339 lines
17 KiB
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339 lines
17 KiB
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\hypertarget{warden-i}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Warden I}\label{warden-i}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{warden-i}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Warden I}
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\epigraph{``May you become the weakest link in the Chain of Hunger.''}{Ancient Lycaonese curse}
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Amadeus lightly tapped the mark on the map spread across the table.
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``Aisne,'' he said. ``That's where it'll take place.''
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The room where the Dark Council usually held session was empty save for
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him and Alaya, their most accurate map of the Principate spread across
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the table and cluttered with small figurines representing the armies
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being deployed. The largest concentration was around the city of Aisne,
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seat of the principality of the same name. The largest current alliance
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in Procer was mustering there to meet Cordelia Hasenbach's forces in a
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pitched battle on the flatlands to northwest. Said battle, in his
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estimation, would take place within the month. The Lycaonese under
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Hasenbach didn't have the supplies for a long campaign and the longer
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the war stretched the more vulnerable their borders.
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``Princess Constance had to make that concession for Brabant to swing to
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her side,'' he added. ``Their prince doesn't want whatever army loses to
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turn to banditry on his lands afterwards. There's too many fantassins
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floating around at the moment for anyone to control after the battle.''
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``The Princess of Aisne has three times Hasenbach's numbers,'' Alaya
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noted, sipping a cup of terrible wine in her seat. ``Common military
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doctrine would say she's assured a victory unless she makes a major
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blunder.''
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It always amused Amadeus to hear her speak of `common military
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doctrine'. It wasn't that the Empress wouldn't make a good field
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commander -- she had the right instincts, though she'd need seasoning --
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but rather that Alaya had always left the military matters to him. Most
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of what she knew about war she knew from books, and Praesi ones at that.
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The dark-haired man was of the opinion that over half the books on war
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written in the Empire were worthless when applied to a proper war
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machine. The Legions of Terror as they currently were had little to do
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with the unruly hordes that had been the staple of Praes military
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enterprises for centuries.
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``She has the advantage,'' he conceded. ``But not by as large a margin
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as you'd think. About two thirds of what Aisne and her allies field are
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levies and fantassins, not professional soldiers.''
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``Hasenbach has a much smaller population to draw from,'' Alaya said.
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``She might have more professionals proportionally, but when it comes to
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hard numbers her edge is only a few thousands.''
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``True,'' Amadeus said calmly. ``But she has three factors on her side.
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First, most of her soldiers are Lycaonese.''
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``And so they've seen battle before,'' Alaya frowned.
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``It's more than that,'' the green-eyed man said. ``The force that
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presses at their borders is the Chain of Hunger. Ratlings are weaker
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than humans on average, unless they've had a few decades to grow, and
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they've no true siege weaponry save for the Ancient Ones. What they do
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have, however, is \emph{numbers}.''
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It was a very rare thing for him to have to spell out anything to Alaya,
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and this was no exception.
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``They're used to being outnumbered,'' the Soninke said.
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``And in the fights the get in, retreat is not an option,'' Amadeus
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said. ``They won't flinch when the casualties rise. Princess Constance's
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soldiers will. Wars in the south of Procer just aren't fought the way
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they are up north.''
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The Empress sipped at her drink, mulling it over.
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``The second advantage would be the Augur,'' she said.
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Amadeus nodded.
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``Hasenbach's army will know where and when the enemy will move. She
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showed against Lange exactly how dangerous that can be,'' he said.
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By the time the Lycaonese had moved to siege the city, Prince Dagobert
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effectively had no army. His troops had suffered three ambushes in a
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row, then a series of brutal night raids that butchered his best
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soldiers before they could fight. The Prince of Lyonis turned on him
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immediately and the Princess of Segovia was entertaining envoys from
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Hasenbach in her tent even as the city gates were being breached, her
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army watching passively. With Brus having capitulated within a month of
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the Lycaonese offensive beginning, that had brought four southern
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principalities to Hasenbach's banner and turned that unknown young girl
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from the north into the foremost candidate for the title of First
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Prince. The other rulers of Procer had begun plotting against her before
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the dust from the last battle had settled, of course. The Princess of
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Aequitan, who still had backing from most southern principalities even
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after her repeated defeats, had temporarily joined hands with her hated
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enemy in Aisne. Between the two of them the coalition spanned a massive
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eleven principalities and covered almost as much territory as Praes and
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Callow combined.
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``Which leads me to the third factor,'' Amadeus said. ``Klaus
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Papenheim.''
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``The Prince of Hannoven,'' Alaya murmured. ``Her uncle.''
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``Without contest the best general in Procer,'' the green-eyed man said.
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``In terms of skill I'd rank him below Grem, but he's the most
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experienced living commander on Calernia.''
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A distinction always worth making, considering the existence of the Dead
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King.
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``Hasenbach winning is the worst outcome for us, Maddie,'' Alaya said.
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``She's purged most of our agents out of her sphere of influence, but
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more importantly she's fighting the \emph{right} kind of war. She kills
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princes but spares commoners, her armies don't pillage or burn fields.
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Wherever she goes, she knits Procer back together.''
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While if the coalition led by the Princesses Constance and Aenor won, it
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would immediately collapse into infighting as soon as the larger threat
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was dealt with. Maybe even before. The women detested each other
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personally as well as politically, and with Dagobert of Lange out of the
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running they were itching to have a go at each other with their other
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borders secure.
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``I give her better than half chances of winning at Aisne, as it
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stands,'' Amadeus said. ``I take it you've infiltrated the coalition?''
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``I've applied pressure to keep it together,'' Alaya agreed. ``And I've
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been working on Hasenbach's southern allies. Not all of them are
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steady.''
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``If one of her flanks turns on her in the middle of the battle she's
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done,'' Amadeus noted. ``Not even Papenheim could turn that around when
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outnumbered by this much.''
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Alaya set aside her cup and rose to her feet, running a finger along the
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border between Callow and Procer.
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``As long as the Principate is united, the Empire is threatened,''
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Malicia said. ``Let's make sure it doesn't come to that.''
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---
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Mornings this far south were indolent things, in Klaus' opinion.
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In Hannoven there would be mist and biting cold keeping his men awake,
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but down here the lazy heat of summer was trying to drag them all back
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to sleep. No wonder the Alamans had no stomach for real war. Their land
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was soft and had made them soft in turn. So they'd turned to drinking
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and scheming instead of doing their duty, once more making a fucking
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mess of Procer until the Lycaonese came south to clean up their
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godsdamned mess. It made his blood boil, that this band of shit-eating
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buffoons had somehow managed to wage war for over a decade without one
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of their fat arses somehow managing to claim the throne. Made him want
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to thin the herd a bit so that the next generation would remember that
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if they kept pissing the bed until Klaus' people had to step in there
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would be a price to pay. Cordelia had told him not to, though. Said
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they'd need the Alamans and the Arlesites in years to come and that
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filling a few mass graves with the arrogant twats would burn those
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bridges. Klaus had informed her that the day he needed an Alamans to
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defend the walls of Hannoven was the day he began a hike to Keter, but
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she'd talked him around. Somehow.
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That was the thing with his niece: you start a conversation with her
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knowing the sky was blue and an hour later come out of that room willing
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to start a war over the fact it was green, never able to pinpoint
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exactly \emph{when} she'd convinced you. It just\ldots{} happened. At
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least it worked on other people too. The Prince of Brus had gone from
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being invaded to putting a rapier through a man's belly for implying she
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was not the rightful First Prince in the span of a single month. The boy
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who now ruled Lange was eating out of her palm even after watching his
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own uncle sent to the headsman's block at her orders. Klaus had always
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known Margaret's child was meant for greater things. His sister had been
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a cast-iron bitch that scared the shit out of even the ratlings, but
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she'd always been meant for a soldier's life. She'd died spitting in the
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eye of the Plague, as the line of Papenheim had since times immemorial,
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but she would not have been able to lead the Lycaonese the way her
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daughter did.
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There'd been some who looked down on his niece when she'd been a young
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girl, because she wasn't much of a fighter. Because she cared for
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etiquette, because she corresponded with Alamans princes and dressed in
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skirts instead of mail. All of those were eating their words now,
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watching Cordelia spin the heads of the southerners and beat them at
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their own game. His niece had learned their ways and she was not turning
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them against the arrogant princelings with a cold ruthlessness that
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would have made her mother proud. Not all their allies were so
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impressed, though. Cordelia had two princes firmly in hand, but Luisa of
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Segovia was a wily old fox who'd switch sides the moment she got a
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better offer. \emph{Segovians}, he thought with distaste. They had such
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a hard on for coin they might as well be Ashurans. As for the Prince of
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Lyonis, he knew so little about loyalty he probably wouldn't know how to
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spell the word. That was the one they had to watch for betrayal, when
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the time came.
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Klaus broke off a piece of bread and thoughtfully chewed it, watching
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the field. He was never all that hungry before the killing began, as it
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happened. He broke off another piece and fed it to his horse, who licked
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his palm in appreciation. Ratbiter was getting a little old as well, he
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thought. The days where the destrier dutifully trampled whoever was in
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his way would soon be over. Tossing away the rest of the bread and
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washing away the taste with water, Klaus affectionately slapped the
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animal's neck.
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``We've still got another few in us, don't we old boy?'' the greying
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general said.
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The horse whinnied and the prince smiled grimly. The alliance opposing
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them was getting ready around Lange, but he had no intention of waiting
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until they were ready to strike. Princess Constance was still moving in
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supplies to feed her horde of fuckups and the Augur had told him where
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and when to strike. The general adjusted his helm and unsheathed his
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sword, silently watching the column of horse-drawn carriages lumbering
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north to Aisne. They wouldn't have expected him to move through Salia
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with his cavalry, he knew. Salia, as the future seat of the First
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Prince, had remained neutral so far. Until Cordelia had negotiated
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passage for him. The rest of his army was still crossing the south of
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Brabant, loud and visible and drawing attention. Klaus turned to his
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ranks of horsemen and offered them a wolf's grin.
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``All right, boys and girls,'' he called out. ``It seems fucking
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Dagobert up the arse didn't get our message across. Those two sweet
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princesses are going to need a repeat performance before it sinks in, my
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darlings. So make sure that smoke can be seen all the way from Aisne,
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you hear me?''
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Their call back was deafening. Feeling twenty years younger, Klaus
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Papenheim brought up his shield and \emph{charged}.
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---
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``He'll win,'' the Augur said. ``On all paths, he wins.''
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Cordelia mandated court dress for all her attendants, even the
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Lycaonese, but her distant cousin Agnes was something of an exception.
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Named, after all, lived according to their own rules. Heroes were rare
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in Procer, at best a once in a generation appearance, and they were
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treated with distant awe. By most, at least. Soldiers tended to be
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sceptical of them, given that the Principate had face both heroes and a
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handful of villains in battle and come off the better without any Named
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of its own. There was an institutional contempt for nations like Callow
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who relied on heroes to fight the enemy, and when Praes had successfully
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invaded the country there'd been many who'd shaken their heads and said
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it was an inevitable outcome for a kingdom who relied on the Heavens for
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protection. Which was absurd, in her opinion, since Callow had to deal
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with all-powerful madmen who could burn cities with a single spell while
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the Principate dealt mostly with mundane armies. Regardless, a Named
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like the Augur commanded respect from even seasoned generals.
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It had been illuminating, seeing the change in how people treated her
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cousin. Agnes had been a lonely child and then a lonely girl, thought
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odd by most for her awkwardness and endless enthusiasm for bird
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watching. While never bullied -- she was a Hasenbach, however distant
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from the main line -- she'd been avoided. Cordelia herself had been one
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of the few people to make a point of spending time with her, though they
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never had much in common. They were blood regardless, and so she'd
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always made time for her cousin when her duties allowed. And then one
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day Agnes had casually predicted a ratling raid at dinner,
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absent-mindedly referring to herself as the Augur. Overnight people
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began bowing to her and seeking her advice, to her confusion. She'd
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shied away to the attention and been extremely grateful when Cordelia
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set aside one of the few ornamental gardens in Rhenia for her, spending
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her days sitting in her chair and watching the sky. Always distant,
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Agnes had become almost otherworldly: the cares of Creation passed her
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by, and even when speaking with people she seemed distracted.
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The gifts of the Heavens always came at a cost, Cordelia knew.
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``Does he come back safely?'' the blonde asked.
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Agnes nodded.
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``Hawks to the east, flocking,'' she said.
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Cordelia patted her cousin's hand gently.
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``I do not know what that means, Agnes,'' she said.
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``Oh,'' the Augur blinked owlishly. ``The Empress waits. She has knives
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for you.''
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As expected. Malicia still had a hand to play. That she would be backing
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Aisne and Aequitan was a given, but the Dread Empress of Praes always
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had more than a single scheme at play. She'd be targeting the weak
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points of Cordelia's own alliance, Segovia and Lyonis. The Prince of
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Lyonis was the most openly treacherous of the two, never having
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forgotten that he'd been a contender for the throne when he'd had his
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relatives in Cleves and Hainaut behind him. Princess Luisa, though, was
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where Cordelia thought the betrayal would come from. She had too many
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merchant interests, too many ways for the Empire to reward her changing
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sides. She'd already prepared for the eventuality, placed safeguards to
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remove her from play if she acted. It would have been a relief, she
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thought, if Procerans were all she had to deal with. But that would be a
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naïve expectation: all of Calernia had a vested interest in the outcome
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of this civil war. Praes most of all, for they had engineered it, but
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the other vultures were circling.
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It was only a matter of time until the Dominion of Levant began eyeing
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the exhausted and impoverished principalities of the south. And when
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they began to move, everyone else would. Helike was quiet for now, its
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king kept occupied by gifts of gold and dancers from the Princess of
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Tenerife, but that would not last forever. The Free City had declined in
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influence too much of late, and those were the tell-tale signs of a
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Tyrant rising. The Chain of Hunger had not troubled Lycaonese borders
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overmuch, but eventually the ratlings smell weakness on the walls and
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assault in force. Cordelia had stripped the strength of her people bare
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for the war in the south, knowing the risks it entailed. She could not
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afford a long war, two years at most of which she had already spent
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half. She had to end things in Aisne so her people could return north as
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soon as possible, for if the princesses of Aequitan and Aisne survived
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this blow the fighting could stretch on for years.
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A gamble, then. Cordelia had always disliked those. It felt like making
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light of the lives she was responsible for to risk them imprudently, but
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what else could she do? If she did nothing Procer would collapse. If any
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of the rulers aiming for the throne had any vision at all she could have
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supported them instead of struck out on her own, but as things stood?
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She'd warned them all of who stood behind the Pravus Banks, and still
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they took the gold. Because if they didn't, their rivals might and
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they'd lose an advantage.
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``Do you think it had to be this way, Agnes?'' she asked quietly.
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Her cousin glanced at her, then smiled.
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``There's a lot of people who ask me things, Cordelia,'' she said. ``Do
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you know why you're the only one I always answer?''
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The Prince of Rhenia shook her head.
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``Because you do what you think you need to do, not what you want,'' the
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Augur said. ``That's why you're worth helping, even if it's tedious.''
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Cordelia sat next to her cousin in the morning sun, looking at the sky
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for a long time. Eventually she closed her eyes. She had planned all she
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could, she knew. All she could hope now was that she had, this once,
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planned better than the woman trying to destroy Procer.
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