286 lines
14 KiB
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286 lines
14 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{crowned}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Crowned}\label{crowned}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{crowned}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Crowned}
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\epigraph{``That slip of a girl from Rhenia is playing ruler, coming south
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with her pretty little army. I'll have driven her out of Brus by winter,
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then we can turn our attentions to real threats like the Princess of
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Aisne.''}{Extract from the correspondence of Prince Dagobert of Lange, dated
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four months before the fall of Lange}
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Routine was something Cordelia embraced.
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There were only so many hours in a day, to her regret, which made it
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important to regiment them so she could get the most out of what she
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had. Rising with dawn, she broke her fast with her closest advisors and
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took measure of any difficulties they might have encountered. Afterwards
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she walked the length of the fortress-city's ramparts, allowing the
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brisk morning air to finish waking her as she paused to talk with
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soldiers. It was important, particularly in Lycaonese lands, to have the
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love of the army. The principality of Rhenia as she'd inherited it was
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more an army with a land than a land with an army, every institution in
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it shaped so that they could support country-wide mobilization at any
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moment. It had been decades since the Chain of Hunger had crossed the
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Three Rivers in numbers larger than a few hundreds, but her people had
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long memories: there'd been a time where every spring had thousands of
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hungry ratlings throwing themselves at the walls. Those days would come
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again, she knew as every Hasenbach before her had known deep in their
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bones. And when they did, her principality would be prepared.
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For all that, in the two years since she'd become the Prince of Rhenia
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she had attempted to broaden the horizons of her people. While Lycaonese
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soldiers fought and died to keep the rest of Procer pristine, southern
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princes feasted and grew rich while sneering at the coarseness of the
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very soldiery saving them from the perils of the north. Their lands were
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fertile, compared to the rocky northern fields, and the numbers of
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southerners had been swelling for generations. Until recently, anyway.
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Since the First Prince had died, the rest of the Principate had taken to
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devouring itself with ugly zeal. The reforms Cordelia had dreamed of as
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a child, of tying the Lycaonese principalities together through common
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trade laws and the absence of borders, had been burnt up by the fires of
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civil war. None of the northern rulers were interested in implementing
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economic or diplomatic reforms when there might be an Alamans army at
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their doorstep demanding submission any day. Clearly, any progress to be
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made would have to wait until a First Prince of Princess was elected.
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Or so Cordelia had thought when she was still a child of ten, her mother
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serving as her regent after a ratling raid took her father's life.
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Margaret Hasenbach, once Margaret Papenheim, had never been entirely
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comfortable ruling the principality. She'd been a field commander for
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her brother in Hannoven until her marriage and had always balked at
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having to rule Rhenia when others did the fighting for her. Cordelia had
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begun taking on responsibilities as seneschal of the keep by age twelve,
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and by age thirteen effectively ran the fortress and its dependencies
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while Margaret Ironhand rooted out the ratling nests infesting the
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mountains. She'd died when Cordelia was fourteen, not by the blades of
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her enemies but by the affliction known as the bloodless heart. Priests
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could not heal what had been born weak: they could soothe the pains of
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the children of the Heavens, but not reverse what the Gods Above had
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wrought. Cordelia's uncle, the Prince of Hannoven, had served as her
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regent for the last year before she came of age but he'd never presumed
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to contradict her in anything.
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Uncle Klaus, a childless widower who'd flatly refused to remarry after
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the death of his deeply -loved wife, had always treated her more as a
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daughter than a niece. He'd gone as far as naming her his heir
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presumptive above any of the branch Papenheims, a decision that had
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caused some unrest when made official. Even now he was in Rhenia as
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often as Hannoven, the most trusted of all her councillors. She'd not
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been shy in leveraging her uncle's fame as a military commander when
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forging the four Lyaonese principalities into a single united front, one
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that would give pause to any southern prince who would command the
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allegiance of any single Lycaonese ruler by force of arms. In some ways
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the reforms she'd sought as a youth had come to pass: in her
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correspondence she now spoke not only for Rhenia and Hannoven but also
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for Bremen and Neustria, an alliance the match of any of those setting
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the rest of the Principate aflame. And yet the Alamans and Arlesite
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rulers she wrote to insisted on treating her as an idiot child, to be
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deceived into supporting them by honeyed words and empty promises.
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Cordelia Hasenbach was nineteen and well-bred, so she did not throw
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tantrums, but some of the letters she received made her wish she could
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choke the southerners the same way her mother had famously done to a
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ratling warlord. Correspondences, as it happened, was what occupied her
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time for half a bell after touring the fortress walls. On this
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particular morning she chose to read her missives in the squat hall
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overlooking the training yard, allowing the sound of drilling recruits
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to wash over her. A single cup of watered-down wine stood by the sheaths
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of parchment covering her table, sparsely indulged in. Uncle Klaus was
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`keeping her company' as she worked, which meant he was resting his
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elbows on the balustrade, on his third skin of mead and regularly
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heckling the recruits below. Decorum was rarely a skill Lycaonese rulers
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prized, to her despair. Cordelia put down the letter she'd been reading
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and reached for the wine, allowing herself a fuller sip than usual.
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A shame she despised the sensation of being drunk. After that letter, it
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felt almost warranted.
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``Your father got that same look on his face, whenever people wanted him
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to arbitrate farming disputes,'' Uncle Klaus said, laughter in his eyes.
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The Prince of Rhenia put down her cup gingerly, touching her pristine
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lips with a cloth as etiquette dictated when a highborn lady drank
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spirits.
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``Not an inapt metaphor, considering the pettiness of what was put to
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ink,'' she admitted.
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Klaus snorted, fingers coming up to put a semblance of order to his
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salt-and-pepper beard. It was getting shaggy, Cordelia noted. She'd have
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to arrange for a barber to attend him tonight, one that would not be
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cowed by her uncle's ferocious scowling.
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``You're still talking to those idiots down south?'' he said. ``I don't
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know where you got that patience of yours from, because it's certainly
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not your mother.''
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``One of those southern princes is likely to rule Procer in the years to
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come,'' Cordelia said. ``Cultivating a civil relationship before the
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ascension can only be to our benefit.''
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The older man chuckled, dropping down on the seat across from her and
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bringing the skin of mead to his mouth to pull at it.
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``And how \emph{is} that civility going?'' he asked.
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Well-bred ladies did not scowl, Cordelia told herself. They were not,
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however, above having a man's favourite fur coverlet disappeared and
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replaced with a fancy velour one. She'd even see to it it was
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embroidered in the Arlesite way, with fragments of courtly poetry and
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scenes of duels fought for praise and honour.
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``Cleves and Hainaut pledge neutrality in all fights to come,'' she
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said. ``If they take any more losses they will no longer be able to
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effectively watch over the Tomb.''
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``They never should have sent men south,'' Uncle Klaus growled. ``Just
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because the Dead King's being quiet doesn't mean he's not watching. They
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have a \emph{duty}, like we do.''
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Cordelia rather thought he uncle was doing those particular princes
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injustice, but she did not comment. The principalities of Cleves and
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Hainaut formed, with Rhenia and Hannoven, what should be considered
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Procer's most vital line of defence. If the Kingdom of the Dead began
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looking outwards again, they would be the ones charged with holding the
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line until southern armies could be mustered. The fair-haired Prince of
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Rhenia agreed with her uncle that above all those rulers should look to
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seeing their walls fully manned, but these were ultimately Alamans
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princes. They were more involved in the Ebb and the Flow than
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northerners, bound by the intricate webs of alliance that spanned the
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centre of the Principate. Neutrality from the onset would have been
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difficult for them to maintain, with their cousins and nephews taking up
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arms so close to their own borders.
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``Those pledges are the only pleasant news this day has brought,''
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Cordelia said. ``The rest is\ldots{} unpromising.''
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``Aequitan and their allies got whipped all the way out of Creusens,''
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Klaus frowned. ``That should knock them out of the war. With his back
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secure, Lange will go after Aisne -- the winner of that tussle will get
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the crown, by my reckoning.''
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``Princess Aenor of Aequitan raised another army as of the last
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fortnight,'' the fair-haired prince said. ``Levies armed with dwarven
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weapons. They will resume their offensive as soon as they have gathered
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in sufficient numbers.''
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The Prince of Hannoven scowled.
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``That's the third host she wrecked on the field,'' he said. ``Who'd be
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fool enough to lend her the coin for a fourth?''
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``The Pravus Bank,'' Cordelia replied quietly.
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Fury flickered across the older man's face until he mastered it.
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``You \emph{told} them it's Praesi gold, Cordelia,'' he hissed. ``This
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flirts with godsdamned treason.''
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It had taken her years, to ferret out that it was the Tower pouring gold
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into the defeated princes of Procer. Years and the help of her cousin,
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become the Augur by the grace of the Heavens. She'd related that truth
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to every ruler in Procer within the month after she'd acquired solid
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proof, to warn them from allowing the Dread Empress to continue fanning
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the flames of civil war. To no avail. The still took loans, still raised
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armies with them, and after near two decades of strife hatreds now ran
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so deep princes would rather be up to their neck in Praesi debt rather
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than allow their rivals to triumph. It was madness, the worst kind of
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madness. The first fluctuating alliances had eventually turned into a
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handful of steady blocs that bloodied each other on the field every
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summer without ever coming closer to the crown, ruining the very
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Principate they wanted to rule. Fields were going fallow, trade was
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effectively dead and rulers spent peasants like coin. The sheer
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disregard princes where showing to the men and women they were supposed
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to rule disgusted her deeply.
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``They will not listen, Uncle Klaus,'' she said tiredly. ``They do not
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care anymore. Dagobert of Lange demands we raise our armies and support
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his claim, or suffer brutal taxes under his reign. Constance of Aisne
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offers to recognize me as overlord of all Lycaonese if I assault
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Dagobert's back, as if this sort of splintering would not effectively
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dismantle the Principate.''
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``So let them mutilate each other,'' Klaus said. ``They don't
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\emph{deserve} our help.''
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Cordelia allowed herself to sigh. This kind of thinking, she knew, was
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common among Lycaonese. Let the southerners kill each other, what did
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the people of the mountains care for it? It would also be the death of
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the greatest nation Calernia had ever seen. A brutal but swift civil war
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would not have allowed for entire regions of the Principate to grow to
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despise each other. This drawn-out farce, however? As of this moment,
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Procer was effectively divided between four or five kingdoms that would
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rather see their cities burn than allow one of the others to rule over
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them. Another decade of this and it would be the end of the Principate.
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The fracture lines were already visible and growing deeper by the year.
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``We have a duty, Uncle,'' Cordelia said.
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``To fucking Dagobert of Lange?'' Klaus laughed. ``I wouldn't toss the
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bastard a copper if he was begging on the street. We owe that man
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\emph{nothing}.''
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``Think beyond our borders,'' the blonde woman said. ``Think of what it
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\emph{means}, if Procer splinters.''
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``It means we don't send coin south ever again to men who've never seen
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the Grave,'' the Prince of Hannoven said coldly. ``It means green boys
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who've never fought a ratling don't get to feast away spring while my
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people die for their sake.''
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``Levant will gobble up at least Orense,'' Cordelia assessed clinically.
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``Likely Segovia as well. Tenerife will become either one of the Free
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Cities or a dependency of Helike. The Dread Empire will take Bayeux and
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Orne before a decade has passed.''
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``And why is that our business?'' Klaus grunted.
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``When the Dead King rouses his armies and crosses the lakes,'' Cordelia
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said quietly, ``\emph{who stands with us}?''
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She met her uncle's eyes.
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``When the Chain of Hunger gathers the might for an invasion, who
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bolsters our strength?'' she said.
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``We've held them back since before there was a Principate,'' her uncle
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replied.
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``We turned them a way as a nation that spreads from here to Valencis,''
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Cordelia said. ``That is why Procer exists, Uncle. Because Triumphant
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slaughtered so many of us we had to band together as a nation or see
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ourselves devoured by our neighbours.''
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``So now you want us to bleed for some princeling in silk,'' Klaus said
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bitterly. ``That's always the way, isn't it? The south makes a mess and
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we foot the bill.''
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There was a truth in that, and for all that Cordelia had eschewed many
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of her people's customs she was not beyond feeling that bitterness
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herself. Was she to entrust the fate of her people to a grasping idiot
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like the Prince of Lange? To the Princess of Aequitan, who would rather
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take Praesi gold than bow her head for the sake of the Principate?
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``No,'' she said. ``Not this time.''
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``Cordelia?'' her uncle said.
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Cordelia Hasenbach felt serenity take hold of her, for the first time in
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years. Her path was clear, finally. \emph{If no one else, then I.}
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``Send messengers,'' she ordered. ``To every tower, every hold, every
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fortress. We gather for war. Anyone we can afford to take from the
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defences comes with us.''
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The greying man frowned.
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``And who do we fight for?''
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``The First Prince of Procer,'' she said. ``Cordelia Hasenbach, first of
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her name.''
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Gods save them all, but she would salvage a nation out of this madness.
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No matter the cost.
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