826 lines
42 KiB
TeX
826 lines
42 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-precipitation}{%
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\section{Interlude -- Precipitation}\label{interlude-precipitation}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Procerans have always been the villains in our plays, scheming
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Alamans and grasping Arlesites. Given our history this is
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understandable, my Strategos, but you and I know the truth of of it. The
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Principate is the final line of defence between Calernia and Evil. Two
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millennia they have kept the Dead King on his shore of the northern
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lakes and even longer have they turned back the ratling plague, without
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aid or succour from the rest of the continent. When Procer fails, the
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light of civilization dims and the monsters all get a little closer to
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our homes.''}
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-- Eleusia Vokor, Nicean ambassador to the Principate
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\end{quote}
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The League of Free Cities did not have an official seat, because that
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would require a hard majority of its constituent to agree on any single
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subject for any length of time.
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Anaxares was of the opinion that this was even more unlikely than usual,
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these days. Stygia was on the wane, as they'd hit that part of the
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twenty-year cycle where their old slave soldiers were being discreetly
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butchered and the fresh ones finished their training, but their northern
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neighbours were in no shape to take advantage of it. Atalante and Delos
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were too busy fighting over control of trade routes to Mercantis to turn
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their attention elsewhere, a situation further inflamed by the murder of
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an Atalantian logothete at the hands of a frothing Delosi preacher. In
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Delos, the will of the Heavens and the will of the \emph{asekretis} of
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the Secretariat were considered to be the same thing. Woe to anyone who
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would defy that vicious little pack of scribes. To make everything even
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more complicated, Helike had spawned one of their godsdamned Tyrants a
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few years back. The boy had promptly proceeded to piss all over the last
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fifty years of border treaties, seizing Nicean assets and tickling the
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chin of the Proceran princess in Tenerife. There was opportunity in
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that, however, for the Great City of Bellerophon. \emph{First and
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Mightiest of the Free Cities, May She Reign Forever.}
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Anaxares capitalized the words even in the privacy of his own mind
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because you never knew when the \emph{kanenas} were looking into your
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thoughts. His delegation must have at least two of them out of the ten
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diplomats who'd accompanied him, not that he'd be able to tell which
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were part of Bellerophon's ``agents for the protection of the people''.
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His home was the only true democracy on the continent, a fact its
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citizens touted at every opportunity, but the will of the people was
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preserved by the spilling of blood. The \emph{kanenas} made sure of
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that, ensuring anyone who looked like they were trying to seize power
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for themselves disappeared. A system of random lot-drawing made all
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appointments every three years, which meant the competence of the city's
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administration could vary wildly from one year to another. The only part
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of Bellerophon's state apparatus was that was not randomly allotted was
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the diplomatic service, of which Anaxares was unfortunately part of. The
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small pebble lodged inside his body -- and that of all members of his
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family -- was a grim reminder that at any point one of the
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\emph{kanenas} could decide that he'd gotten ambitious and kill all of
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them with a word.
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The pebble would return to its original size and break his body from the
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inside. It was, Anaxares had been told, a particularly gruesome way to
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die. His predecessor had been splattered all over the insides of a
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meeting hall in Nicae just for being offered a bribe.
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Naturally, the filthy Penthesians had made a game of trying to have the
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envoys of Mighty Bellerophon executed by their own people in as few
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words as possible. The \emph{kanenas} had gotten their hands on one of
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the sheets they used to tally scores and plastered copies all over the
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streets. There was a reason Anaxares' city kept trying to invade theirs,
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ugly knock-off Mercantis that it was. Did they really think that just
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because the wealth of Praes flowed through their river they were better
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than anyone else? They weren't even \emph{Evil}. Admittedly Good and
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Evil in the Free Cities were more like backing a charioteer team than a
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true affiliation but the principle of the thing made it galling. You'd
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think the Dread Empress would send her gold to one of the cities on the
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right side of the metaphysical fence. Not that he'd ever say as much out
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loud: the Empress' agents were everywhere in the Free Cities these days,
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clashing in back alleys with those of the First Prince.
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It was Helike's turn to host the League delegates, which no one had been
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all that happy about. The city had gone even madder than usual under the
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Tyrant, whipped into a frenzy at the memory of Theodosius the
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Unconquered and the legendary victories the man had achieved on the
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battlefield. Anaxares had been in the city for a mere fortnight and
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already could no longer stand to look at statues of the man. He was
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currently drinking from a cup with Theodosius' face on it and sitting on
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chair engraved with his work at the Siege of Tenerife, when the
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Helikeans had crawled through the sewers to avoid the butcher's bill
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taking the walls would have cost. The representative for Bellerophon
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shifted uncomfortably against the wooden frame, ignoring the screaming
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delegate from Atalante calling the senior Secretariat member from Delos
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a ``quill-waving lunatic''. His eyes flicked to the Tyrant in question,
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who'd named himself delegate for Helike instead of sending an actual
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diplomat.
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The boy was dark-haired and olive-skinned, with a bloodshot red eye and
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a hand that seemed to be permanently shaking. He was sixteen, Anaxares
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knew, and had been sitting on the throne of Helike since he was twelve
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-- when he'd seized power and sent his much older nephew fleeing in
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exile. \emph{Bad seed}, the delegate for Bellerophon thought. The Tyrant
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had been smiling for what seemed to be hours now, and the grin widened
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when he met Anaxares' eyes from across the table. That same friendly
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young man had made swearing a stoning offense in his city and drowned a
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Nicean delegation in their own wine barrels when they'd protested their
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seizure. \emph{Named}. Mad, every single one of them.
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``Proper forms were filed by Secretariat members of good standing,'' the
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Delosi delegate said calmly. ``The caravan went through our territory
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without a permit, seizing its merchandise was perfectly legal.''
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The woman's tone never rose, but it could be seen in her eyes she was
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beginning to get irritated. Fair enough, Anaxares thought. Atalantians
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got on everyone's nerves, what with the way they were moved to emotion
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so easily. The famous warrior Atalante who'd founded their city was said
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to have wept at the sight of the rising walls, so clearly it was some
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sort of cultural defect. Public weeping was not allowed in Bellerophon,
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as it had been deemed Against The Will Of The People.
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``Is there a form for \emph{murder}?'' the Atalantian screeched,
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sounding triumphant like he'd achieved some sort of great victory with
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the reply.
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The Secretariat member blinked.
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``Seven,'' she said. ``Though for five of them, after committing the
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crime the criminal must present themselves for execution within twelve
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hours.''
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That wasn't going anywhere, so Anaxares let his attention lapse and
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considered the other diplomats at the table. The Nicean delegate was
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listening carefully but the man \emph{had} been hitting the wine pretty
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hard so this might actually seem interesting to him. The delegate from
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Stygia -- Magister Zoe, she'd introduced herself as -- was openly bored
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out of her skull and had been scribbling on a sheet of parchment for a
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while. Anaxares squinted at the lines while trying not to be too obvious
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about it. There were stanzas, he saw. It looked like a sung version of
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the argument between the Atalantian and and the Delosi that had been
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lasting for the better part of an hour. Some liberties had been taken
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with the plot, unless he'd missed a lot of unspoken sexual tension
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between those two. The delegate from Penthes was\ldots{} looking at him
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already. Smiling. Anaxares resisted the urge to make the sign of of
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warding, the one that politely asked Evil to look at someone else
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instead please. That covered all the diplomats seated at the table,
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though there was another one seated on a bench a little to the side: the
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envoy from Mercantis.
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The City of Bought and Sold was not part of the League proper, but
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they'd been granted the right to sit in on its meetings because of
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``aligned interests''. Anaxares suspected a grand amount of bribes had
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also been involved in making that right part of the League's charter,
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though that was the kind of suspicion best left alone. The merchant
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lords of the Consortium did not have a standing army, or even a city
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guard, but they had a great deal of gold and enough hired killers to
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populate a small city. The woman Mercantis had sent was morbidly fat, of
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course. They always were. It seemed to be considered a prerequisite for
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rising to the higher tiers of the Consortium, and so anybody who could
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afford to pack on the weight did so with gusto. The waste that implied
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offended Anaxares' Bellerophan sensibilities. \emph{The Grain Of The
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People Should Go To The People}, he thought, just in case one of the
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\emph{kanenas} was listening in\emph{. Down With Foreign Despots, May
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Glorious Bellerophon Reign Forever.}
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``You're wasting everybody's time,'' the Stygian magister said, breaking
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into the middle of the argument. ``Either submit the matter to League
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arbitrage or shut up.''
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Anaxares snorted. No one had ever submitted anything to League arbitrage
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without being sure what the verdict would be ahead of the submission. If
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either of the arguing delegates had considered the incident worth the
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bribes and concessions buying a verdict would cost, they wouldn't have
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been bickering about it in the first place. His amusement had been
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noticed, though.
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``Do you find my people's pain amusing, Bellerophan?'' the Atalantian
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said.
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``The Glorious Republic of Bellerophon has no stance on the incident,''
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he said.
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``You're a person, \emph{you} should have an opinion,'' the man said
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dramatically.
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Anaxares went very still.
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``I am a mere vessel for the will of the people,'' he babbled hurriedly,
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``unfit to pass judgement on my own. Long Live The Republic, Peerless
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Jewel Of Freedom.''
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Eyes closed he waited for the pebble to shift and tear through his
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organs. There was a long moment of silence in the room, but nothing
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happened.
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``Damn,'' the Penthesian said. ``That would have been a five pointer.''
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``Don't blow up the Bellerophan, this one is less fucking insane than
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the usual ones,'' the Nicean delegate said.
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``\emph{Language}, you two,'' the Tyrant said. ``Please, ladies and
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gentlemen, let us have some decorum.''
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No one felt quite safe enough to roll their eyes at that. Diplomatic
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immunity only went so far when you were dealing with a Tyrant.
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``Delos sees no need to submit the matter to arbitrage,'' the
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Secretariat member said.
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The Atalantian looked like he'd just bit into something foul.
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``Neither does the city of Atalante,'' he said.
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``Good,'' the Nicean delegate said, after draining his seventh cup of
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wine. ``If that's over with, the city of Nicae had a motion to submit
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for League consideration.''
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He held out his cup for a servant to fill again. Anaxares raised an
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eyebrow. He doubted this would be a rehash of the old Nicae demand for
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the League to declare war on Ashur -- no one else cared that the
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Thalassocracy suppressed Nicean commerce. If they'd wanted to own the
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Samite Gulf, they should have won at least one of the four wars they'd
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fought for it. Ashur made sure to line the pockets of all the other
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cities with fleets anyway, which ensured their predominance at sea would
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never be seriously challenged. Not that any of this mattered to
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Anaxares: Bellerophon was landlocked\emph{. Ships Are The Work Of Wicked
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Foreign Oligarchies}, he added just to cover his bases.
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``The Strategos feels that tensions with the Principate have been
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escalated unnecessarily,'' the Nicean said. ``Their civil war is over
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and the First Prince has the principalities in order: we need to nip
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this in the bud before they turn in our direction.''
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Everybody carefully did not look at the Tyrant, who had both the
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distinctions of being the boy responsible for those elevated tensions
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and the ruler who'd be expected to lead the armies of the League if it
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came to war. That wasn't a coincidence: whenever Procer came knocking,
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Helike always became the first among equals. Their army might not have
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been as large as Stygia's, but it had never lost a war to the Stygians
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either.
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``To achieve this,'' the Nicean continued, ``the Strategos has ordered
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me to present a motion to open ten-year truce negotiations with the
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Principate.''
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Anaxares' eyes flicked from one delegate to another. The magister was
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surprised but no one else seemed to be, not even the Tyrant. \emph{Ah.}
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As he'd earlier thought, no one ever bothered to present a motion
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without knowing what the results of the vote would be. Of the seven Free
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Cities, four were aligned with Good -- Nicae, Atalante, Delos and
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Penthes. Bellerophon and Stygia openly embraced the Gods Below, while
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Helike waffled between one side or another depending on whoever ruled
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them at the time. Even if rivalries between cities usually trumped any
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greater allegiance to the Gods, when it came to League foreign policy
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the Good cities tended to stick together. They never pushed too far of
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course, since forcing their will too often would trigger the collapse of
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the League, but it looked like this was going to be one of those times
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where they banded together.
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``Atalante votes in favour,'' the diplomat said.
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``Delos votes in favour,'' the woman from the Secretariat said.
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``Penthes votes in favour as well,'' the filthy Penthesian added.
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Well, that carried the vote. Some advantage might be gained in ensuring
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a Bellerophon presence when the negotiations begun, and the four cities
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having their way here should give him enough leverage to ensure that.
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Anaxares signalled a\ldots{} servant, repulsive as that thought was
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\emph{-- People May Be Servants Of The State But Never Of Other People,
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A Thousand Years Of Damnation On Vile Foreign Autocrats} -- to fill his
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cup of wine but the woman drifted away without apparently seeing him
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gesture. Irritating.
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``We won't be doing any of that,'' the Tyrant said cheerfully. ``Procer
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can go hang and the pox on anyone who says differently, if you'll
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forgive my language.''
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Magister Zoe raised an eyebrow. They had a talent for condescension, the
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Stygians. The ones who weren't slaves anyway.
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``I sympathize with the sentiment, but a majority has been reached.
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Exactly how do you intend to reverse it?''
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``Well,'' the Tyrant began, bloodshot eye fluttering, but he was
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interrupted by a dull thump.
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The Nicean delegate had hit the table face-first, cup of wine still in
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hand. The man did not look to be breathing, and Anaxares' own breath
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caught. The Delosi slumped in her chair a moment later, the Atalantian
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had just enough time to scream before choking and the Penthesian
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simply\ldots{} stopped moving, between two heartbeats.
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``The dosage must have been inaccurate,'' the Tyrant mused. ``Someone's
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getting stoned for that. I had this entire speech planned, I was going
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to sweep my arm and then-``
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The young man made a noise Anaxares assumed was meant to represent death
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by poison, which was by definition silent.
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``This is madness,'' the Stygian barked, apparently unshaken by the
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fresh murder of over half the people in the room.
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That was the slavers for you: ice all the way to the soul.
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``The poison?'' the Tyrant asked, surprised. ``It was quite affordable,
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actually. Bought it from Mercantis.''
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The representative from the Consortium had not moved since the deaths
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and seemed utterly unconcerned. She was openly amused at Magister Zoe's
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angry look.
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``The Consortium believes in a modern, cost-effective form of murder,''
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she said. ``A wide range of substances is available to any with the
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means.''
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``I believe she was referring to the act of poisoning itself, Lord
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Tyrant,'' Anaxares said, surprised at how steady his voice sounded.
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Having carried a death sentence in his stomach since the age of twelve
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had done wonders for his composure, the delegate from Bellerophon
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reflected.
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``There will be war for this,'' the magister barked. ``Murdering envoys?
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It's-``
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``Villainous?'' the Tyrant said softly, smiling again.
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His bad eye looked redder now. Like it had fed on the deaths. His hand
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was not shaking for the first time since Anaxares had met him. The
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Bellerophan was something of a connoisseur in the domain of foreboding,
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and considered that sign a particularly ominous one.
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``That's the problem with Magisters,'' the boy said cheerfully. ``It's
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all slavery and murder with you, there's no \emph{art} to it. No whimsy.
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When's the last time any of you did anything just because you could?''
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He gestured enthusiastically.
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``You're taking it too seriously. You have all this power and all you
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ever use it for is making sure you keep it. Do you have any idea how
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\emph{boring} that is?''
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``Stygia will have no part of this idiot war of yours,'' the magister
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hissed.
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``Of course you'll take part,'' the Tyrant grinned. ``And you'll be on
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my side, too. Because if you're not I'll sack your city, tear down you
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walls and swell my ranks with your slaves.''
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``Am I to assume this threat extends to Bellerophon?'' Anaxares said
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calmly.
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``Anaxares, was it?'' the boy asked. ``I have to say, I'm loving the
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whole serenity thing you have going on. And if your Republic doesn't
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back me, I'll roast your children like poultry and sell them in Praes.
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Maybe overcharge on transport, they've been screwing us on tariffs
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recently.''
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``You're at war with over half the League and you're threatening the
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rest?'' Magister Zoe said, sounding appalled.
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She had, the Bellerophan thought, yet to grasp exactly what it was they
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were dealing with here. Magisters were too used to being in control.
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Anaxares had never been under that delusion: his people were the current
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carrying him, on any day as likely to dash him on the rocks as they were
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to carry him safely to shore. Having no real influence over the course
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of his life was a familiar feeling. If he cared enough to comfort the
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foreigner, he would have told her it got easier after you stopped
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thinking of your future too much. Much like drowning, it was much easier
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on you if you didn't struggle.
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``Four cities or six or half of Creation,'' the Tyrant shrugged. ``It
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makes no difference to me. Gods Below, act Evil for once in your life.
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It's like it's a hobby with you people.''
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That red eye shone malevolently as the Named stared them down.
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``It's not a hobby, my friends, it's a side. A side in the war that
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defines Creation. Did you think you could sit the fence forever? Speak
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the words without ever paying the price? Naughty, naughty, if you'll
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forgive my language.''
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The Tyrant grinned and for a moment all Anaxares could see was that
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horrible red orb and and the curved stretch of pearly white teeth. A
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devil's grin on a devil's face.
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``We're the villains, my friends. We're the things out there in the
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night that they're all afraid of, the reason they bar their doors and
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shutter their windows. This place is in \emph{dire} need of being
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remembered that truth.''
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The boy laughed and Anaxares shivered.
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``So muster your armies, rustle up your devils and let your monsters out
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of their cages. Let's have us a jolly good time, eh?''
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The Bellerophan decided to call for another cup of wine and didn't
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particularly care if it was poisoned or not.
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---
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Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer, put down her correspondence.
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Her quarters in Orense were like a warrior past his prime: fair to look
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at still, but already showing signs of decay. She was not surprised.
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Prince Rodrigo of Orense's finances could aptly be described as
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``dregs'': the commerce that had begun to bloom again had petered out,
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his fields emptied of farmers who'd died as soldiers and the entire
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south of the principality had been ransacked by Dominion raiders. The
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man could no longer afford to live in the style he was accustomed to,
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and for a prince of Procer there were few blows harder to one's pride
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than that. It had turned the older man bitter, as had his repeated
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bloody defeats in the Proceran civil war. Though he'd never been a
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claimant himself, the two candidates the prince backed had been crushed
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by other alliances after he'd sunk his fortune into their causes. And
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now the Dominion of Levant was pillaging his lands with impunity, or at
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least had been until Cordelia came south. Gratitude might have been
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expected, but then the man was an Arlesite.
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The army Uncle Klaus had raised was not as full of northerners as the
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one that had won her the throne, but the core of the host had still been
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forged on the battlefields of Lange and Aisne. It was there that
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Lycaonese steel, tempered against the ratling warbands of the Chain of
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Hunger and the endless harassment of the Kingdom of the Dead, had proved
|
|
superior to the numbers of southern principalities. Numbers were still
|
|
Cordelia's problem, as it happened. There were only four Lycaonese
|
|
principalities: Rhenia, Hannoven, Bremen and Neustria. Though neither
|
|
Bremen nor Neustria were surrounded by mountains as the other two were,
|
|
their lands were still hard to farm on. The four Lycaonese
|
|
principalities had the four smallest populations of any principality in
|
|
Procer, and though unlike southerners the Lycaonese had universal
|
|
military service the attrition still rankled. She could only afford to
|
|
lose so many soldiers from her support base before she was too weak to
|
|
strong-arm the Highest Assembly.
|
|
|
|
So now she drew from the ranks of her allies, the princes and princesses
|
|
who'd joined her willingly when it became clear her cause was on the
|
|
rise. Few principality troops had been made available to her, but her
|
|
allies had not been stingy with \emph{fantassins.} Cordelia was somewhat
|
|
unschooled in matters military, but as her uncle explained it these were
|
|
men and women who'd served as peasant levies in the the civil war after
|
|
being disposed by the fighting, making it their trade. Not as good as
|
|
soldiers who'd trained since infancy, but those were costly and hard to
|
|
replace. There were tens of thousands of \emph{fantassins} floating
|
|
around Procer at the moment, the First Prince knew. People who could
|
|
only live for violence and now found themselves without anyone willing
|
|
to pay for them to commit it. She needed a war, and quickly, before they
|
|
turned on their own people. The first step in mitigating the problem was
|
|
folding as many of them as she could into the ranks of her own armies,
|
|
but that wouldn't be enough. She'd have to accelerate the economic
|
|
recovery of the south to find them lands to occupy, which she'd been
|
|
trying to avoid until her position was better secured.
|
|
|
|
She'd a received a report that morning from Uncle Klaus announcing he'd
|
|
thrown the last Dominion raiders out of the south of Orense and set up
|
|
defensive positions a few miles away from the Red Snake Wall, which had
|
|
been one problem solved. That was not the report she was looking at,
|
|
though: this one was from an agent of hers in the Free Cities, informing
|
|
her that two days ago the Tyrant of Helike had murdered four League
|
|
delegates in broad daylight, then declared war on their cities. Calmly,
|
|
she placed down the letter on the surface of her gilded desk.
|
|
|
|
She'd pressured, bribed and otherwise convinced the leaders of the same
|
|
cities whose envoys had been poisoned to pass a motion to negotiate a
|
|
ten-year truce with the Principate. It had taken her years and quite a
|
|
bit of silver, but she'd done it. And when she had, she'd known there
|
|
would be two ways that League session could end: either the Evil cities
|
|
accepted the muzzle, or there would be war. Either one would force
|
|
Helike to cease probing at Tenerife's borders, binding the princess who
|
|
was already one of her closest allies to her even closer. \emph{And it
|
|
would secure our south-eastern flank}, she thought. The Tyrant of Helike
|
|
still stood alone, as far as she knew, but the odds were that the other
|
|
two Evil cities would join him. Could she influence them the other way,
|
|
to stack the odds towards the outcome she desired? Bellerophon was more
|
|
or less impossible to affect measurably, since they executed anyone who
|
|
looked like they might put some order to the mob that ruled the city.
|
|
Stygia\ldots{} No.~She was weak in that city and the Empire owned the
|
|
ruling coalition of magisters body and soul. Literally, in some cases.
|
|
Stygia would lean in the direction Malicia wanted it to.
|
|
|
|
Who would win the war? Stygia and Helike had the two largest armies, but
|
|
Nicae had the largest population and Penthes was the richest. Both sides
|
|
would be emptying Mercantis of mercenaries before the month was done,
|
|
lining the pockets of the Consortium with their bidding wars. As things
|
|
currently stood, Cordelia would be inclined to believe that the Good
|
|
League would beat the Evil League. And yet the Tyrant had triggered this
|
|
war. The boy had something up his sleeve, something more deadly than a
|
|
mere Name. More than that, it was a certainty that Praes would
|
|
intervene. They would not send one of the Legions south, but the First
|
|
Prince suspected the Calamities would be coming down. A counterweight
|
|
was needed, Cordelia knew, but she did not need to trouble herself with
|
|
that. The Heavens had already provided: a fortnight ago a ship had
|
|
docked in Nicae carrying the White Knight, returned from his years in
|
|
the Titanomachy. The survivors of the Lone Swordsman's band of heroes
|
|
would cluster around the new one, though how many had survived Liesse
|
|
she did not know.
|
|
|
|
The Thief was still reportedly alive, but no one had seen the Wandering
|
|
Bard in weeks. Liesse had been such a mess she was still trying to sort
|
|
out exactly what had happened there. Devils had been summoned, then
|
|
disarmed. The Squire had forced the surrender of the Baroness Dormer
|
|
then spared the woman. She'd killed the Lone Swordsman and apparently
|
|
returned from the dead, which the House of Light adamantly maintained
|
|
was impossible. There was already talk in Salia of naming her an
|
|
abomination in the eyes of the Heavens. The entire Liesse Rebellion had
|
|
died an ugly death at the hands of this Callowan slip of a girl and her
|
|
master, killed with a whimper instead of the bang Cordelia had been
|
|
hoping for. Daoine had never entered the war, and was now on the back
|
|
foot with the Tower since one of Duchess Kegan's relatives had been
|
|
caught helping a hero.
|
|
|
|
Had her observers not gotten a close look at the Legions of Terror in
|
|
action, Cordelia would have called the entire affair a detestable waste
|
|
of silver and lives. Several books' worth of reports were already being
|
|
compiled into a combat doctrine that would see use in the crusade, but
|
|
she'd failed to meet all her other objectives. Praesi hegemony in Callow
|
|
was stronger than ever and the Empress had killed unrest for good with
|
|
her masterstroke of a ``ruling council''. Considering there would be
|
|
four Praesi sitting on that council, Malicia had come out of this
|
|
rebellion with tighter control over her foreign holdings than she'd
|
|
started with. Trying to hobble the Empress was like cutting off a
|
|
hydra's head: every time two more grew, more vicious and cunning than
|
|
the last. At least the woman's nobility was giving her trouble. As well
|
|
they should: Cordelia had been sinking coin into their cause for half a
|
|
decade using a labyrinthine series of intermediaries. Her payback for
|
|
the depredations of the Pravus Bank.
|
|
|
|
Things were unfolding all across of Calernia and Cordelia could not
|
|
longer afford to grant the Dominion the lion's share of her attention.
|
|
It was time to end this. Setting aside her correspondence, the First
|
|
Prince of Procer took a fresh sheet of parchment and dipped her quill in
|
|
the ink.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``We're too close to the wall, I don't like it,'' Prince Klaus Hasenbach
|
|
announced for a third time.
|
|
|
|
``They need specific conditions to wake the snake,'' Cordelia said
|
|
calmly. ``Which we do not meet.''
|
|
|
|
In a concession to the heat of summer, the First Prince had worn a dress
|
|
of a much paler blue than was present on the heraldry of Rhenia. It
|
|
ended conservatively above her collarbone, tailored to hide the way her
|
|
Hasenbach blood had seen her born with shoulders better fit for a
|
|
lumberjack than a noble. The cloth of gold bordering the cut suggested
|
|
the outline of her chest without lingering inappropriately, as the belt
|
|
of sapphires set in gold that hung loosely on her hip did for that
|
|
curve. Her long blond tresses had been carefully combed and bound with a
|
|
brooch that had been in her family since days before the Principate, a
|
|
beautiful little piece shaped like the spearman that was the emblem of
|
|
the Hasenbachs. The crown, though, was from Salia. A simple circlet made
|
|
from white gold, a metal only the First Prince could wear in public by
|
|
ancient law. It was meant to subtly set the aside the ruler of Procer
|
|
from all others.
|
|
|
|
The pavilion Cordelia had ordered raised was not close enough to the Red
|
|
Snake wall to be in its shadow at this time of day, but in a bell it
|
|
would be. The structure was impressive, seen from this close. The
|
|
foundations only stood ten feet tall, limestone painted over red, but
|
|
the bulk of it was the titanic sculpted red granite snake that stretched
|
|
from the sea to the beginning of Brocelian Forest. The sheer scale of it
|
|
was absurd, the largest project ever undertaken by the gigantes outside
|
|
of the borders of the Titanomachy. That it was enchanted to protect the
|
|
Dominion of Levant from any who would seek to pass it was arguably even
|
|
more absurd: enchantment on that scale was almost without precedent.
|
|
Only the Miezans had ever cast magic on that scale, as far as she knew.
|
|
It made assailing the Dominion by land impossible, though landing ships
|
|
far enough down the coast was still an option.
|
|
|
|
Lady Itima of the Bandit's Blood, ruler of Vaccei, would know this. The
|
|
other members of the Majilis had already told her she would get no
|
|
support from the rest of the Dominion in a closed session so she'd had
|
|
to look for support elsewhere. Her bloodline's ancient ties to the
|
|
gigantes weren't strong enough for them to break their enforced
|
|
isolationism, which had seen her turn to Ashur instead. The
|
|
Thalassocracy was the natural choice for an ally, really. The Ashurans
|
|
had supported the war of independence that had seen Levant form out of
|
|
former Proceran principalities and it was a central tenet of their
|
|
foreign policy to ensure Procer never became a sea power. The
|
|
Thalassocracy's war fleet dwarfed the Proceran one by a rapport of ten
|
|
to one, all of them lifelong sailors who could only rise through the
|
|
citizenship tiers by uninterrupted service. Some of them would even have
|
|
experience in naval warfare, as two decades ago Nicea's latest attempt
|
|
to gain primacy in the Samite Gulf had been bloodily suppressed by their
|
|
captains. In comparison, the Principate had never fought a single major
|
|
naval engagement in the nation's entire history.
|
|
|
|
As long as Ashur backed Vaccei, it was untouchable.
|
|
|
|
Itima would know this, and when she came it would be with the swagger of
|
|
a woman who knew the Principate would beggar itself if its armies camped
|
|
out in southern Orense until she got bored. She would expect
|
|
concessions, perhaps even angle for the ceding of territory. This was a
|
|
negotiation now, though. Cordelia's uncle had spent his days learning
|
|
the trade of war and come out of it one of the finest generals on
|
|
Calernia, but swords had never been the First Prince's way. She'd
|
|
learned diplomacy and intrigue, spent years sharpening her mind by
|
|
fighting the most dangerous woman on Calernia across the continent in a
|
|
hundred different simultaneous battlefields. Itima of the Bandit's Blood
|
|
had picked the wrong battlefield to challenge her on. When the ruler in
|
|
question arrived, her favourite refreshments had already been set up --
|
|
chilled wine from Alava -- and attendants swarmed around her delegation
|
|
like hummingbirds around nectar. Uncle Klaus has wanted to remain seated
|
|
when she arrived as a sign of his disdain, but Cordelia had given him a
|
|
steady look until he conceded the matter. When it came to etiquette, he
|
|
usually did.
|
|
|
|
Itima was a middle-aged woman with tanned skin, startling blue eyes and
|
|
hair cut so closely it might as well have been shaved. Her two sons
|
|
followed her closely, tall young men with hard faces and the scars of
|
|
people who had seen battle before. Likely they'd been the ones leading
|
|
the raids their mother had ordered. Cordelia smiled sweetly at them and
|
|
the younger of the two gave a startled blush before he blanked his face.
|
|
Their mother was not so easily charmed and eyed the goblet of wine
|
|
presented to her with distrust before turning her attention to the First
|
|
Prince. Who stood there and said nothing. Silence fell across the
|
|
pavilion, broken only by the murmured of Cordelia's attendants seating
|
|
the rest of the delegation and plying them with treats and flattery.
|
|
|
|
``Your Most Serene Highness,'' Itima finally said.
|
|
|
|
Good. An acknowledgement of Cordelia's superior rank was the right tone
|
|
to set for this conversation.
|
|
|
|
``Lady Itima of the Bandit's Blood,'' Cordelia replied, elegantly taking
|
|
the seat at the head of the table before the woman could slight her
|
|
before doing it first.
|
|
|
|
The ruler of Vaccei took the seat facing her, the two sons looming
|
|
behind the chair in a rather meagre attempt at intimidation tactics.
|
|
|
|
``If I may introduce Prince Klaus Papenheim of Hannoven,'' she said,
|
|
nodding at her uncle.
|
|
|
|
Said uncle was drinking from the cider cup she'd arranged for him to get
|
|
specifically so he wouldn't talk.
|
|
|
|
``My sons, Moro and Tarif of the Bandit's Blood,'' the blue-eye woman
|
|
replied, not bothering to specify which was which.
|
|
|
|
Not that she needed to. Cordelia had extensive files on every member of
|
|
Itima's allies and family. Tarif was the younger one who'd blushed, and
|
|
had a well-documented fondness for blondes. He was quite good in bed,
|
|
the agent who'd sent the report had assured her. The First Prince found
|
|
him handsome enough, but a dalliance with someone of his rank might have
|
|
an expectation of marriage -- which she'd made a point of avoiding. It
|
|
gave her much leverage in Procer.
|
|
|
|
``Would any of you care for a meal before we begin negotiations?'' she
|
|
offered.
|
|
|
|
``I'd care for you to stop wasting my time,'' Itima said. ``We're here
|
|
because I've got you in a corner and you know it. I have my demands.
|
|
Most of them are not negotiable.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia smiled politely, then gesture for one of the attendants to step
|
|
forward. The young girl bowed and lightly set a scroll on the table.
|
|
Lady Itima seemed about to say something scathing until she noticed the
|
|
seal keeping it closed. A ship with a crown for a sail, seven coins
|
|
forming a half-circle above it. The official seal of the Thalassocracy
|
|
of Ashur, used only on formal diplomatic documents.
|
|
|
|
``What is this?'' the Levantine asked.
|
|
|
|
``A reassessment of our respective positions,'' Cordelia said.
|
|
|
|
Itima broke it open and began reading, skipping the first few paragraphs
|
|
and the inevitable niceties and title-trading they consisted of. The
|
|
fair-haired Lycaonese knew the moment Itima first arrived to the actual
|
|
treaty terms because the tan woman's face dropped.
|
|
|
|
``This is a fake,'' the Levantine said accusingly.
|
|
|
|
``You know it is not,'' the First Prince said calmly. ``The
|
|
Thalassocracy will remain neutral in the event of a war between you and
|
|
the Principate, so long as the borders remain unchanged afterwards.''
|
|
|
|
``I have assurances for half of the third tier citizen's they'll sack
|
|
your entire coast,'' Itima barked.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, and that was cleverly done,'' Cordelia conceded. ``Yet all of
|
|
them fall silent when the only second tier citizen speaks.''
|
|
|
|
Ashur's citizenship tiers were a maze to outsiders, as there were over
|
|
twenty of them, but it could be understood that the dozen or so third
|
|
tier citizens ran the Thalassocracy on a day-to-day basis. The only
|
|
individual to stand above them was Magon Hadast, a man in his seventies
|
|
whose ancestor had been the captain of the initial ship of settlers to
|
|
populate the island. There could only be one second tier citizen for any
|
|
colony of the Baalite Hegemony -- which Ashur still technically was --
|
|
at any time, and there was no rising any higher than that: first tier
|
|
citizens could only be born in Tyre, the city to have spawned the entire
|
|
Hegemony. Magon's word was law in Ashur, and though he was not a
|
|
heavy-handed ruler he'd been displeased at the idea of getting in a
|
|
slugging match with the Principate over the ambitions of a single woman
|
|
from the Dominion.
|
|
|
|
``The old man doesn't speak,'' the Levantine said.
|
|
|
|
``Not to you,'' Cordelia said. ``You are a skilled diplomat, Lady Itima,
|
|
and an intelligent woman. I am both those things, but I also happen to
|
|
have the resources of the greatest surface nation on the continent at my
|
|
disposal. This defeat does not speak of incompetence but of a mere
|
|
disparity of means.''
|
|
|
|
``We'll hold the beaches against you,'' the ruler of Vaccei said, anger
|
|
glittering in her eyes.
|
|
|
|
``The first time, perhaps,'' the First Prince said. ``But the time after
|
|
that? Or the next? We will land eventually. And we will bury you in
|
|
numbers until Vaccei falls.''
|
|
|
|
``The rest of the Majilis will side with me the moment you tread
|
|
Dominion soil,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``The rest of the Majilis are already considering which of their
|
|
relatives should rule Vaccei after the removal of your dynasty,''
|
|
Cordelia explained gently. ``I am not invading Levant, Lady Itima, I am
|
|
ending a threat to Procer.''
|
|
|
|
``And you'll just leave after you take back your old principality, will
|
|
you?'' Moro sneered.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia met his eyes and smiled kindly.
|
|
|
|
``I do not want a war, Lord Moro,'' she said. ``I am not the one who
|
|
crossed borders and sacked towns. Frankly, the loss of so much life
|
|
needlessly appals me.''
|
|
|
|
``There's a reason we have the wall in the first place, Proceran,''
|
|
Itima said. ``We know your kind.''
|
|
|
|
There was a truth in that, Cordelia knew. Many a First Prince or
|
|
Princess had looked south and pondered the fresh conquest of old
|
|
territory, their hands stayed only by the attention of Ashur and the
|
|
impossibility of taking the Red Snake Wall.
|
|
|
|
``The Principate has done foul things in the past, it is true,'' she
|
|
said. ``Taking Levant -- and then trying to keep it -- was one. The
|
|
occupation of Callow after the Third Crusade was another.''
|
|
|
|
``The League Wars,'' Tarif counted out quietly. ``The Humbling of
|
|
Titans. The Red Flower Massacre.''
|
|
|
|
And hadn't they paid grand prices, for all those foreign adventures?
|
|
Just like Dread Empress Triumphant's red-handed madness had directly led
|
|
to the formation of the Principate after her fall, Procer had given
|
|
birth to its own enemies. The Principate was more distrusted in Callow
|
|
than any other nation save for the Empire, the gigantes killed Procerans
|
|
on sight south of Valencis and old Arlesite warmongering was the reason
|
|
there was a League of Free Cities at all. Cordelia believed the
|
|
Principate had grown as large as it would ever be. All that further wars
|
|
would accomplish was set the rest of the continent against them, and
|
|
they could not \emph{afford} that. Alamans and Arlesites principalities
|
|
had the luxury to believe the might of Procer was unchallenged, safe in
|
|
their southern domains, but Cordelia knew differently. She was
|
|
Lycaonese, from the tip of her toes to the crown of her head, and all of
|
|
her people knew one truth as sure as they knew their own breath: Evil is
|
|
real. It is not a story or a lesson, it is a piece of Creation as true
|
|
as rain or music. Evil is on the other side of the mountain, of the
|
|
lake, and when spring comes it will march for your home. And it will
|
|
never, ever stop unless you \emph{make} it.
|
|
|
|
``When I became First Prince,'' Cordelia said, ``I gained another title.
|
|
Warden of the West.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, your kind have claimed to be `wardens' of our land for a long
|
|
time,'' Itima said with a hard look.
|
|
|
|
``I do not think that it was that title should mean,'' the fair-haired
|
|
woman said. ``Not anymore. Gods, Lady Itima, we were so busy squabbling
|
|
over a crown that we allowed Praes to conquer an entire kingdom. That is
|
|
not what the Principate \emph{should} be.''
|
|
|
|
``And what is that, exactly?'' Moro asked with a thin smile.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{We are the wall},'' Cordelia said, and she spoke with the
|
|
ironclad belief of a hundred generations of Hasenbachs before her. ``We
|
|
are the bulwark between the West and the monsters. We have been looking
|
|
south all those years, and now Evil wakes. Do you think the Tower will
|
|
stand alone, when their Legions spill out onto the continent? The Dead
|
|
King will rise from his slumber and \emph{drown the world in death}. The
|
|
Everdark will band under a single banner and etch the Tenets of Night in
|
|
blood across our cities. The Chain of Hunger grows larger and bolder
|
|
every spring, and when they come it will not be in warbands -- their
|
|
hordes will blot out the horizon.''
|
|
|
|
She leaned forward.
|
|
|
|
``So \emph{please},'' she said, speaking as sincerely as she ever had.
|
|
``Do not make me fight you, Lady Itima. There will be only one war that
|
|
matters in my lifetime, and it will not be in the south.''
|
|
|
|
The tanned woman looked shaken.
|
|
|
|
``You ask me to ignore centuries of bad blood,'' she said hesitatingly.
|
|
|
|
``I ask you to stand with me,'' Cordelia replied quietly. ``Not as a
|
|
subject or a vassal, but as an ally.''
|
|
|
|
She could see it in the sons' eyes, that they understood. What was
|
|
coming, crawling closer to them every day.
|
|
|
|
``They say there is only one choice we can make that ever really
|
|
matters,'' the First Prince of Procer said. ``I beg you, for all our
|
|
sakes. Make the right one.''
|
|
|
|
She offered a hand, and after a long moment the ruler of Vaccei took it.
|
|
The rest of the Dominion would follow, Cordelia knew. It would not be
|
|
enough. Gods forgive her, but it would not be enough. She'd have to
|
|
intervene in the Free Cities, to make peace between Ashur and its
|
|
rivals, to somehow mend bridges with the Titanomachy. Cordelia would
|
|
have to lie and scheme and strike deals in the dark of night until her
|
|
desperate, ramshackle alliance stood together.
|
|
|
|
Because the madmen were coming. The monsters of legend. The ones that
|
|
cast shadows on the world from their flying fortresses, who broke the
|
|
very fabric of Creation with their sorceries. They were coming, and
|
|
while the Principate had bled itself in a hundred wars they had
|
|
\emph{learned}. Cordelia had always loved the words of her mother's
|
|
family, the quietly dignified Pappenheim boast thrown in the face of the
|
|
Enemy, but in the end she was a Hasenbach first. It ran in her blood,
|
|
the old duty no one had given them but they had taken up anyway. Because
|
|
it was right, because they could, because no one else would.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Because We Must.}
|
|
|
|
Gods Above, let that be enough.
|