767 lines
34 KiB
TeX
767 lines
34 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-49-triumph}{%
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\chapter{Triumph}\label{chapter-49-triumph}}
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\epigraph{``There's a degree of argument among scholars as to whether the
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Liesse Rebellion was the underlying cause of the Uncivil Wars or the
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first of them. I was there, though, and I can tell you this: the seeds
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that were sown in Liesse are what we reaped in the years that
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followed.''}{Extract from the personal memoirs of Lady Aisha Bishara}
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I'd have thought they would do this in Whitestone, with all the
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sprawling avenues and gardens there to use, but I'd severely
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underestimated how many people would be there for the ceremony. Half the
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city must have been packed around Fairfax plaza, filling every nook and
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cranny Marketside. Merchants were selling chilled wine and ale as well
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as something that smelled like those spicy sausages from Hedges. I was
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more interested in the grilled fish on sticks from the lake, though
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watching some man obviously devoid of taste scarfing down one macerated
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in the Southpool way instead nearly put me off my appetite. Ratface had
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told me that in Praes the designated idiots in all the jokes were the
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people from Nok, but here in Callow it was the Southpooleans. Too much
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mud in their part of the Silver Lake, it clogged the brains. The old
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rumour that their people mated with giant carps was a fond a
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well-polished assertion in the rest of the country.
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The Fifth Legion was out in force, today. They'd opened a cordon from
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the Green Gate to the plaza and kept it open by liberal use of clubs
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when the crowd got too enthusiastic. Which it had, much to my surprise.
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I'd been at the heart of the force that had ended the Liesse Rebellion
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in fire and steel, but by the way people were cheering as I rode through
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the streets you'd think I'd restored the Kingdom. Some people actually
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threw flowers: bell lilies, the same blooms Eleanor Fairfax had once
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worn a crown of. A symbol of victory old as the Kingdom, now used to
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praise the girl who'd made sure that same Kingdom would not rise in her
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lifetime. The irony of that was cloying, and I would have told Hakram as
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much were he not three steps behind me to my left. Apprentice, to my
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right, had somehow gotten his hands on a chariot pulled by two pale
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silver winged horses.
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I'd seen Warlock use a similar one back in Summerholm, running over the
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Lone Swordsman as his way of joining the fray. The horses were likely a
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pretty picture for the celebrants -- they'd bring in mind the old tales
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about unicorns, now gone from Callow and into the Waning Woods -- but
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from where I sat I could see the melded at the base of the wings.
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Clearly, those horses hadn't been \emph{born} with wings. I supposed
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that I should count myself lucky they didn't breathe fire, like the
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flying pig had. Masego clearly had no idea how to actually guide a
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chariot, much to my amusement, but there seemed to be spells on the
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reins that did the work for him. Still, now and then his hand jerked out
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of his control and he tried very hard to pretend he'd meant to do that
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all along.
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Behind us the Fifteenth filtered through the streets, the Gallowborne in
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front. The name had been officially sanctioned, and the paint on their
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shields depicting a golden noose was still fresh. The same emblem was on
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the banner Captain Farrier carried, gold on red with the embroidered
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motto they'd picked themselves: \emph{best of the worst}. Robber already
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had several limerick couplets unflatteringly relating the words to their
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abilities in bed, which inevitably had spread like wildfire in my
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legion. Behind my personal guard, Juniper and her general staff were at
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the head of the column. The orc was looking unusually cheerful today,
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which more or less meant she wasn't actively scowling at anyone. I even
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knew why, since Black had passed one that bit before official word could
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come in: she was, today, to be made the youngest general since Reforms.
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Before those didn't count, in my opinion, since there'd been quite a few
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High Lords and Ladies barely into their teens granted that authority for
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political purposes. Marshal Grem One-Eye had only been granted the
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position officially in his twenties, though he'd ascended to the office
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of Marshal the same year. Still, she might yet beat that record too.
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There was always another war around the corner, and the old guard was
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beginning to be more old than guard.
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I caught a handkerchief floating through the air, thrown from a balcony.
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The pretty blond girl who'd tossed it flushed deeply when I looked in
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her direction. Nice dress, I noted, and quite revealing. It was satin,
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so she was likely from lesser nobility or wealthy merchant class. I
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tucked it into one of the pockets sown inside my cloak. It was still the
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same pitch-black garment Black had gifted me last year, but it had
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undergone\ldots{} modifications. There were three strips of cloth
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bordering the bottom of it now. Taken from three banners: the Silver
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Spears', Marchford's and Liesse's. Hakram had procured and sown them
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himself on the march to Laure, since he was apparently a deft hand with
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a needle. I liked the effect, and it did not escape my attention he'd
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left room for many more stripes.
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The procession was slow, but eventually we arrived to the plaza. I
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dismounted from Zombie the Second, who for now remained a living
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creature, and let a sigh of pleasure out at finally standing on my feet
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again. Adjutant and Apprentice flanked me as we waited for Juniper to
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join us, her perfectly polished armour reflecting the glare the noonday
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sun. The four of us stepped towards the platform ahead of us. There
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might have been wood under it, but it was out of sight: the entire
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structure was covered with a red woven carpet, the style of it Callowan
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if not the colour. The Empress had likely ordered it from Laure weavers
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to reinforce ties there. Malicia herself was seated on a throne, an
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ornate thing made almost entirely out of gold. The arms of it were
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shaped as lions holding bells in their mouth, a rather bold statement.
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Lions were a symbol associated with the throne of Praes, while bells had
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been the symbol of the Fairfax dynasty the Empress had overthrown.
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Apparently the lions were a recent change, as it had been previously
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been tigers who'd served as the emblematic animal. They'd gone out of
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style after the sentient tiger army fiasco, Aisha had told me.
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The Dread Empress was still absurdly beautiful, and I privately decided
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that having gotten a good look at her was half the reason the people of
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the city were cheering. The crown on her head was ivory inlaid with
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lapis-lazuli with a perfectly spherical sapphire as the centrepiece. Her
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dress was white bordered in thick braids of gold, revealing the
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beginning of her breasts and her bare shoulders. Splendid gold armbands
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with scenes of the Imperial civil war held from her upper arms and a
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heavy necklace shaped a dozen Towers linked circled her neck. None of it
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held a candle to Dread Empress Malicia in the fullness of her glory,
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sitting in the shade of her red pavilion. The four of us came to stand
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half a dozen steps down from her throne and stopped. She smiled, and the
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world felt like it had gone bright. Just a quirk of the lips, and I knew
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men would have killed their own siblings to get another one. They
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probably had.
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Even Hakram was blushing, and I knew for a fact he found humans
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unattractive. Masego seemed a little surprised at himself for being
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affected at all, which made sense to me. I'd never seen him display any
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interest in anyone from either gender, and wasn't sure he had that in
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him at all. The Empress rose, and for the first time I noticed that
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Black was standing to the right of her throne. He looked shabby,
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compared to Malicia. His plate was without ornament, his sword
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undecorated and his cloak looked almost threadbare. Until it caught the
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light, anyway, and then suddenly it looked like it was made entirely of
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crow feathers. It wasn't enough to make him look like anything but a
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sworn sword guarding his ruler. At my side Masego and the two orcs knelt
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as Malicia took a step forward.
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I remained standing.
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``Rise,'' the Empress ordered, and they obeyed.
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Malicia's words reverberated across the entire plaza without her ever
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raising her voice and the silence that ensued was so absolute you could
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have heard a pin drop.
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``Order has been restored to Callow,'' she said. ``Procer's attempt to
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place a puppet on the throne has been thwarted, the misguided rebels of
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the south shown the errors of their ways.''
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Or a grave, for those who hadn't been nailed to a cross. So that was the
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angle she was going to take on this whole thing. Poor Callowans had been
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tricked by the wicked Procerans, made to bite the hand that fed them by
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bribery and coercion. The Empire would, of course, be merciful. But no
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so merciful as to spare the nobles who'd masterminded the rebellion.
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``Laure remained loyal,'' Malicia said, her voice caressing the city's
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name in a way that almost gave me a shiver. ``As did so many of our
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subjects. For this, there will be reward.''
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The anticipation in the plaza was palpable.
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``All taxes in cities that remained loyal with be halved for a year,''
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she announced. ``And in this greatest of Callowan cities, I declare a
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week-long festival to honour our victory.''
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The crowd went wild. Halved taxes, huh. Good call. Trade had slowed when
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the blades came out and this would get it started again. As for
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flattering the ego of Laureans, it was hard to go wrong with that. I was
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honest enough to admit that the people of the city I'd been born in
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thought of themselves as the only part of Callow that really mattered.
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Apprentice looked bored out of his skull, but Hakram and Juniper were
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listening with sharp eyes. The Hellhound had already pressed me
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privately on the subject of what the Fifteenth would be doing in peace
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time, and the Empress' current focus on Callow was revealing. I knew my
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legion would be on assigned duty to a city, I just didn't know
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\emph{which} one. Black had been even vaguer than usual, implying there
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were plans being hatched higher up in the ranks.
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``Though I reward loyalty, I must also reward service,'' Malicia
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continued when the cheers died out. ``Legate Juniper of the Red Moons,
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step forward.''
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The Hellhound did, and knelt when the Empress elegantly gesture for her
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to do so.
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``For your resounding victories at Three Hills, Marchford and Liesse, I
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name you a general of the Empire. As of this moment, the Fifteenth
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Legion is granted full status as a Legion of Terror and the ensuing
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right of recruitment.''
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The cheers at that were more sporadic, though I got the impression the
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crowd would vocally approve of pretty much anything Malicia would say
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today. Greenskins still weren't popular in Callow, though in cities that
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was beginning to change as they spent time in garrison duty. Juniper
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remained kneeling.
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``Lord Apprentice,'' the Empress said, after Masego also knelt. ``For
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your distinguished service in the pursuit of peace, I grant you Imperial
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sanction to raise a mage's tower anywhere in the territories of the
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Empire.''
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The history behind that was a little more complicated. A mages' tower
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was essentially a fortified laboratory warded so heavily it would make a
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fortress flinch, and after having to put down a dozen rebellions
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springing from those the Tower had restricted their raising. The only
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person currently sanctioned to have one was Warlock, who had linked the
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three dozen laboratories he actually had through a pocket dimension to
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get around the technical restriction of one. Now Masego could raise one
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as well, and I knew where he would: Marchford. He'd already told me that
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after the ceremony he would be leaving the Fifteenth to go study the
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thinning of the borders between Arcadia and Creation where we'd fought
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the demon. He'd be missed, but I knew if I really needed him he'd come.
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We were friends. How odd, that I actually had those now.
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``Hakram of the Howling Wolves,'' Malicia said. ``I welcome you as the
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embodiment of the ties between the Clans and the Tower, the living proof
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that our people are united as they never have been before. You have
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served well and faithfully, proving the worth of your Name. For this I
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grant you all the attending the dignities of a lord of Praes.''
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But not, I noticed, the actual legal title. Black had been trying to
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push the recognition of clan chieftains as nobles in their own right for
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decades to no avail. The reasons for that involved the Clans not
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technically owning the steppes they lived in and the justifications
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behind the whole tribute system, which had apparently been even more of
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a clusterfuck before the Empress had reformed it. Still, this was not a
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meaningless gesture. Hakram could now own land, raise a retinue and
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would be tried in the noble courts of Praes should he ever commit a
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crime. That last part was admittedly largely irrelevant as long as he
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served in the Legions, since he answered only to military tribunals
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while in service, but should he break the law as a civilian he might be
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the first greenskin ever taken to trial in the noble courts. He could
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technically style himself Lord Adjutant in public, now.
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``And lastly, Catherine Foundling.''
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The Empress dark eyes were on me, her red lips quirking fondly. It was a
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lie, that fondness. I'd done little to earn personal affection from the
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ruler of the Empire. And yet, looking at her smile, I almost wanted to
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believe in the lie. Some people could be dangerous without ever holding
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a blade. I barely noticed the crowd going quiet again behind me.
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``Our Squire was born in this very city,'' the Empress said, and there
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was a rumble of approval. ``In Callow's hour of need, she led soldiers
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from all parts of the Empire and scattered the forces of disorder.''
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Only true if I counted as a Deoraithe, but it painted a pretty picture.
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``For her valour, she now stands before me as the Lady of Marchford.''
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For a moment I thought I'd gone deaf. The clamour from the crowd filled
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the sky, as they stomped the ground and screamed themselves hoarse. I
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met Malicia's eyes and inclined my head, hiding my surprise. My mind was
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already spinning. What the people had heard was a no-name orphan
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becoming a noble, granted the rule over one of the oldest and richest
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holdings in Callow. A promise that the old nobility was dead, and under
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the rule of the Tower anyone could rise. What I'd heard, though, was
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different. The Empress had granted me a Praesi title, ruling over
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Callowan land. It was a statement. \emph{We're here to stay. No
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rebellion will ever sweep us out.} I closed my eyes and let the crowd's
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approval wash over me. I'd have to think on this, on what it meant,
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before the day was out. But just for a moment, I allowed myself to enjoy
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it.
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---
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The suite in the Royal Palace was the same one I'd been given after
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becoming the Squire, though this time I was conscious when moving in.
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There would be festivities tonight and I'd need to change for them, so I
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took a bath in that same Miezan wonder I'd already sampled once. When I
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emerged scoured clean and smelling like lavender I dried myself, tying a
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towel around myself. I felt something more than heard it, and reached
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for the knife I'd left by the bath.
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``That won't be necessary,'' Black's amused voice informed me.
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I sighed. One of these days, the two of us were going to sit down and
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have a nice talk about the wonders of knocking. I returned to the room
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to catch the familiar sight of my teacher lounging in a chair by a
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Proceran \emph{bureau}. He was idly thumbing through a book of Kilian's,
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a treatise on fine elemental manipulation by Dread Emperor Sorcerous.
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I'd tried to read through it a few weeks back and emerged from the
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attempt more confused about how magic worked than when I'd started.
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Whatever the transitional phasing of energy was, it was fiendishly
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complicated. And also possibly not real? How something could
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simultaneously not exist and be considered a basis for spellcrafting was
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beyond me. I ignored my teacher and stepped behind a cloth screen to
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change into comfortable breeches and shirt. It wasn't that I was shy
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about my body, more that it felt\ldots{} wrong to be naked around Black.
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Like pissing in a church. It had been bad enough seeing him make out
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with Ranger in a Name dream.
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``So you've got bad news for me,'' I said as I emerged. ``You're getting
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sadly predictable in your old age.''
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``I'm not even eighty yet,'' Black replied with a twitch of the lips.
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Not that he looked a day older than twenty-five, unless you paid very
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close attention.
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``You're correct, though,'' he said. ``Sit down.''
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I leaned against the pillars of my enormously oversized bed instead.
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``As the last appointment of the sort done directly by the Tower, Akua
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Sahelian was granted the governorship of Liesse,'' he said.
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I blinked, started to speak then closed my mouth. I pushed myself off
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the wooden pillar and, very calmly, punched it so hard it splintered.
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``That is \emph{insane},'' I said. ``Is this because I sent the letter?
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I put all my recommendations that she get the post in quotes, Black. The
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only way I could have been clearer was to add a sentence afterwards
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going `by the way, this is sarcasm, the only thing Heiress deserves is a
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summary execution'.''
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``Her bid had other backing,'' he said.
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``Gods, if Malicia had waited another \emph{week} the appointment would
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be put of her hands. The whole point of the ruling council is
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controlling the governorship system,'' I snarled. ``I don't know what
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she's up to, Black, but people are going to be butchered.''
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``I am aware,'' he said quietly.
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``This will cause unrest, mark my words,'' I said. ``It's open knowledge
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she's the one who set the devils on the city. Gods Above, you're putting
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in charge of Liesse the same woman who saw over two thousand of its
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citizens fed to \emph{literal} hellspawn.''
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The butcher's bill after the siege had been heavier than I'd thought it
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would be. The evacuation of civilians deeper into the city had not been
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complete, some people refusing to leave their homes even with an army
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knocking at the gate. Black did not reply. I stared at him until the
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fury began to wane. All I'd just said he already knew.
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``This isn't your doing at all,'' I said.
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``It is not.''
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My eyes sharpened.
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``Malicia?''
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He grimaced, and that was all the answer I needed.
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``Why? She must have reasons,'' I said.
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``I would assume so,'' he replied.
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I sat down on the bed, my limbs feeling heavy. What he'd just
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said\ldots{} Shit. That had \emph{implications}. Black and Malicia had
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been thick as thieves since I'd first met them, and though I'd known
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there were some fractures there they'd always presented a united front.
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Disagreements were settled behind closed doors, where no one would hear
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-- not even me. That my teacher was even willing to admit this was
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entirely the Empress' game meant he disagreed with the decision so much
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he was not willing to put up that façade for the conversation.
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``Is she cutting you out?'' I asked.
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He shook his head.
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``I will be getting answers on the subject when we return to Ater,'' he
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said. ``She doesn't trust any defensive measures but the Tower's for
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this conversation.''
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There were only so many people who would have the guts to eavesdrop on a
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conversation between these two.
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``The Truebloods are up to something,'' I guessed.
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``You kicked a hornet's nest when you forced them to back your
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petition,'' Black said.
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``You were along for the ride the whole time,'' I reminded him.
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``I was not criticizing you,'' my teacher said, lips twitching. ``Quite
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the contrary.''
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\emph{I might still have to kill you, one day,} I thought as my cheeks
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warmed. The longer I knew the man, the more complicated my relationship
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with him grew. I'd thought, when I first became the Squire, that I would
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have to fight him tooth and nail for every scrap of power. Instead he'd
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had my back every step of the way, battering down doors I couldn't open
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on my own. I loved him a little bit for that. For seeing something in me
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I'd always believed was there, but that no one else had ever
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acknowledged. I also hated him for it, because I could no longer think
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of him as the enemy. Warlock had said that one day I would have to make
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a choice, and I believed him. And when that day came, when the knife was
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in my hand, I knew that if I killed him I'd miss him. As a teacher, as a
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mentor, as perhaps the closest thing to a father figure I'd ever had.
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He was the Black Knight, and I was the Squire.
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``I'm your successor,'' I finally said.
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``You are,'' he agreed.
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``I've wondered why you have one of those at all,'' I said. ``The
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Empress has a theory but I don't think it fits anymore. If it ever
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did.''
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Black rested his chin on the top of his hand, draped over his chair.
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``I have been doing this for a very long time,'' he said.
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``Villains live until they die,'' I said.
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``Yes,'' he said softly. ``Until they die. Over the length of my career,
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I have myself killed twenty-three heroes and heroines. I've orchestrated
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or otherwise ordered the death of easily thrice that.''
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He shrugged indifferently.
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``I'll meet someone better, eventually. Or they'll get lucky: it only
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needs to happen once. It might be today, it might be next month, it
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might be decades from now -- but they'll get me.''
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``So I'm your contingency?'' I said.
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``You've heard it, haven't you?'' he asked instead of replying. ``The
|
|
song.''
|
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|
My heartbeat stilled.
|
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|
|
``The first step is hardest, they said to her
|
|
|
|
You will have to walk through fire-``
|
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|
|
``It will burn away what you once were,
|
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|
|
And always devour whole a liar,'' I finished.
|
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|
|
He smiled, and it was sharp as a knife.
|
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|
|
``They will learn to \emph{fear} you, Catherine. I hope I live long
|
|
enough to see it.''
|
|
|
|
A shiver went through me as he rose to his feet. He knew the song. Gods
|
|
Below, he knew the song. Two years that question of where I knew it from
|
|
had plagued me.
|
|
|
|
``You've heard it before?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Once, when I was young,'' he said. ``It was not for me.''
|
|
|
|
``Where is it from?''
|
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|
|
``It's not from anywhere,'' he said.
|
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|
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I frowned.
|
|
|
|
``What's it called, then?''
|
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|
|
``\emph{The Girl Who Climbed The Tower},'' he told me, and left.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Masego's rooms weren't far from mine. I'd expected to find him alone
|
|
there, but was pleased to discover he was talking with Kilian. They both
|
|
rose when I came into the room.
|
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|
|
``Cat,'' Apprentice greeted me.
|
|
|
|
``My Lady of Marchford,'' the redhead teased, curtsying.
|
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|
|
I strode forward and swept her into my arms, dipping her into a long and
|
|
deeply satisfying kiss. Gods, I'd missed spending time with Kilian.
|
|
Eventually Masego cleared his throat and I released her. She was flushed
|
|
and her eyes a little wide.
|
|
|
|
``Already taking advantage of the servants,'' my lover sighed. ``Typical
|
|
noble.''
|
|
|
|
``Don't bother returning to the legion quarters tonight,'' I said. ``I
|
|
don't think you'll be using those much.''
|
|
|
|
``Your bed i\emph{s} much nicer than mine,'' she conceded.
|
|
|
|
I threaded my fingers through hers.
|
|
|
|
``Somewhere in this godforsaken palace there must be a dress that fits
|
|
me,'' I said. ``It might even be in a colour other than black, one
|
|
hopes. We'll go dancing tonight, at the festival.''
|
|
|
|
``Dancing was not one of the Fae talents I inherited,'' Kilian said.
|
|
|
|
``Wear thick shoes,'' I recommended. ``It's not one of mine either.''
|
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|
|
She smiled, cheeks dimpling as she brushed back a strand of hair behind
|
|
my ear.
|
|
|
|
``I'll leave you two to it, then,'' she said. ``Always a pleasure, Lord
|
|
Apprentice.''
|
|
|
|
Masego grimaced. ``Gods, don't call me that. It makes me sound like I
|
|
should know what's going on at court.''
|
|
|
|
She waved us goodbye with a last smile and the door closed behind her.
|
|
Masego's room were smaller than mine, I noticed amusedly, and already
|
|
filled with a dozen pile of books. I could see what looked like a dead
|
|
pig cut open in his bathtub, which was just so typically Apprentice I
|
|
couldn't help but snort.
|
|
|
|
``We'll have to discuss where I'll build my tower,'' Masego said.
|
|
``Sit?''
|
|
|
|
I sat on what appeared to be the sordid Proceran invention known as a
|
|
pouf. It was particularly frilly, and couldn't decide whether it was a
|
|
stool or a sofa. Praesi had it right with the cushions, I thought.
|
|
|
|
``We'll settle that when we get there, I think,'' I said. ``Obviously
|
|
I'd prefer if it wasn't in the middle of the city.''
|
|
|
|
``The hills would be best,'' he said. ``Where the demon was first
|
|
contained.''
|
|
|
|
And that was why I was here, wasn't it? Apprentice had claimed an actual
|
|
chair and looked rather curious as to why I was here at all.
|
|
|
|
``Masego,'' I said. ``Could you hand me the trinket I gave you? The one
|
|
made of bone.''
|
|
|
|
He frowned, then cocked his head to the side.
|
|
|
|
``Why? You've had no definitive proof I'm not corrupted.''
|
|
|
|
I blinked. ``Wait, you \emph{knew}?''
|
|
|
|
He looked rather offended.
|
|
|
|
``You thought I \emph{didn't}?'' he said. ``Catherine, it smells like
|
|
goblin munitions. It has a piece of your Name in it.''
|
|
|
|
``And you wore it anyway?'' I said disbelievingly.
|
|
|
|
``Well, yes,'' he said slowly. ``After being exposed to a demon it was
|
|
necessary for me to have a kill switch in case Father's diagnostic spell
|
|
has failed.''
|
|
|
|
I was, honestly, at a loss for words.
|
|
|
|
``That's, uh, very enlightened of you,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``It was a reasonable precaution,'' he said. ``Arrangements like it
|
|
aren't uncommon among villains. I know Uncle Amadeus has a way to kill
|
|
Father should he ever be corrupted, and he himself has an arrangement
|
|
with Assassin to be executed should he ever become a threat to the
|
|
Empire.''
|
|
|
|
He shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``Your method was crude and relatively obvious, but it would have been
|
|
effective.''
|
|
|
|
``I kind of feel bad, now,'' I mused. ``I mean, I already did. But now I
|
|
feel bad in a different, novel way.''
|
|
|
|
``You \emph{should},'' Apprentice muttered. ``Honestly, thinking I
|
|
wouldn't notice. You might as well have written `magical bomb' on the
|
|
surface.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm\ldots{} sorry?'' I ventured.
|
|
|
|
``I'll expect a more elegant method of disposal before we get to
|
|
Marchford,'' he said. ``As well as a written essay on the subject of why
|
|
trying to deceive a man with my superb intellect is a fool's errand.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm a villain now, I shouldn't have to do homework,'' I whined.
|
|
|
|
Both of us were smothering grins. Apparently I \emph{could} do something
|
|
right, once in a while. Not for lack of trying in the other direction.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This particular annex to the Royal Palace, called the Songbird's Cage,
|
|
had been built by Eleanor Fairfax's grandson to house his mistress away
|
|
from the prying eyes of his queen. He'd had the doors and windows barred
|
|
and locked when said queen had started visiting the mistress more often
|
|
than he did, spawning half a dozen songs running on the theme of caged
|
|
doves, all of them involving puns about `locks and keys' that thought
|
|
themselves very clever. In later years, it had become where Callowan
|
|
royalty held prisoners that weren't officially prisoners. Several
|
|
rebellious Dukes of Liesse had cooled their heels there until talk of
|
|
secession died down, as had Fairfax uncles with a little too much
|
|
ambition. It was fitting that the Baroness Dormer would be held there. A
|
|
line of Gallowborne led by Captain Farrier trailed behind me as we tread
|
|
the corridors, waving away the legionaries from the Fifth that guarded
|
|
the unlocked door. My guards took position around the entrance -- I'd
|
|
expected a bit of friction there, but the two orcs from the Fifth began
|
|
asking questions about Marchford instead.
|
|
|
|
Few of my legionaries had to pay for their own drinks, these days.
|
|
|
|
I knocked politely and waited until I was bid to enter from inside. I
|
|
could have just strolled in, but it cost me nothing to be polite. If I
|
|
ever ended up in her position, I hoped I would be extended the courtesy.
|
|
Somehow, it was doubtful I would. Villains didn't get taken prisoner, as
|
|
I understood it. We turned our cloak or died, there was no middle
|
|
ground. I had a nice cloak now, though. Turning might damage it. I
|
|
supposed I'd have to stick with the whole villain thing for now. Anne
|
|
Kendal, the Baroness Dormer, was still stunningly beautiful even in the
|
|
subdued garments of a prisoner. She'd been allowed to keep her personal
|
|
wardrobe, by my order, save for armour and weapons. Sitting in the solar
|
|
of her suite, by the window, she'd been reading a book in candlelight.
|
|
It wasn't dark out yet but the windows were facing the wrong way to let
|
|
the sun in properly.
|
|
|
|
``Lady Squire,'' she said. ``I did not expect a visit for some days.''
|
|
|
|
``There's been some new developments,'' I said. ``May I sit?''
|
|
|
|
``By all means.''
|
|
|
|
I took the comfortable armchair facing hers, then lightly slapped two
|
|
scrolls on the table. One held the seal of the Legions of Terror, the
|
|
other the Tower's.
|
|
|
|
``My trial is over,'' Baroness Kendal immediately grasped. ``I wasn't
|
|
even asked to stand in front of the judges.''
|
|
|
|
Her smile turned bitter.
|
|
|
|
``So much for a fair trial.''
|
|
|
|
``There would have been no point in you being there,'' I said flatly.
|
|
``I stacked the tribunal.''
|
|
|
|
Surprise and confusion flickered across the Baroness' face. She'd been
|
|
taken prisoner by the Fifteenth when the city of Liesse was under
|
|
martial law -- it was in my power to decide she should be tried under a
|
|
military tribunal. I'd quietly sit down with the officers involved and
|
|
told them what the verdict was going to be. There had been no debate.
|
|
|
|
``Open it,'' I said, pushing forward the scroll with the seal of the
|
|
Legions.
|
|
|
|
She broke it open and her brow rose as she scanned the lines.
|
|
|
|
``I am not to be executed,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``You've been stripped of your holdings,'' I said. ``That much was a
|
|
given. You may still call yourself a baroness, but not the Baroness
|
|
Dormer. Doing so would qualify as unlawful claim to Imperial property,
|
|
under Praesi law. I think the punishment for that is lashes? I skimmed
|
|
the reading, to be honest.''
|
|
|
|
``This,'' she said, ``does not seem like the work of Praesi law.''
|
|
|
|
``Things are changing,'' I said. ``There's a reason I fought this war.
|
|
Open the other one.''
|
|
|
|
Steeling herself, the noblewoman broke the Tower's seal. Her eyes
|
|
widened.
|
|
|
|
``What is this?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``Before the week is over, the Empress will announce the creation of a
|
|
ruling council over Callow,'' I said. ``This is your appointment to a
|
|
seat on it.''
|
|
|
|
Seven members, there would be. Black had one, as the official head of
|
|
the council -- and also held the sole right of veto over any motion
|
|
passed. One seat for the Empress' representative, two in the hands of
|
|
the high nobles who'd backed me willingly. One for me, and two
|
|
appointments left for me to choose. It would work through majority vote,
|
|
and I'd own that. Black had already told me privately he'd only attend
|
|
the first few sessions before officially passing his vote and right of
|
|
veto into my hands. With two seats in Callowan hands, my own vote and my
|
|
teacher's, I'd be effectively capable of passing any motion I wished.
|
|
I'd agreed to Black being head of the council without any quibbling: I
|
|
was not, at the moment, capable of ruling Callow. Especially not if I
|
|
now had the rebuilding of Marchford to worry about as well. The council
|
|
was a temporary measure meant to ease me into the trade ruling until I
|
|
made a decision about the reorganization of Callowan territories.
|
|
|
|
``I'm a rebel,'' Baroness Kendal said.
|
|
|
|
``You \emph{were} a rebel,'' I said. ``Now you have a seat and vote in
|
|
the institution that will pick the Imperial governors for all the
|
|
holdings that were confiscated in the rebellion -- including your own.
|
|
Congratulations, Baroness.''
|
|
|
|
``Who else will be in this\ldots{} institution?'' she asked faintly.
|
|
|
|
``Three Praesi yet to be determined, Black, myself and someone I've yet
|
|
too choose. I'm considering picking someone from the House of Light, but
|
|
I'll need a priest that's not a zealot. I was hoping for your help in
|
|
finding one, actually.''
|
|
|
|
``So Praes still holds the leash,'' she said. ``Majority vote, is it?''
|
|
|
|
``\emph{I} hold the leash,'' I corrected. ``There's governors needed for
|
|
Vale, Dormer and Holden. We'll be choosing them. I don't know about you,
|
|
but I figure it's time at least \emph{some} Callowan land is governed by
|
|
Callowans.''
|
|
|
|
``Not Liesse,'' she said, clever eyes searching mine.
|
|
|
|
``Liesse is my problem to handle,'' I said. ``We'll have authority to
|
|
set laws and taxes for all of Callow -- except maybe Daoine. The Duchess
|
|
is already sending envoys to argue that since her duchy is a tributary
|
|
state it doesn't fall under the council's authority.''
|
|
|
|
``Kegan was born grumpy and only got worse with the passing of years,''
|
|
the silver-haired woman murmured. ``Am I to understand that this council
|
|
will have authority over all Imperial governors?''
|
|
|
|
I smiled coldly.
|
|
|
|
``That is correct,'' I said. ``It is within the scope of our mandate to
|
|
remove governors and governesses should they prove unworthy of the
|
|
authority they wield.''
|
|
|
|
Oh, there were quite a few laws specific to governors I was going to
|
|
pass. First among them a rule forbidding any Callowan official from
|
|
summoning or dealing with devils. Then another one limiting the amount
|
|
of city guards allowed, as well as the founding of a group investigating
|
|
corruption in the collection of taxes. Heiress might have her
|
|
appointment for now, but she sure as Hells wasn't going to \emph{keep}
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
``The Empress has forged anew the crown of Callow,'' the Baroness said.
|
|
``No, she's gone even further. The Fairfaxes could not dismiss nobles
|
|
who displeased them at will. The powers you described are unheard of
|
|
outside of the Free Cities.''
|
|
|
|
``Things are changing,'' I repeated quietly. ``You could refuse the
|
|
appointment, of course. Head into exile.''
|
|
|
|
Black had told me that if she made that choice Assassin would dispose of
|
|
her before she ever crossed the border.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' she said. ``I rebelled because I saw a better path for Callow.
|
|
What kind of a hypocrite would I be, if I left now?''
|
|
|
|
A dead one, I did not say. I rose to my feet, inclining my head
|
|
respectfully before heading for the door.
|
|
|
|
``Lady Foundling?''
|
|
|
|
I paused, then turned to match her stare.
|
|
|
|
``Why me?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``Because there was more to the Liesse Rebellion than the Lone Swordsman
|
|
and Proceran gold,'' I said. ``Because you weren't wrong, really. Just
|
|
not strong enough to win.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Because I know I can bend you to my will if I need to}, my mind
|
|
whispered. I left the room and the noblewoman with it. The Gallowborne
|
|
immediately broke out of conversation, falling behind me. Captain
|
|
Farrier stood at my side as we strode away. We left the Songbird's Cage,
|
|
and I strolled through a pleasant garden. Sunset was beginning. The
|
|
birds in the trees already sang their songs, the silver fountain in
|
|
front of me gurgling quietly. I stopped a moment to enjoy the quiet.
|
|
|
|
``Where to now, Countess?'' Farrier asked.
|
|
|
|
I looked at him, at the calm blue eyes and the angular face. Not for the
|
|
first time, I reflected he had the most Callowan face I'd ever seen.
|
|
Malicia had made a statement, in front of the crowd. Named me Lady of
|
|
Marchford. And now, in this quiet garden, John Farrier was making
|
|
another one. Countess, he'd called me. Not Lady. \emph{One of us or one
|
|
of them.} I looked up to the reddening sky, my fingers clenching and
|
|
then slowly unclenching.
|
|
|
|
I did not correct him.
|