452 lines
19 KiB
TeX
452 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{prologue}{%
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\chapter*{Prologue}\label{prologue}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{prologue}} \chaptermark{Prologue}
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\epigraph{``The most dangerous opponent for a master is a novice. Therefore,
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seek to be a novice in all things.''}{Isabella the Mad, only general to ever defeat Theodosius the
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Unconquered on the field}
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Anaxares, to his surprise, was still alive.
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Perhaps his utter irrelevance in the grand scheme of things had seen him
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spared, he pondered, but such a thought was too optimistic. More likely
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the \emph{kanenas} had all assumed another one of them was going to
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trigger the stone in his stomach and one would get around to it whenever
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they remembered. His impending death was such a certainty he no longer
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spared any time troubling himself over it -- what point was there in
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cursing the river when you were already drowning? At the very least his
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last days would be interesting, in a truly horrifying manner. The Tyrant
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of Helike had seemingly adopted him as a pet of sorts, naming him an
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official advisor to the crown and now dragged him along wherever he
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went. The villain was amused by his calm. Calling the contraption the
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two of them were currently on a litter would have been a misnomer: the
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boy had essentially built a massive dais, slapped a throne on it and now
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had it carried around by porters everywhere.
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A pavilion could be added to cover the surface when weather demanded as
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much and tables were positioned to allow for the taking of a meal should
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the Tyrant demand it. The wretched labour involved offended his
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sensibilities. \emph{Foreign Slavers Will Be Known By Their Wicked
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Works}, he added out of habit. \emph{May They All Choke On Ashes And
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Also Snakes.} The villain had tried to have a smaller, noticeably
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cheaper throne put next to his for Anaxares to sit on but the
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Bellerophan had flatly refused. He'd claimed a wooden stool for the
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people and discreetly carved the sigil of Bellerophon -- three peasants
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waving pitchforks -- on the side. The small act of rebellion had been
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deeply satisfying, if utterly meaningless. Not, he decided, an inept
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description of his own existence.
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``\emph{Finally},'' the Tyrant said, ``we're getting decent weather.''
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Anaxares looked up at the massive storm clouds gathering and cocked an
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eyebrow. The lands between Helike and Atalante were known for the
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occasional bouts of week-long rain and storms, blown south from the
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Waning Woods and the madness that passed for nature over there. The Fae
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toyed with the winds and the sky the way men did with their clothes, and
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the farms beneath them paid the price.
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``It will be harder for your army to retreat in the mud,'' Anaxares
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said.
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He knew next to nothing about strategy -- in Bellerophon the only people
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allowed to read books on the subject were the citizens who drew army
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positions, and even they had the knowledge erased from their minds past
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their term of service lest they Use It In Horrid Rebellion Against The
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People -- but so far the Tyrant's campaign against Atalante had not
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impressed him. For one, there'd been no battles. The famous Helikean
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army had marched east towards Atalante, whose farmers had already
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emptied their fields, without contest from the enemy. The Atalantians
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had remained behind their walls as the emptied their treasury buying up
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all the mercenaries in Mercantis they could afford, only taking the
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field after they outnumbered the Helikeans two to one. Twenty thousand
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men had then dutifully marched towards the Tyrant, who had immediately
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taken his army back through the farmlands he'd just gleefully set fire
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to.
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``Oh, we're done retreating,'' the Tyrant said cheerfully. ``I'm bored
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with it now. Got what I need anyway.''
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Anaxares pulled at his third wineskin of the morning, trying to wash
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down the taste of impending doom. The Tyrant disapproved vocally of his
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drinking habits, but the man's servants kept bringing him skins anyway.
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``As my advisor,'' the boy said, his bad hand visibly shaking, ``what
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would you advise me to do now?''
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Just being called that qualified Anaxares for thirty-three different
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counts of treason by Bellerophan law. Fifty-something, even, if you
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counted all the articles about foreign collusion separately. His remains
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would be on trial for years after the initial execution.
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``Return to Helike, slit your own throat and let your replacement beg
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the mercy of the League,'' he replied without missing a beat.
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``You're a terrible advisor,'' the Tyrant complained. ``I should have
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you hanged.''
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Anaxares shrugged.
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``If that is your wish.''
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Less painful of a way to go than internal organ crushing, he assessed.
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``You haven't gotten tedious yet,'' the boy mused. ``I guess you can
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live.''
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``I am, of course, relieved and grateful,'' the Bellerophan deadpanned.
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``You should be,'' the Tyrant said cheerfully. ``I'm so merciful, it's
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why my people love me so much.''
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As far as Anaxares could tell, the reason Helikeans `loved' the Tyrant
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was that they had been told they did by men with swords and grim faces.
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The army, though, did seem genuinely loyal. Not surprising: whenever a
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Tyrant took the throne, they started invading everything in sight. The
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last one to hold the Name had broken the desperate alliance of Stygia,
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Atalante and Delos before the southern Proceran princes had intervened
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and put her down. Glorious war had been waged, victories tallied, and
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within a decade all the borders had returned to what they'd been before
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the woman had claimed the crown. Named or not, one could not change the
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face of the Free Cities.
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``Admittedly there is no other claimant to the throne, since your
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nephew's death,'' the diplomat said instead of rehashing the histories.
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``Pretty idiot got himself shot by an orc, of all things,'' the Tyrant
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said delightedly, the red in his eye deepening for a heartbeat. ``He
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always talked too much, it's how he lost the throne in the first
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place.''
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The Bellerophan's eyes sharpened with interest as he swallowed another
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mouthful of wine. The Tyrant's seizing of the throne of Helike had been
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one of the most unexpected diplomatic development of the last decade, in
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the Free Cities, but precious little was known about. A boy that had
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been by all reports a nonentity before the coup had in a single day
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taken control of the city and the army, killed the king in his own bed
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and purged his nephew's supporters brutally. The nephew in question had
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fled the city with most of the young nobility and his surviving
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loyalists, becoming the Exiled Prince in the process.
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``Talked too much,'' Anaxares repeated, leaving the tone questioning.
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``See, Dorian's father was a lot like mine,'' the Tyrant said. ``Drank
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too much, dallied with servants, let the nobility and the army run
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things. Everybody liked that state of affairs. Dorian, though? He was
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just so \emph{pretty} and so \emph{good}.''
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The bitter hatred in those words almost fouled the air.
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``Now, the old guard didn't care much for him. But their heirs? The
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swarmed him like flies a corpse. Hung on to his every word, his promises
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of reform and a better Helike.''
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The Tyrant seemed almost amused at the prospect of the betterment of his
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city-state, as if such a thing was unimaginable.
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``They figured out eventually that when Dorian took the throne, he was
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going to be \emph{an actual ruler},'' he snickered. ``Their own children
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would back him in this. Now that angered them quite a bit, Anaxares. If
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you steal power and keep it for long enough, eventually you start to
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think you have a right to it.''
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He waved his good hand expansively.
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``So they looked at the only other child of royal blood,'' he said.
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``Approached me. And I said: \emph{why not}?''
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``They thought they could rule through you,'' the diplomat said. ``A
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mistake of some scale.''
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``Most of the I fed to dogs,'' the Tyrant smiled, that flash of sharp
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pearly teeth. ``The others fell in line.''
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``You were twelve years old,'' Anaxares said, feeling old. ``And already
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Named.''
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``I wasn't the Tyrant then,'' the boy said. ``Just Kairos. Can you keep
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a secret, advisor?''
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``No,'' the diplomat replied immediately. ``I will report everything you
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say to the \emph{kanenas} at the first opportunity, before my summary
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execution.''
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The villain grinned.
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``Treachery is pleasing to the Gods Below,'' he said. ``There's a crypt
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in Helike, under the palace, where the first foundations of the city
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were laid. There's a creature there, lying under a tomb of stone
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sculpted to look like someone holding a sword. There is a crack in the
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side just large enough that you can hear the thing inside whisper, if
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you press your ear to it.''
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Anaxares would have shivered, if years of walking with death in his
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belly had not effectively burned fear out of him. The words were
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casually spoken but the description felt more vivid than it should have.
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He could smell the dusty air, feel the unsettling whisper of an
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abomination against his ear.
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``I don't know what it is. My father said it's the first king of Helike,
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still straddling the line between life and death,'' the Tyrant said.
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``The king, though, once said it is the god who once owned the ground
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the city was built on -- tricked into the tomb and forever bound to give
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us advice.''
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``Advice?'' the diplomat repeated.
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``Prophecies,'' the boy said. ``All of royal blood can ask one question
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if it, in our lifetime.''
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``And it told you you would rule?'' Anaxares guessed.
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The Tyrant laughed.
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``It told me,'' he said, ``that I would die when I turned thirteen. That
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there was nothing I could do to change this.''
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The boy smiled.
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``It was,'' he said, ``a great gift.''
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Looking down at his shaking hand, the Tyrant seemed lost in memory for a
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moment before he gathered himself.
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``We spend so much of our lives, Anaxares, shackling ourselves. Avoiding
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doing this and that because others would frown upon it. Because it is
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wrong and wicked and unworthy. Once I knew there was only death ahead of
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me, I started doing what \emph{I} wanted. I ceased censuring what I was
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to please others.''
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``The drow believed the same as you, when they embraced the Tenets of
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Night,'' the Bellerophan said. ``And look at them now, Tyrant -- packs
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of savages inhabiting the ruins of an empire. Censure Is Just, Law Is
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Necessary.''
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\emph{Glory To Peerless Bellerophon, Whose Laws Are That Of The People},
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he added silently.
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``Your city is the mutilated remains of a people,'' the boy said. ``That
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you wielded the knife yourself is the only thing setting you apart from
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the rest of Creation.''
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``We have no rulers, in Bellerophon,'' Anaxares said.
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This time there was no need for him to speak the words taught to all of
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them as children, the capitalized praises learned before one could walk.
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This, he believed for himself. Because the Republic was flawed, deeply
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flawed, and he could admit this to himself even if he deserved death for
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it. But what it stood for was\ldots{} greater than the sum of its
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faults.
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``No crowns. No nobles. No Names. This is not an accident, Helikean, it
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is a \emph{statement}. We are all of us free or we are none of us free.
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There is no middle ground.''
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``You've lived a heartbeat away from death all your life,'' the Tyrant
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said, ``and still you don't quite get it, do you? You Bellerophans just
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traded one tyrant for fifty thousand. You don't get to decide who you
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are. Others do that for you.''
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The boy rose to his feet, stretching out gingerly. He looked almost
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fragile, thin and sickly under his red silken robes.
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``When those nobles and generals came to whisper treason in my ear,'' he
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said, ``I did not hesitate. Because I felt like usurping a throne,
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because I hated Dorian. I was curious to see if it could be done. I was
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going to die soon, anyway, and what did I care what followed that?''
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Anaxares was not a warrior, or a large man. He was thirty and more
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familiar with wine than a hard day's work. For all that, looking at the
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boy, for a moment he was convinced he could snap his neck almost without
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effort. That the bones would break like a bird's, shatter like glass.
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Then he saw the eye, the damnable red eye, and the Tyrant was a looming
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titan looking down on him.
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``So I did it,'' the boy hissed. ``I crushed them and I stole the crown
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and I called the would-be puppeteers to heel. And when I turned
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thirteen, sitting on my throne as the Tyrant of Helike -- \emph{I did
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not die.} Because Fate isn't a path we must follow, Anaxares, it's a
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tug-of-war between the Gods.''
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He leaned closer.
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``And sometimes, if you put your hands to the rope, you can tug it your
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way,'' he whispered.
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The Named withdrew with unnatural agility, laughing. The intensity there
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had been to him was gone like mist in the sun. The Tyrant ripped out one
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of the banners that flew at every corner of his dais -- his personal
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heraldry, a leering skull with a red eye on gold -- and leapt down onto
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the wet grounds. The porters who'd been carrying the dais hastily
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slowed, not daring to drop the entire thing even as their muscles
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creaked lest their ruler be splattered with mud.
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``Come along, advisor,'' the boy said. ``We must speak with my
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general.''
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Anaxares followed. The soldiers, hard men and women in scale armour with
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swords and shield, turned into awed children whenever they saw the
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Tyrant. Some reached hesitantly for the hem of his silks, which the boy
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tolerantly allowed. There was no sign of discontent among them even
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after the pantomime that had been this campaign: in Helike, Tyrants did
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not fail. Not without betrayal or half the world set against them. They
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would follow the little madman into the fray without hesitation or
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doubt. The general they were seeking found them first, riding towards
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them. A woman, the diplomat saw, then his gaze lingered on her throat.
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Not that she had always been that.
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``Sire,'' the general said, dismounting hastily and kneeling.
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``General Basilia,'' the Tyrant said, patting her armoured shoulder
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affectionately. ``The army is to cease retreating immediately.''
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Something feral flashed in the woman's eyes.
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``We are to prepare for battle, then? The enemy is half a day's march
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away, we can still set the grounds.''
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The Named chuckled.
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``There is no need to array our soldiers for a fight,'' he said. ``Stay
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in a column. We will be marching on Atalante before nightfall.''
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She almost hesitated, Anaxares saw, but did not protest. Loyal, this
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one. To a boy more than half mad. Gods save them all. He should have
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brought the wine.
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``As you command, sire,'' she said. ``There is a farm not far from here,
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should I prepare it to accommodate you?''
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``No need,'' the Tyrant said. ``My advisor and I will be awaiting our
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friends on the field.''
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Without even the semblance of an explication, the boy strode away with
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the standard resting on his shoulder. The diplomat sighed and made to
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follow but he was stopped by the general, who put a gauntleted hand on
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his shoulder. She glared down at him.
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``If he dies,'' General Basilia said, ``you will follow him shortly.
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\emph{Screaming}.''
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``Nine,'' Anaxares replied.
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``What?'' she said.
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``The number of times I've been threatened with death today,'' the
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diplomat clarified. ``Will we make it to ten before noon? It is an
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auspicious number, in Bellerophon.''
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He strode away after that, while she was still too surprised to protest.
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He found the Tyrant alone in a sprawling field of grass, gazing ahead.
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The boy hummed, as he approached.
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``And now?'' the diplomat asked.
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``Now we wait,'' the Tyrant said.
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---
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It was mid-afternoon when the forces of Atalante arrived.
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They were a sorry bunch to look at, compared to the soldiers of Helike.
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Citizen levies armed with spears and shields and decked in hardened
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leather, city and caravan guards who'd traded cudgels for swords,
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unarmoured conscripts with javelins and slings. Only the cavalry looked
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professional, nobles with long lances and chain mail. The mercenaries
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looked more fearsome, infantry from all parts of Calernia that dwelled
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in the mercenary villages surrounding the shores of Mercantis until
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hired by patrons. There were Ashurans there, he saw, with their curved
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bows and ornate armours. Levantines with painted faces and hooked
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swords, even Callowan knights with long banners who must have survived
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the Praesi purges. Behind him, the army of Helike remained in an orderly
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column and did not move. The commanders on the other side ordered a
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halt, but after most of an hour passed without anyone moving orders
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began being screamed along the Atalantian lines. In good order, the
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enemy began to advance again.
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``They're not even sending an envoy to talk with me,'' the Tyrant
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complained.
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``You murdered the last one,'' Anaxares said.
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``It's still very rude,'' the boy said, rolling the wooden shaft of the
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standard between his palms. ``They ought to have better manners than
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that.''
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The diplomat watched twenty thousand soldiers marching in his direction
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and wondered which one would kill him. Hopefully one with a sword. Spear
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wounds tended to kill slowly, he'd been told, unless something important
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was pierced.
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``Last night, Malicia's hounds set foot in Penthes,'' the Tyrant said
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conversationally.
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``May The Ground Open Up To Swallow The Base Penthesians,'' Anaxares
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replied out of habit.
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``The city will be eating itself alive before a fortnight has passed,''
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he said. ``Nicae won't move until they've grown fat with Proceran silver
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and `mercenaries', Delos will be dealing with the Stygian phalanx moving
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north. That leaves only our dear Atalantian friends and their escorts.''
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``Who you have decided to fight,'' the diplomat said. ``Without your
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army.''
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``Oh, I could have had General Basilia tear those poor fools alive, if
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you'll forgive my language,'' the Tyrant said. ``It wouldn't even have
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been very hard. That's how the Praesi do things, nowadays. Let tactics
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and preparation carry the day.''
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The frail boy's lips curled in distaste.
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``And to think they were once the greatest among us.''
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``The Dread Empire is the most powerful it has been in centuries,''
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Anaxares frowned.
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``And their Empress plays shatranj with the First Prince across an
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entire continent, winning more often than not,'' the Named said. ``For
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all that, they've lost their way.''
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The Bellerophan raised a sceptical eyebrow.
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``It's not about winning, Anaxares,'' the Tyrant said. ``It's about
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\emph{how} you win.''
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The standard rolled again between the boy's palms as the enemy host
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crept ever closer.
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``Even now, if I gave General Basilia the order I believe she could win
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this. It would be a victory, yes, but would it be a victory for Evil?''
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``You are a villain,'' the Bellerophan said. ``A victory for you is a
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victory for Evil.''
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``A mere clash between armies? No,'' he said. ``It takes more than that.
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The war I am fighting has little to do with steel: I am soldier for the
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Gods Below in the game that will settle Creation. A point has to be
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made, a sense to the story.''
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``And what is the point of us standing on this field, watching death
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arrive?'' Anaxares asked.
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``Twenty thousand men march to end me,'' the Tyrant said. ``They will
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break, because they are in my way. Watch, diplomat, and learn.''
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The boy drove the standard into the ground, flying his banner of one in
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the face of the host that spread across the plain.
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``I am Kairos Theodosian,'' he laughed. ``Tyrant of Helike. And I say
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that my \textbf{Rule} extends to even the sky. Come, servants of the
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Heavens. The Age of Wonders is not dead yet. \emph{Not while I
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breathe}.''
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The cloud above thickened, more black than grey now. For a long moment
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nothing happened, and then lightning struck the soldiers of Atalante.
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Thunder clapped, the sky danced to the whims of a madman and Anaxares
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watched the largest army he had ever seen break apart at the seams. The
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Tyrant of Helike stood there, smiling.
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His hand no longer shook.
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