|
|
nobility to gather behind her. The second was High Lord Jaheem Niri of
|
|
Okoro, a strikingly good-looking man with warm golden eyes and a roguish
|
|
smile. He had to be what, in his mid-forties? He had a daughter a little
|
|
younger than me, but she wasn't his oldest. The real surprise, though,
|
|
was the third. High Lady Wither of Foramen, once Matron of the High
|
|
Ridge Tribe. Pickler's mother.
|
|
|
|
Also the sworn enemy of High Lady Takisha, and according to my spies
|
|
still very far away.
|
|
|
|
No wonder the Matrons of the Confederation of the Grey Eyries had sent
|
|
word they were sending a delegation north to Ater to treat with me. It
|
|
would be in part so they'd have a seat at the table after Ater fell, as
|
|
I'd expected, but now a second reason was looking at me through pale
|
|
yellow eyes. The High Lady of Kahtan might despise Wither and want to
|
|
take Foramen from her, but that enmity was nothing compared to how much
|
|
the Grey Eyries hated the traitor who'd turned on them in exchange for
|
|
becoming recognized as High Lady by Malicia.
|
|
|
|
Still, this reception was a surprise and not a welcome one. It was
|
|
taking me by surprise in multiple ways and suggesting there were
|
|
undercurrents to imperial politics I'd not sniffed out. A dangerous
|
|
thing, to treat carefully with. It was fortunate that I was such a dab
|
|
hand at diplomacy these days.
|
|
|
|
``How long have the three of you stood so close?'' I asked, cocking my
|
|
head to the side. ``One hour, two? And no one's dead. That has
|
|
\emph{got} to be some sort of record.''
|
|
|
|
I hear the knight behind me choke down on a snort. The Praesi were less
|
|
amused. Wither was impatient, Takisha sneered and High Lord Jaheem
|
|
raised his eyebrows in a way that suggested rolling them without ever
|
|
actually doing it. Impressive trick, that.
|
|
|
|
``We greet you, Black Queen,'' High Lady Takisha began, ``and in-''
|
|
|
|
``Spare me the speech,'' I cut through, tone flat. ``I arranged talks
|
|
with you, not three High Seats. I might be considered justified to see
|
|
this as a breach of our truce terms, so let's get to whatever point the
|
|
three of you made yourselves to stand together to make.''
|
|
|
|
``This is poor diplomacy,'' High Lord Jaheem said. ``High Lord Sargon
|
|
spoke better of you.''
|
|
|
|
``Sargon was a stepping stone, not the last thing between me and the end
|
|
of this irritating little war,'' I replied. ``He got as much courtesy as
|
|
I'll ever afford High Seat. You, though?''
|
|
|
|
I smiled toothily.
|
|
|
|
``Count yourselves lucky this doesn't begin and end with knives.''
|
|
|
|
``You don't have enough knives to get this done, Black Queen,'' High
|
|
Lady Wither said, voice startling reedy. ``That is our point. If you
|
|
come for Ater steel in hand, you will lose.''
|
|
|
|
``That's arguable at best,'' I noted. ``But I'll generously assume you
|
|
came with \emph{something} to offer, since only a fool would think I've
|
|
come to Ater just to walk away.''
|
|
|
|
``We are willing to support a negotiated settlement with the Tower,''
|
|
High Lady Takisha said, tone irritated. ``So long as the sovereignty of
|
|
the Dread Empire remains untouched, there is some room for compromise.''
|
|
|
|
I cocked an eyebrow over my dead eye, unimpressed by the phrasing, and
|
|
to my satisfaction I saw her glance at the cloth.
|
|
|
|
``I sacked Wolof without needing to break its walls, broke the Legions
|
|
in Kala and now my army is camped beneath the very walls of the City of
|
|
Gates,'' I said. ``If some room for compromise is the best you have to
|
|
offer, we'll be resuming this conversation after I've killed a few
|
|
thousand more of you.''
|
|
|
|
``You would refuse terms without hearing them?'' High Lord Jaheem said.
|
|
|
|
``I'd refuse to humour posturing,'' I flatly replied. ``You're here to
|
|
do me a favour, I broke through your front door and set fire to your
|
|
house. If you want me to stop torching everything in sight, \emph{make
|
|
it worth my while}.''
|
|
|
|
``We would be willing to support armies being sent to aid the Grand
|
|
Alliance,'' High Lady Wither said. ``It's an open secret you're badly in
|
|
need of diabolists.''
|
|
|
|
``That's a start,'' I noted.
|
|
|
|
``The Blessed Isle can be formally ceded back to the crown of Callow,''
|
|
High Lady Takisha said.
|
|
|
|
Huh, hadn't seen that one coming. On the surface it was a worthless
|
|
piece of land, considering it was a blackened wasteland ruined by my
|
|
father's use of massed goblinfire, but that was a surface perception
|
|
only. It was a strategic stronghold, the best way to keep Praes penned
|
|
on its side of the Wasaliti should it decide to get unruly.
|
|
|
|
``That's worth something,'' I agreed, ``but it's not why I'm here. The
|
|
Tower would need to sign the Liesse Accords.''
|
|
|
|
They didn't look too pleased by that, but neither were they surprised.
|
|
|
|
``We might support such a thing, given the right incentives,'' High Lord
|
|
Jaheem said. ``The text as we've obtained has some\ldots{} concerning
|
|
inclusions.''
|
|
|
|
That sounded like someone after diabolism exemptions, which wasn't
|
|
happening, but I wasn't above throwing some minor concessions elsewhere
|
|
if that was what it took.
|
|
|
|
``The final draft of the Accords has not been made,'' I said. ``There is
|
|
still time to negotiate.''
|
|
|
|
``That is reassuring to hear, Your Majesty,'' High Lady Takisha smiled.
|
|
|
|
\emph{I just bet}, I thought.
|
|
|
|
``And who would it be that negotiates the terms of the Accords for
|
|
you?'' I asked. ``Who do you mean to replace Malicia?''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Akua}, I guessed. Had to be. She was the only prominent person
|
|
left in Praes with enough power to be considered and not enough enemies
|
|
to be too badly opposed. And what a knife in the belly it would be for
|
|
this lot, when turned away from them. Just in time for me to cram my
|
|
father down their throats. Silence stretched on for a moment.
|
|
|
|
``We do not mean to replace the Dread Empress,'' High Lady Takisha said.
|
|
``We are loyal subjects, Black Queen.''
|
|
|
|
My eye moved between them, and appallingly enough they looked serious.
|
|
Not about being loyal, that was just absurd, but about not supporting
|
|
Malicia being deposed. At least not here and now.
|
|
|
|
``Dread Empress Malicia has made herself too much a foe of the Grand
|
|
Alliance and an ally of the Dead King to be allowed to keep her power,''
|
|
I plainly said. ``You might have believed this to be negotiable, but
|
|
allow me to now disabuse you of that notion.''
|
|
|
|
I leaned forward, cold-eyed.
|
|
|
|
``If I have to burn Ater to the ground around her to see her driven out
|
|
of the Tower, \emph{I will}.''
|
|
|
|
My gaze swept over all of them.
|
|
|
|
``If I must step over your mutilated corpses to get my way, do not
|
|
believe for a moment I will hesitate. The Dread Empire has been nothing
|
|
but thorn in our side as most of Calernia fights to hold back the
|
|
annihilation of all life on this continent,'' I said. ``There is not a
|
|
speck of sympathy left for any of you west of the Wasaliti: I could raze
|
|
every High Seat and even the fucking heroes would applaud.''
|
|
|
|
I drew back, put on a friendly smile.
|
|
|
|
``Malicia is a stone around your necks,'' I said. ``Put up someone else
|
|
and then we can talk.''
|
|
|
|
``Your threats are empty, Black Queen,'' High Lord Jaheem said. ``You do
|
|
not have long before you must return west with diabolists, else this
|
|
campaign will have doomed your allies.''
|
|
|
|
I met the man's golden eyes with a cold smile.
|
|
|
|
``I still have months,'' I said. ``It's my patience that's in danger of
|
|
running out, Jaheem Niri. Beware of that, while you still can.''
|
|
|
|
Yet even as I spoke, I knew there were no grounds no win here. I'd made
|
|
a mistake, I could feel it. Not in refusing to bend over the matter of
|
|
Malicia or making it clear how far I was willing to go over the matter,
|
|
but somewhere else. Focusing, I could almost feel it out. Neither Jaheem
|
|
Niri nor Wither were surprised, they had expected this, so it was High
|
|
Lady Takisha who'd wanted this conversation to happen. Why? What did she
|
|
gain? \emph{She wants to move them}, my instincts whispered, but I could
|
|
not yet tell to which purpose. I almost could if I focused, but somehow
|
|
I was sure that if I closed my eyes the stars in the darkness would
|
|
distract me. But Takisha had gotten something she'd wanted from this,
|
|
that much I was certain of.
|
|
|
|
Time to cut my losses before she got more.
|
|
|
|
``There is no point to this conversation,'' I stated. ``I tell you only
|
|
this: when we resume it, the terms will have grown starker.''
|
|
|
|
I left them to that, casually tossing in the insult of not giving proper
|
|
courtesies while leaving. Already I was frowning, lost in thought. I'd
|
|
just taken a hit without knowing about it until it was too late, and I
|
|
still didn't know what it'd been \emph{for}. I did not have as clean a
|
|
read on the forces at play in Praes as I'd thought I had, and if I kept
|
|
it up it would cost me.
|
|
|
|
It was time to sharpen the same knives I'd wielded at the Graveyard.
|