358 lines
19 KiB
TeX
358 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{prologue}{%
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\section{Prologue}\label{prologue}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``You can't drop a pin in Procer without hitting royalty.''}
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-Eleusia Vokor, Nicaean ambassador to the Principate
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\end{quote}
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Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer, idly glanced at her
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paperweight and pondered how satisfying it would feel to break Prince
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Amadis' nose with it. No such thoughts, of course, appeared on her face
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as she continued to listen to the ruler of Iserre lay out his objections
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to the Principate's current political stance. Objections was admittedly
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a generous term to use. One might have called the man's tone ``whiny''
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if one cared to pass such a judgement, but properly raised ladies like
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Cordelia did not venture such opinions out loud. For all that
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southerners were convinced that the Lycaonese were one bad harvest away
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from barbarism, manners had been drilled into her from an early age.
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``If these Callowan paupers insist on taking Proceran gold, it is only
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fitting they should be led by a Proceran commander,'' Amadis finished,
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the smugly self-satisfied smirk on his face tempting Cordelia's hand to
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drift towards the paperweight.
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She allowed silence to linger long enough that the cold glare levelled
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onto him by Uncle Klaus started to make the Iserran shift uncomfortably
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before replying.
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``The Liesse Rebellion is a popular uprising, Prince Amadis, at least in
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appearance. We must not allow the shadow of foreign interests to be cast
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on that image,'' she reminded the man patiently.
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That she even had to explain this much to a ruler over twice her age was
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galling. For all that the Prince of Iserre had a way with intrigue, his
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grasp on popular opinion was\ldots{} dubious. The Alamans rulers had
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spent so long playing the Ebb and the Flow that they were completely out
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of touch with the people they were supposed to rule over. \emph{That is
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what happens when one is the fulcrum of a nation's political elite for
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nigh a thousand year}, she reflected.
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``With all due respect, First Princess Cordelia,''-
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``Prince,'' she corrected flatly. ``First \emph{Prince}.''
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It seemed to dumbfound southerners that she still went by the Rhenian
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formal address rather than the more gender-accurate one she'd gained
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upon her election as the ruler of the Principate. While she was
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technically the princess of Salia, now that she'd gained the title of
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First Prince, she refused to allow the southlings to slight her heritage
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by refusing to acknowledge that she came from the northernmost
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principality of Procer. Rhenia was still backwards in some regards and
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the laws had never been officially amended to reflect the reality of
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women ruling, but she was proud of her origins nonetheless. Not that she
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would expect an Alamans to understand. Their own tribal confederation
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had joined with the disparate Arlesite holds to found the Principate and
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they'd never allowed anybody to forget it. \emph{Meanwhile the Lycaonese
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were made part of Procer by conquest, as they are so fond of remembering
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for us.} Yet this particular Lycaonese was the lawfully elected ruler of
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the Principate and she would not allow this wretch of a man to forget
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it.
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``Your\ldots{} advice has been duly noted, Prince Amadis,'' she spoke
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calmly. ``We will explore all avenues open to us, but at this point in
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time direct Proceran involvement does not seem like a feasible option.''
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In truth, imposing a foreign general would be utterly disastrous. For
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all that Liesse had bought an army's worth of mercenaries in Mercantis,
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over half of the rebellion's rank and file was peasant levies from
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southern Callow. Should the Countess Marchford be replaced by a prince
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of the Highest Assembly as Amadis so clearly desired, mass desertion
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would follow. Callowans were notoriously touchy about their independence
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and while they would fight for a restored Kingdom they would not bear
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arms to forge a Proceran protectorate. Amadis took the implied dismissal
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with ill-grace, as Cordelia had expected him to. The prince of Iserre
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bowed to the exact degree he was expected to and not an inch lower
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before leaving the room. Normally she would have taken the time to
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smooth over the man's ruffled feathers, but today he'd tried her
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patience too much. It would not do to allow him the impression he could
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push her this far on a daily basis. She'd have to make that statement
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more pointedly, of course. The man was working trade deals in Creusens,
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sabotaging a lucrative but not politically relevant one should get the
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point across. A moment passed, then Uncle Klaus rose from his seat and
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poured himself a glass of mead. The grizzled prince of Hannoven eyed the
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silver-gilded goblet with puritan disdain before gulping down a
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mouthful.
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``Not your most loyal subject, that one,'' Klaus grunted.
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Cordelia snorted. ``He would sell me out for a basket of fish,'' she
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agreed. ``It would not even have to be \emph{fresh} fish.''
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And yet, irksome as it was, she would continue to have to play nice with
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the man. Amadis had made too many alliances to be dismissed out of hand.
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His keeping Iserre largely out of the civil war had allowed him to
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emerge from the two decades of warfare with an intact power base and
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full coffers. In the wake of Cordelia's rise to power malcontents from
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the Alamans and Arlesite principalities had flocked to him like maggots
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to a corpse, bolstering his power and influence to a very troublesome
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extent.
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``He's a buffoon,'' her uncle decided after a moment. ``Spends more gold
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on throwing banquets than equipping the Iserran army.''
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``He is a buffoon making inroads in Creusens and Segovia,'' she reminded
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him with a sigh. ``That makes him a particularly dangerous specimen of
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the breed.''
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The prince of Hannoven smiled wolfishly.
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``Let him try his luck, then,'' he said. ``We taught them to fear
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northern blades, at Lange and Aisne. A third time will sink in that
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lesson properly.''
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Cordelia loved her uncle dearly. He'd been the one to command her armies
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during the civil war, and she would never have managed to unite the four
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Lycaonese principalities without his backing. He was, in truth, one of
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the finest military minds in the Principate. While the principalities of
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the centre and the south had been playing their petty games Uncle Klaus
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had been taking on the endless flood of warbands trickling down from the
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Chain of Hunger, and when the time had come for Cordelia to claim the
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throne he'd shattered every army that stood between her and it. But he
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saw things through the lens of military affairs only, and in the Highest
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Assembly that was the kind of flaw that got you murdered in your bed.
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Amadis would not trigger another civil war, if he started to really
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oppose her. After twenty years of the Principate bleeding itself to
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death none of its rulers wanted to start another fire. He'd simply start
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going after her support base until she became little more than a
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figurehead to the Principate.
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``We have other preoccupations at the moment,'' Cordelia murmured. ``The
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Dominion has been shuffling around troops and Helike keeps testing
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Princess Francesca's borders.''
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``Helike's just blustering, they always do when a Tyrant gets in
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charge,'' Klaus dismissed. ``They won't take on the Principate now that
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the civil war's over. The rest of the League wouldn't have it anyway.''
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``That still leaves Levant,'' Cordelia spoke. ``The Dominion has been
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itching to take a bite out of Orense for decades. They would swallow the
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entire principality if they thought they could get away with it.''
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``If you're that worried, lend them the gold to rebuild their army to a
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decent standard,'' her uncle spoke flatly.
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The First Prince of Procer rubbed the bridge of her nose, allowing
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herself the impropriety only because there was no one else in the room
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to see it.
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``I cannot do that without removing lending restrictions for all
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principalities,'' she told Klaus.
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And that was not something she could do. Not when her position was still
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so weak. No power could challenge the newly-founded Hasenbach dynasty as
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of yet, not with the kind of backing she had, but should the south be
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rebuilt\ldots{} There were just so \emph{man}y people living down there,
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compared to where her power was based\emph{.} Her enemies could afford
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to fill the ranks with fresh recruits, if they lost a battle. She could
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not. \emph{And for us every loss on the field is one less soldier to man
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the walls when the Chain of Hunger comes again, one less watcher keeping
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an eye on the Kingdom of the Dead.} The south could not be allowed to
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regain its footing just yet, not before she'd secured the throne.
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``You know I hate agreeing with the likes of Amadis on anything,'' Klaus
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spoke quietly, ``but he's almost got a point. This rebellion gambit is
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risky. And even if they win, it won't amount to much. Liesse is an
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incompetent wastrel, Cordelia. He's got no business being in charge of a
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chamber pot, much less a kingdom.''
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The ruler of Procer sighed and forced herself not to fiddle with her
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hair. It was a bad habit, and it had taken her chambermaid the better
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part of an hour to style the blonde locks that morning.
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``Pour me a glass, would you?'' she said.
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Her uncle's white brows rose in surprise. She rarely drank, mostly
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because she disliked the loss of control that came with being drunk.
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This time, though, the conversation ahead of her warranted the
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indulgence. Klaus wordlessly filled a cup and handed it to her.
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Technically speaking it was illegal for a prince to hand anything to the
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ruling First Prince of Procer, but when it was just the two of them she
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tended to ignore those little formalities. Odds were her uncle had never
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bothered to learn them. Regardless, she had no intention of allowing a
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cupbearer into her solar when they could overhear state secrets.
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``We are running out of options, uncle,'' Cordelia admitted. ``The
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longer we delay, the more the Empire strengthens their grip on Callow.
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The reports are unanimous: outside the cities, most of the Kingdom no
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longer cares it is under occupation. They do not think the Legions of
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Terror can be beaten and the standard of living for the peasantry under
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Praes is \emph{better} than it was under the Fairfax dynasty. They have
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no stomach for rebellion and if we wait a few more years I am afraid
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they might actually resist an attempt to liberate them.''
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The prince of Hannoven looked like he was about to spit in distaste
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until he remembered where he was sitting.
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``We're not ready for a war with Praes,'' Klaus told her, though it
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visibly pained him to say it. ``Not when they've got people like Black
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and Grem One-Eye on the other side. If we send a host through the Red
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Flower Vales, they'll savage it and set the border principalities on
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fire.''
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Cordelia took a deeper sip, letting the sweet taste of the honey-wine
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linger in her mouth.
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``We can no longer afford \emph{not} to be at war with the Empire,'' she
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replied. ``And for all that you worry about the likes of the Black
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Knight, Malicia is the real danger.''
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Klaus scoffed.
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``Malicia's been spending all her time keeping her nobles in line,'' he
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scorned. ``And she's not the one the Legions are loyal to.''
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``If the Knight was intending a coup he would have already made his
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attempt,'' Cordelia noted. ``Regardless, the Augur is adamant: the
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Pravus Bank was Malicia's doing.''
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At the beginning of the civil war most participants had expected it to
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be an affair of a single year, two at the most. Wars of succession in
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Procer were not unheard of when the Highest Assembly proved unable to
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elect a First Prince, but usually when one of the claimants proved to
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have a decisive advantage the principalities fell into line. Weaker
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rulers and regional power blocs stayed down after being inflicted a
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major defeat, treasuries too empty to make another bid. And yet, this
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time, principalities on the brink of defeat had always seemed to manage
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to find the funds and the weapons to stay in the Ebb.
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Cordelia had been thirteen when she'd first seen how. She'd been on a
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diplomatic mission to Lyonis, as its prince had managed to carve out
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alliances neatly encircling the northern principalities, but by the time
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she arrived in the city the man's armies had been broken on the field by
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the betrayal of the princess of Lange. He'd refused to meet with her for
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the first few days, and when they'd finally talked he did not face her
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with the kind of despair she would have expected of a man in his
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position. He'd recently come into a great deal of gold, he'd told her,
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and was already raising another army with the funds. He'd even managed
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to secure several wagons of dwarven weaponry to equip it.
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Cordelia had left the city after being assured the man had no designs to
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open a new front to the north, mind awhirl at the sudden change in the
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other ruler's fortunes. Where had the gold come from, she wondered? Year
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after year, news trickled in of similar reversals. Even when alliances
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collapsed the strongest ruler among them somehow always ended up with
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the just the funds and the weapons to launch a counter-offensive. This
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was not, she had decided, a coincidence. Someone was purposefully
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fanning the flames of the civil war. From there, it had only been a
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matter of narrowing down the suspects. The name her agents found was the
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same every time: the Pravus Bank.
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It was based in Mercantis, but that meant nothing: the City of Bought
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and Sold had a long history of being used as a cat's paw in
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international politics. Cordelia's initial attempts to find out more
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were met with polite misinformation and the much less polite slitting of
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her agents' throats. By then she'd been the ruler of Rhenia and de facto
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the leader of all four Lycaonese principalities but her reach that far
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south had been\ldots{} limited. Which had been when an unexpected
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windfall fell into her lap. Her cousin Agnes from one of the Hasenbach
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branches came into the Name of Augur, overnight turning from a quiet
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girl overly fond of bird watching to the holder of a Role that granted
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indirect access to the very Heavens. And so, one augury at a time,
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Cordelia had narrowed down the source of the gold flowing into Procer.
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\emph{Praes.}
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That had been\ldots{} unexpected. Dread Emperors and Empresses broadly
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fell into two categories: the laughable and the terrifying. Thankfully
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for Calernia, the latter were few and far in between. For every
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Maleficent and Terribilis, there were ten Sinistras -- whose notorious
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attempt to ``steal Callow's weather'' had resulted in the devastation of
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half her realm instead. The point was that, most of the time, the Dread
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Empire was comically inept. They used undead plagues and flying
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fortresses, sentient tiger armies and invisible invasions. Those grand
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projects inevitably failed and most backfired spectacularly. Of the
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Empire's seventy-odd attempts to conquer Callow only two had succeeded.
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And that first success was why people still thought of Praes as more
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than an international laughingstock: Dread Empress Triumphant. The only
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person to ever conquer all of Calernia and she'd done it in \emph{ten
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years}. Every time some madman climbed the Tower, there was the risk he
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or she was cut from the same cloth.
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And yet Triumphant's conquests had collapsed within five years, while
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Malicia's annexation of Callow still stood twenty years later. That made
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her an entirely new breed of Evil. Slower, more careful and in some ways
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even more dangerous. The Augur had found that the plan being implemented
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went much deeper than a mere escalation of the civil war, and Cordelia's
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blood still ran cold whenever she remembered her cousin's words:
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\emph{the Tyrant seeks to end Procer}. Once she'd known what to look
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for, the patterns had emerged. The Pravus Bank systematically enabled
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regional powers to fight above their means, but not enough that they
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would be able to expand outside of their borders. As the years passed,
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the Principate had become a handful of petty kingdoms in all but name,
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perpetually waging war on each other. And Malicia had intended for them
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to stay that way, forever asunder.
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And so at the age of nineteen, Cordelia had gone to war. She was not a
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particularly gifted warrior, she knew. Like all Rhenians she was
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expected to man the walls if the Chain of Hunger tried to cross the
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Grave again, but military training had never particularly appealed to
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her. Instead she'd studied history and etiquette, the ways of diplomacy
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and intrigue -- all the arts of ruling that her father had held in
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contemptuous disinterest. And while her uncle killed southerners, she'd
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made alliances. She'd schemed and betrayed, and for once the proud
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Alamans princes had found that their opponent's cunning ran just as deep
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as theirs. Six years of running battles and backroom deals, playing
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Creation's most elaborate shatranj game against the Tyrant in the Tower.
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And, Gods forgive her, but it had worked. There was enough blood on her
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hands for a hundred butchers, but it had worked.
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``I do not expect Liesse to succeed, though the Lone Swordsman might yet
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surprise us,'' Cordelia admitted quietly. ``The rebellion is a tool
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crafted for a specific purpose: getting the Deoraithe into the war.''
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``I know the Watch has a reputation, but not even them can beat all of
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Praes on their own,'' her uncle said.
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The First Prince of Procer took a hearty swallow of mead and closed her
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eyes.
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``They will not have to, Uncle Klaus,'' she replied. ``Liesse will last
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a year, perhaps two. It will be enough.''
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The prince of Hannoven's vivid blue eyes narrowed.
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``Enough for what?''
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``For Procer to be ready to launch the Tenth Crusade,'' she whispered.
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All of her problems, neatly solved with a single announcement. The
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Dominion was at least nominally Good, and would not nibble at their
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borders while they were fighting the Empire. The League of Free Cities
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would either keep their more Evil-inclined members in line or erupt into
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civil war, either of which would keep Helike busy. And while the First
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Prince did not legally have the right to command the private armies of
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the principalities, all of them were by custom bound to contribute to a
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Crusade. The troops of her political opponents would be abroad for
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years, where they could not interfere while she stabilized the
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Principate. Tens of thousands would die. Callow would be broken for a
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generation, as the prize being fought over. But it would keep Procer
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together.
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Cordelia loved the Principate, for all its flaws. At the end of the day
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it remained the greatest force for Good on Calernia, and though its
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history was full of mistakes and mishaps Procer was what kept the
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surface together. If it collapsed\ldots{} Those twenty years of civil
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war had been but a taste of the bloodshed that would come if the
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Principate split. Like crows to carrion, all its neighbours would feast
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on the corpse of Procer and madness would seize the continent. So let
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Malicia plot her schemes and send her blood-soaked Knight to reap his
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harvest of lives. Let all of the traitors and the monsters come for her
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head. She was the First Prince of the Procer, the Warden of the West.
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Cordelia might be a Hasenbach by blood, but her mother had raised her to
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the ancestral words of the rulers of Hannoven, the old retort thrown in
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the teeth of the Enemy when all its grand plans came to naught.
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\emph{And Yet We Stand}.
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