560 lines
25 KiB
TeX
560 lines
25 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-36-madman}{%
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\chapter{Madman}\label{chapter-36-madman}}
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\epigraph{``you call me villain
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cast the word as you
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would a stone;
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seek to bury under
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scorn of herded
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multitude, and yet
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forget my Name:
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I am empress
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most dread,
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savage ruler of
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yet fiercer race;
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did you expect
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meekness of me?
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you call me villain
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speak it a curse
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as if Hells were
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grasping instead
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of grasped;
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as if I had knelt.
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you dare?
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I am tyrant,
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bringer of calamity;
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crowned and
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crowning glory
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of mine empire
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be fearful now
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tremble; for
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my reach is long
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my wrath is great
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patient but
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unrivalled
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above or below
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and I will be
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Triumphant''}{Extract from the play ``I, Triumphant'', author unknown, banned by
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decree of the Tower under Terribilis II}
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Finding Black was easy.
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According to my legionaries, he'd not left the rooms he'd claimed on the
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highest level of an abandoned house since we'd had the meeting with
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Heiress. He'd had visitors, though, including Warlock and Juniper. I was
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mildly surprised to find the moon up in the sky when I started the trek
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to his quarters, but if I'd slept that long there was no denying my body
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had needed it. I'd used my Name much, drawn deeper from the well than I
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ever had before save perhaps on the night William had given me the scar
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across my chest. It was kind of ridiculous that Hakram could be back on
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his feet after taking even worse punishment than me, but orcs were made
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of sterner stuff than humans. Bigger and harder bones, thicker skin and
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even a proportionally larger heart. There was something different about
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their stomachs too, related to how they ate almost only meat, but I'd
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never been entirely clear on what acidic humours actually did. I set
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aside the train of thought, recognizing it for the dissembling it was.
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It was strange to find no Blackguards looming silently by the door,
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watching everything from behind their helmets. My teacher's personal
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guard followed him everywhere, but I supposed going through Arcadia
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might have been a bit much for regular humans. Black had been vague when
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I'd asked him how he'd managed the trip, though he'd at least confirmed
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Warlock had not been the one to open the way through the other realm.
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Likely they'd summoned and coerced one of the Fae, which I'd had no idea
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was actually possible until now. What they could have threatened it with
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I did not know, but if there was anyone in the Empire who could put the
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fear of the Gods in a creature like that it was Black. The stairs were
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rickety and I paused when I felt something odd about them, frowning as I
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used my Name sight on the wood. Runes had been traced in some kind of
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golden sorcery, I saw. Most of the mage tongue was still foreign to me,
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but I recognized a rune associated with explosions and another with
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alarms.
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I sighed. Of course he'd trapped the place. His manor in Ater was the
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second most-heavily warded place in the city, and some of the noble
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families had accumulated protections on theirs for centuries. Most of
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the work had been done by Warlock, apparently, but he'd also used ward
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designs coming from as far as the other side of the Tyrian Sea. The Yan
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Tei were famous for their arrays, whether sealing or protective: when
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they'd landed their punitive army on Praesi shores, back in Triumphant's
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day, they'd trapped at least a dozen demons in scrolls and carried them
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home after the war. That seemed like a horrible idea to me, now that I
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had personal experience with demons, but the Yan Tei did things
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differently from Calernians. No nation on our continent would be able to
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function with both a hero and a villain sharing the highest level of
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authority, but they seemed to be doing fine.
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Since Black was disinclined to blow up the stairs under me, I finished
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the trip up the creaking steps. The door to his room was closed so I
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knocked and waited a few heartbeats before opening it. My teacher was
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seated at a table that had clearly come from somewhere else -- it was
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much nicer compared to the rest of the furnishings, and too large to
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make up the stairway -- with papers splayed all over the surface and a
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lit up scrying bowl to his side. Candles were scattered across the room,
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and the faraway silhouette of the moon shone through the window. As
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usual, his back was turned to the wall. He signalled for me to come in
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without turning, listening to the voice coming from the bowl.
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``- won't settle for anything less than double,'' Scribe said.
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``It's like negotiating with a dragon,'' the dark-haired man muttered
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peevishly. ``Fine, it'll be a dent in the coffers but we can afford it.
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But make it clear the payoff is contingent on them following the
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itinerary we provided.''
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``Your will be done,'' Scribe replied, a tad drily.
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Without either of them bothering with goodbyes, the scrying light winked
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out. There was a sad excuse for a chair placed across the table so I
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claimed it without a word as I snuck a look at the papers in front of
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him. The handwriting in most of them was familiar: Juniper's calligraphy
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was as exemplary as ever, a far cry from my own hasty scribbles. How she
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managed that with fingers twice as thick as mine remained a mystery.
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After-action reports for Three Hills and Marchford, if I had to guess.
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``Bribing someone?'' I asked curiously.
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``In a manner of speaking,'' he said ``Scribe is tying up some loose
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ends for me.''
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I hummed. ``Where did you find her, anyway? The stories don't say.''
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The plain-faced woman was barely in them at all. That almost amused me,
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considering how important she was to my teacher's administration of
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Callow: I suspected Scribe was the reason why he'd never had to set up
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shop in a single city while stabilizing the country after the Conquest.
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The implication of that was that she single-handedly served as both the
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head of his spy network and a one-woman bureaucracy for a territory
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about the same size of the Empire. Scribe was not someone to
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underestimate just because she didn't go around swinging a sword, I'd
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known that even before Ime had warned me never to attract her ire.
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``The Free Cities,'' he said. ``It was an interesting encounter in many
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ways.''
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\emph{I bet.} In the Tower, Scribe had implied she would have preferred
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for Black to take the throne instead of Malicia -- and that Ranger had
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shared that preference. I'd glimpsed some of the reasons for Ranger's
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opinion in my latest dream, but the other woman was still very much a
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riddle to me. I'd never got the impression that Scribe was all that
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invested in the Empire itself: Black was the real reason she was here.
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With Warlock having outright admitted to me he didn't give a single fuck
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about Praes as a whole, that made two of the Calamities whose only
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loyalty was to my teacher. Given that Captain's very Role was bound to
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the concept of protecting Black, that painted a dangerous picture. There
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were five major Named in the Empire, aside from the Empress, and only
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one of them was a staunch supporter of Malicia: the rest only supported
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her reign by default, allegiance filtered through the Black Knight and
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dependent on his position.
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My teacher was perfectly positioned for a coup. He'd founded the modern
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Legions of Terror, personally led most of their generals on the field
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and crafted their very philosophy. He had the Named on his side and
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likely most of the army. Any other villain I could think of would have
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already killed Malicia and taken the throne, so why hadn't he? That he
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was Duni must have been part of it: a paleskin on the throne would be
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met with immediate and bitter rebellion by most of the High Lords. I
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knew he was close to the Empress so that must have been a factor too,
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but there must have been more to it. The Black Knight was, ultimately,
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an icily pragmatic man: I did not believe that even a long-standing
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friendship would stay his hand if the recipient was in his way. I'd been
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promised an answer to those questions in a way, and it was time to
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collect. Phrasing would be important, though. He was a hard man to
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offend, but just asking \emph{by the way, why haven't you murdered one
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of your closest friends and taken her stuff} would have him get all
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sardonic on me. Something to avoid: his sarcasm tended to be on the
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savage side.
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``The Empire is not sustainable,'' I said instead.
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Blurted out, really, but what I was saying wasn't a surprise to him.
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He'd left me markers on the path down to that understanding, though he'd
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refrained from just handing me the knowledge. He'd been right to do
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that: there would always have been a kernel of doubt, if I'd not put it
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together myself. As usual, the man surprised me with how well he
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understood how I thought.
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``Finished the books, have you?'' he said. ``You are essentially
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correct, as long as the borders of the Empire remain what they were
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previous to the Conquest.''
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``That's just delaying the problem, though,'' I pointed out.
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``Eventually the population of Praes will get too big for Callow to
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feed, and honestly that's something that boggles my mind. Why does the
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population keep getting bigger if you can't feed it? Even if Tyrants
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don't to anything to address the problem, starvation by itself should
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keep the whole thing manageable.''
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Black leaned back in his seat, reaching for a jug of wine I hadn't even
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noticed and pouring himself a glass. With a silently raised eyebrow he
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asked me if I wanted a cup too and I shrugged. He took it as a yes and
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placed the full glass in front of me.
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``Because we have the misfortune of being very, very rich,'' he said.
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``As long as the trade lanes to the Free Cities remain open, we can
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import large amounts of grain from Ashur and Procer.''
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``Procer,'' I repeated dubiously. ``I could buy Ashur, since they're
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merchants to the bone, but the Principate feeding the Empire? That's a
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little dubious.''
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``Through intermediaries,'' he said. ``Most people care little for the
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philosophical debates of heroes and villains, Catherine. In the end,
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there is a demand for grain in Praes and a surplus of grain in the
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Principate. The Free Cities merely provide the necessary fig leaf for
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that commerce to not rustle too many feathers.''
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``So you're telling me it \emph{is} sustainable, then,'' I frowned.
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``No, you were correct in your initial thought. On good years, those
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imports and the field sacrifices allowed us to keep our head barely
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above the water. Should there ever be a diplomatic incident down south,
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though, or even if the crops were average instead of bountiful, hunger
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spread across the Empire.''
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``And Tyrants just allowed that?'' I said disbelievingly. ``Hells, half
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of them were mad as\ldots{} well, an Emperor is the usual comparison
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actually, and the other half were idiots but none of them were above a
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spot of massacre. Not a single one of them decided to clear out a few
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cities to make this simpler, or even just restrict childbirth? You
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already do it to the Tribes.''
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Black sipped at his glass. I left mine untouched.
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``Terribilis -- the second one -- was in a unique position after he
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reunited Praes,'' the dark-haired man said. ``His reign was stable, his
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support in the nobility widespread and the Empire's military strength
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was at one of its historical high points. Twenty years of constant war
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had brought down the numbers to something easy to manage, and he decided
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to end the issue forever with magical sterilization and strict familial
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laws. He had, you see, no Callowan ambitions.''
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The Knight put down his glass, the sound of it oddly final.
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``Within a month of his first decree, he was assassinated,'' Black
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finished.
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``And that's the end of it?'' I said. ``Just because one failed it's not
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worth trying?''
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``The second Maleficent came closer,'' he replied. ``She got the Empire
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involved in the Free Cities, where we could bleed our surplus on foreign
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fields. She was too successful: Ashur and Procer allied to drive her
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out. Maleficent did not survive her defeat. Dread Emperor Vile tried it
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with a magical plague that would kill two in ten, only to trigger the
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War of Thirteen Tyrants and One. Sanguinara -- not to be confused with
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the Sanguinias -- made any and all law-breaking a capital offense.
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Overthrown within the year. Bilius the Beast attempted the Dead King's
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gambit of turning all Praesi into undead. Poisoned by his Chancellor,
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before heroes even arrived on the scene.''
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``What are you saying, exactly?''
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``Every single Tyrant who tried to dam Praesi population growth was
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rebelled against, disgraced or assassinated,'' he spoke calmly.
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And Malicia still reigned. The implications of that were horrifying.
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``So Praes has been swelling with twenty years of easy food imports.
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Gods save us all,'' I whispered.
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``Less than you would think,'' Black replied. ``We had two major wars
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before the annexation, which killed a significant portion of people of
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childbearing age. Legionaries cannot have children while in service,
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even in logistical posts, unless a permit is granted. Malicia instituted
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a similar policy for the Imperial bureaucracy, which also had the effect
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of limiting aristocratic influence in the ranks. And the peasantry only
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gets fringe benefits from our access to Callowan fields.''
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``But it will swell, eventually,'' I said. ``In ten years or fifty, it
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makes no difference. And when it does, the Empire will need another
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war.''
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And Calernia would bleed. And \emph{Callow} would bleed, as the land
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closest to Procer -- for there was no doubt the Principate would
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intervene, even if they weren't the target. Procerans fancied themselves
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the nation that kept Evil at bay, and though they had a nasty tendency
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to annex their neighbours there was no denying it was them keeping the
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Chain of Hunger and the Kingdom of the Dead bottled up.
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``It will, if it remains the same Empire it currently is,'' Black agreed
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softly.
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I closed my eyes, parsing out what he'd meant by that. The problem was
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twofold, as I saw it. Not enough product and too much demand. Getting
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more product was just delaying the problem, since the demand would keep
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growing. Lessening the demand was the only way, but resulted in the
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toppling of the current regime.
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``Why?'' I said. ``Why has every single Tyrant who tried to control
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population been overthrown? Many could be a bad string of coincidences,
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but \emph{every single one}? That's\ldots{} bigger.''
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Pride flickered in the man's eyes.
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``Yes,'' he said. ``The right question. \emph{Why}? For years I
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wondered. Was Evil, by nature, inherently self-destructive? The House of
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Light argues as much. But the House of Light is a Calernian institution,
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shaped by Calernian struggles. Its perspective is limited. Creation,
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Catherine, is a thing of patterns and balance.''
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``The pattern for Praes is fucking up pretty bad,'' I pointed out.
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``The pattern for Praes is to grasp,'' he corrected. ``The pattern for
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Callow is to be grasped.''
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And just like that it clicked. For every aspect of Conquer, there was an
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aspect of Protect. For every hero there was a villain. Balance, enforced
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by a pattern. Praes got hungry, and so it invaded Callow. That was their
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pattern. The Empire failed, but the failure was so catastrophic its
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population problem was solved for a few decades. Then they got hungry
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again and the pattern started over.
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``If Praes managed to get its population under control, it would no
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longer have the manpower to invade Callow,'' I said. ``Balance is
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broken. Anybody going against that loses, because they're going against
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the entire pattern of the Empire.''
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``Patterns cannot be broken,'' Black smiled. ``But they can be\ldots{}
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transcended. Names themselves can be transitory.''
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``The Empire doesn't need the manpower to invade Callow, if Callow is
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part of the Empire,'' I breathed. ``Truly part of the Empire, not just a
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conquered territory.''
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Black and Malicia -- for I could not believe that the Dread Empress was
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not up in this to her neck -- had spent decades adjusting the Empire so
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that it would match that state. A small, permanent professional army
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instead of the hordes and mass rituals of old. Praesi ruling Callowan
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cities, Callowans in Praesi institutions like the Legions of Terror.
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Focus on common external enemies like the Principate while slowly and
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quietly smothering the racism in the bureaucracy to pave the way for
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integration. Gods, I'd been raised in Laure and my first instinct in
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looking for protection from Governor Mazus had not been heroes, it had
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been the local Legion garrison. And to bind the marriage, a Callowan
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girl in an old Praesi Name. \emph{Me.}
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My blood ran cold. This was a plan decades in the making, brilliant and
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utterly ruthless. My first panicked instinct was to ruin it by any way I
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could. Could I kill Black, here and now? Did he trust me enough that he
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wouldn't see the strike coming? No, that wouldn't even stop it. Malicia
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would carry on regardless, and there was no touching her. If I stood
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against the Empire now, I would do it without any of the resources I'd
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spent the last year accumulating -- the Fifteenth would balk at
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rebellion when I couldn't even give them a reason they'd be happy with.
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I slowed my heartbeat with a long breath, sharply aware of the pale
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green eyes studying me. If this worked, what would be the end result?
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What would happen to Callow? The Imperial Governorship system made
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permanent, most likely, and spread even further by the lands that would
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be confiscated as soon as the current rebellion was over. Too many
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nobles were participating, there'd be only a handful of baronies left
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west of the Duchy of Daoine. And the Duchy itself, I supposed, but that
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barely counted as Callow. Even under the Kingdom it had been an
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independent nation in all but name.
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On the other hand, the cycle would be done. Over with. No more
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invasions, no more fire and brimstone coming from the East to lay waste
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to Callow. The thought of that was horribly, horribly tempting. But not
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of it came at the cost of killing everything that made Callow what it
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was. \emph{They need me for this}, I realized. I was more than a
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possible replacement for Black, should he die or be put aside. I was, in
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truth, the keystone to what they were trying to build. The proof of
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concept it was possible at all. And that meant I had leverage. I rested
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against the back of the ramshackle chair, feeling my leg twinge in pain.
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Forcing my hands to stop shaking, I met Black's eyes unflinchingly.
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Hadn't this been my plan from the beginning? Enter the ranks, and
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influence the institution from the inside. Praes was seeking to change
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Callow, but Callow could change Praes as well. Already my mind was
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spinning with half a dozen ways to steer this the way I wanted it to go.
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The way I \emph{needed} it to go.
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``I won't just let the Empire swallow Callow whole,'' I told Black,
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ignoring the voice in the back of my head that told me that sentence
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preceded my head rolling on the floor.
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``Then don't,'' he shrugged. ``Preserve what you believe should be
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preserved. Change what you believe needs to be changed. If you judge it
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necessary to end the governorship system, do so. If you think tributary
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status for duchies like with Daoine will be the most stable option, do
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so. As long as the right banner flies, as long as we look at the same
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enemies, I have no objections.''
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And he really didn't, I knew. He could have been lying, but there was a
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weight in my bones that put paid to that notion. This was a pivot, or
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something close to it. As long as what Black considered his victory
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condition was met, he genuinely did not care what the state of Callow
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was.
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``I don't understand you,'' I half-cursed, half-admitted. ``This isn't
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about being a patriot. You don't really think Praesi are better than
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anyone else -- Hells, most of the time you act like you'd set half the
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people in the Wasteland on fire given a good pretext. You do these
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things, like the Reforms or keeping fuckers like Mazus in check, that
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\emph{look} like they're Good -- but they're not, not really. Tools, you
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call them, but tools are used to make something. What do you
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\emph{want}, Black?''
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Languidly, the green-eyed man finished the last of his wine.
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``Do you know what the most common symbol for the struggle between Good
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and Evil is? On Calernia, that is,'' he specified.
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A child could have answered that.
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``A shatranj board,'' I said. ``The so-called Game of the Gods.''
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``I've always hated that image,'' he spoke mildly. ``It implies
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equality. That equivalent forces are arrayed on both sides of the
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board.''
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``Aren't there?'' I frowned. ``Balance, you've said it yourself.''
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``And yet,'' he murmured, ``Good always wins.''
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As if he could feel me about to object, he raised his hand.
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``We don't get real victories, Catherine. Oh, we usurp a throne for a
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few years. Or win a handful of battles. Once in a while, we even win a
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war and stay on top long enough for people to believe we are
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unbeatable.''
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His eyes turned hard.
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``Then the heroes come.''
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I'd seen many sides to this man, since I had first met him. I'd seen him
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cold and vicious, on the night he'd made a game of Mazus for my
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edification. I'd seen his face turn into an emotionless clay mask and
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humanity slide off his face like droplets, on the day he'd Spoken to me.
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Once I'd even seen him shaken, when the Tower had received a Red Letter.
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But the look he had on his face now I had only glimpsed once before,
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when I'd quoted the Book of All Things on the subject of fate. There was
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an old, implacable anger to his frame. For the first time in my life, I
|
|
understood why people called becoming angry `getting mad'. There was a
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madness in him now, nearly visible to the eye. That should have scared
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me but perhaps there was some of it in me too, some orphan slip of a
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girl who believed she could snatch a nation from the jaws of wolves and
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|
make it her own.
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|
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|
``It doesn't matter how flawless the scheme was, how impregnable the
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fortress or powerful the magical weapon,'' he said. ``It always ends
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with a band of adolescents shouting utter platitudes as they tear it all
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down. The game is rigged so that we lose, every single time.''
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He smiled at me, a dark sardonic thing.
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``Half the world, turned into a prop for the glory of the other half.''
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|
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|
The worst of it, I thought, was that I intimately understood where he
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was coming from. I still had the image burned into my eyelids of the
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|
Lone Swordsman effortlessly cutting his way through a full line of my
|
|
men on his way to me, making a mockery of every skill I'd earned with
|
|
his and battering down the strength of my Name with the superior might
|
|
of his own. It had stung, when I'd realized how\ldots{} easy that had
|
|
all been for him. That if Warlock hadn't stepped in I'd be dead, and all
|
|
my friends with me. It had felt like he'd been chosen to win before the
|
|
fight had ever started. Even Hunter, who'd failed to be my equal but had
|
|
simply \emph{refused to go down}. All the things that had made heroes
|
|
heroic when I was a child had become infuriating now.
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|
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|
``Ah, you've had a taste of it yourself,'' he murmured. ``How much worse
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|
it must be, coming from a culture that still teaches you you can win. We
|
|
don't even have that, Catherine. The hope of the happy ending. We get to
|
|
cackle on the way down the cliff, or maybe curse our killer with our
|
|
last breath. You've read the stories, and stories are the lifeblood of
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|
Names.''
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|
``Villains aren't powerless,'' I said.
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|
|
|
He laughed. ``Oh, if the heroes deserved their victories against us, I
|
|
would make my peace with it. But they don't, do they? Your sullen little
|
|
nemesis gets to swing an angel's feather, while you make do with steel
|
|
and wiles. That's always the way of it. At the last moment they're
|
|
taught a secret spell by a dead man, or your mortal weakness is revealed
|
|
to them or they somehow manage to master a power in a day that would
|
|
take a villain twenty years to own. Gods, I've even heard of Choirs
|
|
stepping in to settle a losing fight. The \emph{sheer fucking arrogance
|
|
of it}.''
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|
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|
The second time I'd ever heard him swear, and it surprised me as much as
|
|
the last. Teeth bared, he leaned forward.
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|
|
|
``None of it is earned. It is handed to them, and this offends me.''
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|
|
|
And when a villain disliked an aspect of Creation, they broke it\emph{.}
|
|
As simple as that. Of all the things that being a villain entailed I had
|
|
grasped this one the easiest. What that said about me, I preferred not
|
|
to think about.
|
|
|
|
``You asked me what I want,'' Black said. ``This once, just this once, I
|
|
want us to \emph{win}.''
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|
|
|
The smile across his face was a cutting, vicious thing.
|
|
|
|
``To spit in the eyes of the Hashmallim. To trample the pride of all
|
|
those glorious, righteous princes. To scatter their wizards and make
|
|
their oracles liars. Just to prove that it can be done.''
|
|
|
|
There was something his eyes burning like coals and embers.
|
|
|
|
``So that five hundred years from now, a band of heroes shiver in the
|
|
dark of night. Because they know that no matter how powerful their sword
|
|
or righteous their cause, there was once a time \emph{it wasn't enough}.
|
|
That even victories ordained by the Heavens can broken by the will of
|
|
men.''
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat passed and then he sagged into his seat, as if the words had
|
|
drained something. The embers in his eyes cooled. I sat in my rickety
|
|
chair, and thought. A long moment passed.
|
|
|
|
``Monster,'' I finally said.
|
|
|
|
A single word, carrying with it the faint memory of fear and a dark
|
|
alley. Of a black cloak warming my frame on a cold night. It felt like
|
|
an offered hand.
|
|
|
|
His lips twitched into something almost a smile. ``The very worst
|
|
kind,'' he replied.
|
|
|
|
A hand clasped. I closed my eyes, and wondered whether I'd just saved my
|
|
homeland or sold it.
|
|
|
|
I did not get much sleep that night.
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