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510 lines
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\hypertarget{chapter-2-might}{%
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\chapter{Might}\label{chapter-2-might}}
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\epigraph{``We make the shepherds kings at the end of our stories because
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they already know how to lead recalcitrant, bleating creatures of
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limited intellect.''}{Prokopia Lekapene, first and only Hierarch of the Free Cities}
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Laure had not had an Imperial governor since the unlamented death of
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Mazus.
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The former capital of the Kingdom had been put under martial law while
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the bastard was still swinging from a noose in the market place, but no
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replacement had been appointed afterwards -- the Empress, as I
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understood it, had used the possibility of the appointment to effect a
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little spring cleaning at court. The final body count had been
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comparable to that of a small battle, with even the Truebloods
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discreetly clawing at each other through intermediaries as everyone
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tried to place a relative or dependent at the head of the richest city
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in Callow. It had come to nothing when the Liesse Rebellion had begun,
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as there had been no question of ending martial law in Laure while the
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south was in revolt. The issue of what to do with the city had
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ultimately become the subject of the very first meeting of the Ruling
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Council, and it had revealed how the lines would be drawn between its
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members.
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There were, theoretically, seven members. Black was one, the designated
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head of the council and the only member with the right of veto -- which
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he had given to me along with his vote. Baroness Anne Kendal was
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another, the first appointment I'dd made. Sister Abigail of the House of
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Light was the third, a septuagenarian who'd served as a travelling
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sister for thirty years before settling in an abbey near Ankou in her
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middle age. She'd been one of the most vocal members of the House to
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advocate against armed rebellion after the Conquest. She still had,
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Black had informed me, been put under surveillance by both he and
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Malicia by sheer virtue of having so many connections across Callow. The
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House of Light did not have a true hierarchy but some of its members
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were more influential than others, and Sister Abigail was in the highest
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tier even among those.
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Hakram had also choked the life out of her great-nephew at Three Hills.
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He'd been the priest who'd prevented us from scrying the Silver Spears,
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having volunteered to serve with the mercenaries as a liaison for my
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predecessor in ruling Marchford. The way she seemed to genuinely hold no
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grudge over the events unsettled me, I had to admit. Priests who'd been
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under the vows for long enough were always\ldots{} unearthly but Sister
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Abigail was in a league of her own. I'd never seen her be anything but
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the picture of health and Ratface had told me she'd healed a bleeding
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gut wound in the cathedral without breaking a sweat. There was power
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behind the doting grandmotherly smile.
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The two Praesi with seats were like night and day. Murad Kalbid was
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sworn to the High Lady of Kahtan, a distant cousin who'd married into a
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lesser family, and was exactly what Callowans picture when they thought
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of the Taghreb. Desert-lean and with tanned skin like leather, the
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middle-aged man had a closely-cropped beard and moustache that made his
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dark eyes stand out. I'd never seen him without a sword at his hip and
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he could light candles with nothing but a word. Satang Motherless, as
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the Soninke was apparently named, was the survivor of a succession
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dispute in Aksum who'd come into the service of the High Lord of Okoro.
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She seemed to me a lesser take on Heiress, when it came to appearance,
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with cheekbones not quite as high and curves not quite as full. Her hair
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she kept in a series of braid the way Apprentice did, though without the
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magical trinkets. There was a red mark on her cheek that looked like
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three lines, and I couldn't tell if it was a tattoo or some particularly
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vivid birthmark. Whatever it was there was sorcery in it.
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The two foreigners had wasted no time in striking an informal alliance,
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working together to nudge the Council in directions their patrons would
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approve of. Early on they'd tried to suggest that properties seized from
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the nobles who'd fought in the rebellion should be put to auction under
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Murad's supervision, supposedly to raise funds for the reconstruction,
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but I'd stamped the notion down hard with Sister Abigail's support. Half
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the treasures would be gone before the first sell was ever made, packed
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in carts headed for the Wasteland. Aisha was convinced Satang was in
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communication with Heiress, but I was not so sure. Nothing concrete had
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been dug up by my people, though admittedly what passed for my spy
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network was barely out of the cradle. I'd still have to act as if she
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was, just in case. I knew for a fact Akua kept close eye on the
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proceedings here in Laure, to prepare for the blows before I could land
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them on her. So far I'd only tightened the screws by stripping the
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Liesse governorship of lands and by passing a decree that banned any
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Callowan official from summoning or dealing with devils, but I wasn't
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done. Not until she crawled back to the Wasteland, or preferably
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straight into the Underworld.
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The last and seventh seat was for Malicia's personal representative, and
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had gone unfilled. The Empress had sent messengers to cast her vote on
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occasion, so far only for issues that related to the scope of the Ruling
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Council's authority over Callow.
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Tonight's session would be light, in theory, with only my own accounting
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of the events in Southpool being a topic after we received the monthly
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report from the magistrates that now ruled Laure. Baroness Kendal had
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been tasked with overseeing them personally after the appointments were
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made, but the two Praesi had insisted on a regular report to the
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council. They weren't entirely wrong. I doubted a woman like Anne Kendal
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would try to fill her pockets with bribes but General Orim still
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garrisoned the city and he'd been openly sceptical about a former rebel
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being given power over his legionaries. Being able to say there would be
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oversight by Wastelanders and myself had gone a long way in soothing
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those ruffled feathers. \emph{Compromises}, I grimaced. I'd had to make
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quite a few of those lately, and I didn't like it. I missed Black, to my
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dismay, and more than the man I missed his advice.
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The room the Ruling Council used for its sessions had once been the
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private meeting room of the sovereigns of Callow. The Queen of Blades
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once sat in that same seat I called my own and so had Jehan the Wise. So
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had the likes of Mazus, later on, but that era was over now. It was
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tastefully decorated -- marble floors with hexagonal tiles and old wood
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panelling under a beautifully painted ceiling -- but I wasted no time on
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the sights before heading for my seat at the head of the table: the
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other members were already there. All six of them. \emph{So the Empress
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finally sent her representative}, I thought, studying the woman in
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question. Soninke, dark eyes betraying a common birth and no callouses
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on her palms. Not a fighter then. Probably a court appointee. Neither of
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the other Praesi in the room seemed to know her and that clearly made
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them uncomfortable. As it should. Wastelanders were afraid of Black in
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the dark of night, I'd found, but they were \emph{always} afraid of the
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Empress. She'd given them reason to.
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``We've a newcomer, I see,'' I said, taking off my riding gloves and
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setting them on the table.
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The representative rose from her seat and gracefully bowed.
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``An honour to make your acquaintance, Lady Squire,'' she said. ``I am
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Lady Naibu, representative for her Most Dreadful Majesty on the
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council.''
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\emph{Lady Deputy}, in Mtethwa. Ime's sense of humour still made me
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wince from across an entire empire. I really shouldn't have expected any
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better of a woman who thought calling herself \emph{patience} would lend
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her mystique.
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``We're pleased to have you with us,'' I half-lied.
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Not that convincingly, if the way Sister Abigail discreetly coughed into
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her sleeve was any indication. Baroness Kendal smiled pleasantly,
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murmuring courtesies at the newcomer from her neighbouring chair as
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Naibu sat and I settled into my own seat.
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``I didn't see the magistrates waiting outside when coming in,'' I said.
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``Was their report already given?''
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``It was delayed until tomorrow, Lady Squire,'' Setang said. ``There's
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been news of greater import from Dormer.''
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I raised an eyebrow. Anne Kendal's former barony had been one of the
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first governorships to be filled after the rebellion -- she'd suggested
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one of the town's eldermen for the first mandate, to smooth the
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transition when a more long-term appointee was found, and after having
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him looked into I'd seen no reason to refuse.
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``There's been a Fae incursion,'' Sister Abigail said. ``A handful of
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Summer court fairies snuck into the town after finagling an invitation,
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then forced the people to dance until a priest drove them off.''
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I blinked slowly. The \emph{Fae}? They never left the Waning Woods.
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Dormer was one of the Callowan holdings closest to the woods, certainly,
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but it was still a few days of riding away. The only known gate into
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Arcadia was near Refuge, and- I stopped cold. That was no longer true,
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was it? Masego had speculated as much months ago and he'd confirmed it
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since: when the demon of Corruption had lingered in Marchford, it had
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weakened the borders between Arcadia and Creation. Nothing had come
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through, so far, but\ldots{} \emph{Shit.} I need to talk with
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Apprentice.
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``There were no dead, as I understand it,'' Murad said, facing the
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sister.
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``A handful of sprained limbs was the worst of it,'' Baroness Kendal
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replied, drawing his attention.
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``Then there should be no need to lower the taxes due,'' Setang smiled.
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The segue was too smooth for the two of them not to have planned it.
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``The priority at the moment should be making sure the Fae don't come
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back,'' I said sharply. ``There's no legion garrisoning the region, if
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some of the fairies into the rougher stuff come knocking they'll be
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vulnerable.''
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``I am told the Fifteenth regularly holds field exercises,'' Naibu spoke
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up, the first time since the conversation had begun. ``Perhaps one might
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be arranged close to the town.''
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I eyed her cautiously. I'd been thinking of saying as much, but hearing
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the words coming from an unknown had me rethinking it. My men would be
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close to Heiress' wheelhouse, if they went there, and if she hadn't
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cooked up some nasty tricks since we last met I'd eat my godsdamned
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gloves.
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``I'll speak with General Juniper,'' I finally grunted. ``It's
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placeholder solution, regardless. The Fifteenth is based in Marchford so
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if this become an unstable border there'll be a need for a more
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permanent presence.''
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``Reaching out to the Lady of the Lake might yield answers as to why it
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happened,'' Sister Abigail suggested. ``She's said to know Arcadia
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better than anyone alive.''
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I knew the Empire was in diplomatic contact with Refuge, but I honestly
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had no idea \emph{how} that contact was maintained. Scrying that close
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to a gate into Arcadia would basically be sending a written invitation
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to the Wild Hunt but surely they couldn't be sending messengers on foot
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every time? Less than half of them would actually make it to Refuge:
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those entire woods were even more of a death trap than the Wasteland. I
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didn't want to admit to ignorance in front of those people so I smiled
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knowingly instead, meeting Setang's eyes until she looked away.
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\emph{When in doubt, pretend it was always part of the plan.}
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``Measures will be taken,'' I said vaguely.
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That should keep them guessing. No one else seemed to have anything else
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to add, so Baroness Kendal suggested we adjourn for the night -- my own
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report on Southpool could wait until tomorrow, when we saw the
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magistrates. It was a little abrupt considering how little we'd talked
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but they'd grown to know a little of me in the last six months: whenever
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proceedings got too tedious or I had other business I tended to end the
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sessions early. Council members rose one after another, bowing before
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asking my leave. I gave it absent-mindedly, eyes on Naibu -- who was
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still seated. Well now. That promised to be interesting. Sister Abigail
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was the last to leave and she closed the door behind her, leaving only
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silence. I was about to speak up when Malicia's envoy suddenly twitched.
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Not just a little, too: her entire body convulsed before stilling
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suddenly. A heartbeat hadn't even passed before I was on my feet, sword
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in hand.
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``That won't be necessary, Catherine,'' she said, voice eerily calm.
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The Soninke held herself differently now. Straighter in her seat, hands
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folded primly into her lap. There was command in her bearing.
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``Your Most Dreadful Majesty,'' I said.
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The meat-puppet smiled approvingly.
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``Deputy, is it?'' I muttered. ``Someone had fun with that.''
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``This is a flesh simulacrum with a semblance of personality inserted,''
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Malicia shrugged gracefully. ``One of Nefarious' rare slivers of
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brilliance. It serves my purposes better than coming to Callow in
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person.''
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I sheathed the sword slowly.
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``Are you always in there, or\ldots{}''
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I gestured vaguely.
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``Do not ask that question if you want to sleep well tonight,'' the
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Empress smiled. ``Suffice it to say, anything my deputy hears will
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eventually come to my ears. You may consider her opinions to be mine for
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all practical purposes.''
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One of those days, I was going to come across something from the Tower
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that wasn't the stuff of nightmares. But not today, evidently.
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``I take it there's things going on I don't know about,'' I said.
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There was a safe bet if I'd ever made one.
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``You are not incorrect. First, however, I bring news from the south,''
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Malicia said.
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I perked up at that. Black had been in the Free Cities for a few months
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but word trickled up to Callow slowly. Whatever I heard was always late
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enough to be largely irrelevant.
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``Last I heard he was in Penthes,'' I said.
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``There are currently twelve claimants to the title of Exarch in the
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city,'' the Empress informed me amusedly. ``A little excessive even for
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him, but they are effectively out of the war until the matter is
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resolved. At last contact he was headed for Nicae, but with the latest
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developments I believe he'll turn to Delos.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``It hasn't fallen?'' I said. ``I thought the Tyrant was marching on
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it.''
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It had drawn quite a bit of attention when an unheard-of villain had
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come out of nowhere and grilled the third of an army on his way to
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Atalante. Said city-state had been sacked and conquered a few weeks
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afterwards, its armies dispersed in the field. Apparently half the
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mercenaries Atalante had bought turned to banditry after the defeat and
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had then been press-ganged into the Tyrant's army one band at a time.
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The Named and his army had moved towards Delos afterwards, which was the
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last I'd heard.
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``The initial assault was repulsed,'' Malicia informed me. ``The Tyrant
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is sieging the city with his\ldots{} usual flair.''
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The last part was spoken with distaste.
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``The man basically tore through an army on his own,'' I said slowly.
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``And he was slapped down by a place known for its \emph{scribes}?''
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``There are heroes in the city,'' the Empress said.
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Well, shit. That explained why Black was headed there, too.
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``I don't suppose we know the Names?'' I asked.
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``The White Knight is one,'' she replied. ``And a woman I believe you
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know, though she goes by a different face now: the Wandering Bard.''
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I cursed. White Knight sounded ominous like all Hells, but the Bard was
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a pest I was more familiar with.
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``Well, she was bound to turn up eventually,'' I said. ``That's going to
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be a mess.''
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``There are at least three others, but on those I've yet to acquire
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anything concrete,'' the Empress added.
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Five heroes. The usual number, when something was going to go horribly
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wrong for villains. Was there a specific term for that, I wondered?
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People used cluster for fish and herd for sheep, there had to be a term
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for heroes. \emph{A} \emph{murder}, I snorted. Or maybe a gaggle, like
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with cats. So Black was going to be stuck dealing with a full gaggle of
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heroes. That ought to make his year.
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``Procer's still staying out of it?'' I said.
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``Dearest Cordelia has been sending her disaffected soldiers to Nicae,''
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Malicia said. ``More than ten thousand already and the number grows by
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the day. More importantly, she convinced Ashur to lift its restrictions
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on Nicean commerce -- so they can actually afford to feed them. The
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fulcrum of the war will be the battle that host fights, the current
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conflicts are merely setting the stage.''
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``Keeps her too busy to sniff around Callow, at least,'' I muttered.
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``Small favours.''
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The Empress took a hand off her lap and rested her chin on the palm,
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somehow managing elegance in a body not her own.
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``Callow is what brings me here as it happens,'' she said. ``You've been
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rather busy of late, Catherine.''
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That, I reflected, did not seem like the beginning of a pleasant
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conversation.
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``Still learning the ropes,'' I said. ``There's so much to do even three
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of me wouldn't be on top of things.''
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``Delegating to Baroness Kendal was the step in the right direction,''
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Malicia said. ``Continue to find trustworthy individuals and invest them
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with authority.''
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I cocked my head to the side.
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``Not a lot of those around,'' I admitted.
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Most of the people I could rely on were in the Fifteenth, and I couldn't
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keep piling civilian duties onto them. Their workload had already
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expanded massively with the way the legion had swelled.
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``Then find leverage on people you do not trust and use them
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regardless,'' the Empress said. ``Murad has children in Kahtan and cares
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for them. A scare there would keep him in line. He has experience
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commanding a city guard and you need someone to head Laure's.''
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``I'm trying avoid importing leadership from Praes,'' I said, trying to
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keep my tone not accusatory..
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``The Empire decapitated Callow's ruling class two generations in a
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row,'' Malicia noted. ``Train replacements, by all means, but you need
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people filling positions \emph{now}. Through your actions you've begun
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to centralize authority in Callow without crafting an administration
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that can wield that power. The result of that can only be anarchy.''
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I swallowed. I was, well, out of my depth here. The Empress sighed.
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``You are young, younger than ever we were when we seized power,'' she
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said. ``I do not expect immediate flawlessness of you. What I can teach
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you, I will.''
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She leaned back into her seat.
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``Let us go over your actions in Southpool, as an exercise,'' she said.
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``What do you believe the common perception is of what happened there?''
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``A corrupt Praesi governess was removed,'' I frowned.
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``Forcefully,'' Malicia said. ``Strung up in front of the fortress gates
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for all to see.''
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``The Empire isn't exactly shy about making examples, as a rule,'' I
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said.
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``In exceptional cases,'' the Empress said. ``Governess Ife was not one.
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Removing her was necessary for your purposes, but the \emph{manner} was
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incorrect. You should have had her assassinated discreetly and moved in
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your replacement.''
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``If she just disappears then the point doesn't get made,'' I grunted.
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That whole matter was still like an itch I couldn't scratch, and going
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over it wasn't exactly my idea of an agreeable evening. I listened
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anyway: the Empress hadn't managed to command a pack of wolves like the
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High Lords for over forty years by looking pretty. If she had advice, it
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was worth hearing.
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``It is made to the people it is meant for,'' Malicia disagreed. ``More
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than that, think on what the people of Southpool saw. Wasteland
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nobility, hung like a common Callowan criminal.''
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``She \emph{acted} like a common Callowan criminal,'' I said, temper
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flaring as I struggled not to raise my voice.
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``Every eye on Callow is on you, Catherine,'' the Empress said.
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``\emph{You are the person setting their cues}. If what you employ is
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violence, in violence they will follow. Against all available targets.''
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I rubbed at the bridge of my nose, then grunted.
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``Fair,'' I said. ``Riots against the legions aren't what I was going
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for. Still, I don't \emph{have} assassins to use. My closest equivalent
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is\ldots{}``
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``Currently checking the progress of your opponent,'' Malicia completed
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for me, when I let the sentence trail. ``The natural tool for you would
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be the Guild of Assassins, but you've other ideas.''
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I grimaced. Of course she knew. No part of that had been a question.
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``In the future,'' she said, ``have your mages use a more advanced
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version of the scrying spell formula. Apprentice will know several. The
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one you currently use is exceedingly easy to listen into. Heiress
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certainly has been, among others.''
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That she wasn't being smug about it actually kind of made it worse.
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``Their existence as an entity breaks Tower law,'' I said defensively.
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``There has never been nor will there ever be a nation without hired
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killers,'' Malicia replied. ``You might, at best, disband the organized
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aspect of it for a few decades. The trade will still be plied as long as
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someone has a knife and another has coin.''
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``So I should just allow a pack of murderers to do as they want because
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people are assholes?'' I retorted. ``What's the point of even having a
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law against it then?''
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``The purpose of law is not to define right and wrong, it is to regulate
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behaviour,'' the Empress said. ``You are a ruler now, Catherine. Your
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only concern should be \emph{control}.''
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She shrugged languidly.
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``If you deem it necessary to assert greater control over the Guild of
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Assassins, do so,'' she said. ``But attempting to destroy it entirely
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|
would set you on a collision course with all of the Dark Guilds. You
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cannot rule a realm if you are at war with every institution in it.''
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``Are you ordering me not to disband them?'' I asked through gritted
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teeth.
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Anything short of that wasn't going to make me back down. The simulacrum
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the Empress was possessing studied me for a moment.
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``No,'' she finally said. ``If you fail, it will be a learning
|
|
experience. If you succeed -- well, I have been faced with the
|
|
occasional surprise over the years. I will warn you, however, that you
|
|
do not currently have the resources to face them.''
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|
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|
I grimaced. Marchford had been one of the richest cities in Callow,
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|
before the rebellion. Before a demon had set camp for a few days over
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the silver mines, filling the streets with disaffected miners and their
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|
families. There was a reason enrolling in the Fifteenth was so popular
|
|
at the moment. With bridge that was the main trade route in and out of
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the hills only just freshly raised after the Silver Spears had torched
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it, trade had yet to pick up. And that wasn't even counting on the
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|
gaping hungry maw that was rebuilding the devastated city. I was
|
|
beginning to regret having told Robber to torch that manor, since I'd
|
|
been supposed to actually live in it.
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|
``Apprentice told me the mines will be purged of contamination within a
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|
few months,'' I said. ``It'll be easier after that.''
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|
``Upon you return to Marchford,'' Malicia said, ``you will be presented
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|
with an offer by the Matron of the High Ridge tribe. It could prove a
|
|
solution to your woes, though you should think long before accepting
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|
it.''
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|
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|
I frowned. High Ridge? Pickler's tribe, that, and the reigning Matron
|
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would be her mother. Ominous.
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|
``Make haste back to your holdings, Catherine,'' the Empress said.
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|
You'll find greater trouble there than you know -- your bastard has been
|
|
surprisingly competent in suppressing rumours.''
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|
The meat-puppet leaned forward, the Dread Empress of Praes looking
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|
through it.
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|
``But above all, do not think for a moment that Heiress being silent
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means she has forgotten you. You might be a legacy, Catherine Foundling,
|
|
but then so is \emph{she}.''
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|
Lady Naibu twitched, then went still. The only sign of life there was
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the steady rise and fall of her chest.
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``It's going to be one of those years, isn't it?'' I sighed.
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