574 lines
26 KiB
TeX
574 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-47-offers}{%
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\chapter{Offers}\label{chapter-47-offers}}
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\epigraph{``Here is the truth of our dreadful crown: to claim it a
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declaration of war on banality, on mediocrity. The banner of the enemy
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is apathy, the slow grind of the inevitable. Victor or ruin, every
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Tyrant that ever lived bet their madness against the bridle of the
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Heavens.''}{Dread Empress Regalia II}
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I wore plate, a suit of it untouched since it had left the Imperial
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forges of Ater. My own had been wrecked by combat, both my power and
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that of my enemies. It would be days before our smiths could make
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anything of it, and Akua Sahelian's envoys awaited me now. The goblin
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steel covered by the red tabard of the Legions had been forged for
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someone of broader build than I, and so the aketon I wore underneath was
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bolstered with more padding. The cloak I that streamed down my back had
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long ceased to be dark, strips of banners sown onto the length by
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Hakram's clever hands. I knew them well, those marks. The Silver Spears,
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the colours of House Talbot and Kendall, and now greater honours still.
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Cloth of wind for the Duke of Violent Squalls, a red tongue of heatless
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flame torn from the Princess of High Noon and now a golden ribbon ripped
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from one of the banners of the Immortals, the Queen of Summer's own. The
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black cloth that still looked like feathers in the right light was
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half-covered, by now, and in time there would be more. The collar of the
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cloak felt tight against my neck, worn in the Praesi style, but I wore
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it regardless. It was a statement. \emph{All these were mighty, once.
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Now I bear them on my back. Think twice, before you take a swing.}
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The envoys Diabolist had sent numbered twelve. Three times that number
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in Legion mages kept them under ward, but I was unconvinced it would be
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enough if they truly wanted to get up to something. My mages were
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hardened veterans, but most they knew of magic had been taught at the
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War College. They were no match for practitioners who'd inherited
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legacies old as the Kingdom of Callow, centuries of tricks and trumps
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that no one outside the Wasteland had more than glimpsed. Into the
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pavilion that lay at the epicentre of the heavy wards, I took only two
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people with me. Aisha, whose knowledge of Wasteland currents I may very
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well need to navigate that conversation, and Hakram. Him I trusted to
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see what I did not, and to keep me from making mistakes. I parted the
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cloth flaps and found only two of Diabolist's people were seated, the
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rest standing patiently behind them. One Taghreb, one Soninke. Both
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women I had never seen before, though that meant little. Akua and I drew
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talent from different pools. I'd inherited ties to the Legions from my
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teacher and links to Named besides, but my nemesis had the highborn of
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Praes at her disposal.
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I had her beat in Named and armies, as far as I was concerned, but in
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most everything else we were either matched or she my better.
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The two who'd been seated when I entered smoothly rose and bowed. I'd
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learned a bit since my first public humiliation at Court, in large part
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because of the very woman at my side, and so I was able to dissect the
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nuances. The angle was lower than that owed to an Imperial Governor, yet
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higher than the one a ruling High Lord would expect. As with most things
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Sahelian, the gestured bordered between compliment and insult.
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``Your Grace,'' the Soninke said in Lower Miezan. ``This humble servant
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is Deka Wolde, \emph{mfuasa} to Wolof since the Declaration. At my side
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stands Samiah of Fatimi, sworn to the Qara.''
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My eyes narrowed at the second name, flicking to the Taghreb. Fatimi was
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the name of the lordship Ratface's father ruled, the Supply Tribune's
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name before he'd taken another at the College having been Hasan Qara. He
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was, I remembered, a member in decent standing of the Truebloods.
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Whether he'd since joined with the Moderates I had no idea, but if he'd
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sent one of his own with Diabolist that seemed doubtful.
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``Lady Sahelian sends strange envoys,'' Aisha drawled in Taghrebi.
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``Blood treats, sand shifts.''
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I forced myself not to raise an eyebrow. I knew what the saying meant,
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more or less. Praesi nobles usually only ever negotiated with other
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nobles, even though ruling lords and ladies rarely met face to face. It
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was a show of good faith to have a relative sitting at the table. When
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the Soninke had caller herself \emph{mfuasa}, it meant she was from one
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of the so-called `servant blood'. Retainer families that, while not
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highborn, had been in the service of a High Lord's line for so long they
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were considered to have higher status than the rest of us peasants.
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Powerful mage lines usually fell into that, since it was always useful
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to have a few spares around to breed some talent into the blood. This
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Deka's family, if she was to be believed, had been in the service of the
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Miezans since the founding of the Empire. Still didn't make her noble,
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though. A statement could be read in that, considering I was now Lady of
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Marchford and a Duchess besides: \emph{the highest of Praesi servants
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stand equal to foreign titles.} Ah, good ol' Akua. She never was one to
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pass a good slight when opportunity knocked.
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``This humble servant offers manifold apologies,'' Deka said, bowing
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again. ``The Lady Diabolist means no slight. It was understood that
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Vicequeen Foundling may not take kindly to one of the true blood.''
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I almost snorted. So Diabolist was worried if she sent an aristocrat all
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she'd get back was the head. Yeah, I could buy that.
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``Sit,'' I said.
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Deka bowed again.
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``This humble servant dares not gainsay you, but must offer the word of
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her mistress,'' she said. ``The Lady Diabolist requests that Lord
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Hierophant attend this conference.''
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``This isn't a place where Akua Sahelian gets to make requests,'' Hakram
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gravelled.
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Another bow. Gods, her back was going to kill her by day's end. Unless
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they'd bred her family for the flexible spines, which horrifying enough
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might actually be the case. You never fucking knew with the Wasteland's
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old blood.
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``It is as you say, Lord Adjutant,'' Deka said.
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I sighed.
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``Aisha, have them send a runner,'' I told my Staff Tribune. ``Make sure
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he knows it's not a suggestion on my part.''
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She nodded and saw to it. If that wasn't clear enough he might ignore
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the summons, and that would just be awkward. The envoys might take issue
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with grabbing a seat before Masego showed up, but I did not in the
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slightest. I took the seat appropriated from Summer a while back and
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leaned back against the cushion. I studied the ten standing in silence
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behind the envoys, now that I had the attention to spare. They were, I
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saw, what the soldiers of the Legions of Terror had been once upon a
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time. The true heart of the old hordes that had battered Callow's gates,
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not the greenskins tossed used to blunt charges and the levies sent to
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die storming walls. Soninke and Taghreb, dressed in ornate mail from
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head to toe that glimmered with sorcery. Their swords would be enchanted
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as well, every city weaving its preferred spells into the steel as they
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were forged. Helmets with curtains of mail on the sides and a descending
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prong of steel covering the nose revealed hard eyes, made to stand out
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by the colourful scarves tied around their necks. My people had fought
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men like these for centuries, until Black had replaced them with the
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legionaries I commanded. They were not to be underestimated, and it was
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their kind that would make up a great deal of Diabolist's host in
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Liesse. They were standing around what looked like a tightly bound
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rectangular package taller than I was, which brought questions
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considering the sorcery I could faintly feel coming from it. My men had
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already investigated and I'd gotten a report saying it was a mirror
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inside, which might mean scrying with Diabolist herself was in the
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cards.
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There were no refreshments on the table, and I did not offer any. Aisha
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seated herself at my left, leaving the other side open for Hakram though
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he stood behind me instead. It was Masego that dropped into the chair,
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when he finally arrived. He looked irritated, though his brow rose in
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interest when he laid glass eyes on the two main envoys.
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``Mages?'' I asked.
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``Above average talents,'' he said. ``The Taghreb in particular. Drake
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blood, is it? I'd heard some families near the Eyries managed to bring
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it into the line.''
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``The compliment honours me greatly, Lord Hierophant,'' Samiah said,
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bowing even lower than she had for me. ``This servant's ancestors knew
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fortunate encounters.''
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``Your ancestors managed not to turn themselves into scaled abominations
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when stealing properties from famously unstable lifeblood,'' Hierophant
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noted. ``That takes skill as well as fortune. I confess curiosity. Is
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your blood thicker than that of a baseborn human? Your heart certainly
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beats slower.''
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``Masego, we don't ask people about their blood thickness at diplomatic
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conferences,'' I sighed. ``Sit, you two. What does Akua want? Last I saw
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her I was one oath away from repeatedly shoving steel in her throat
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until she stopped twitching.''
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The two women bowed as smoothly as they had rise, seating themselves
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across us.
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``An explanation for the mirror would be warranted, before beginning is
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had,'' Aisha said.
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She spoke Lower Miezan, but the cadence of the words was all Taghrebi.
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The way she'd avoided using pronouns was as well. Aisha called it `noble
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dialect', and every major Praesi language had a form of it. It was the
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kind of impersonal double-talk highborn used in negotiations with each
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other, conventions established ages ago that had become unspoken law.
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Formal diplomatic language that Akua had never bothered to use in her
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dealings with me before, or any highborn Praesi I'd met for that matter.
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That I was usually killing or coercing them at the time likely had
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something to do with it. Still, it was interesting she was dusting off
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the manners now. Whatever the envoys were after, Diabolist was willing
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to pretend she was taking me seriously for it. Funny how people suddenly
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became polite after you murdered a demigod.
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``This humble servant brings word from the Lady Diabolist,'' Samiah
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said. ``The tool is meant to provide sympathetic link for scrying.
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Authority to treat in the name of the Lady has not been granted, for the
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Lady would treat directly.''
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``Hierophant?'' I prompted.
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The dark-skinned mage leaned forward in his seat.
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``Wolofite scrying array, the kind the Sahelians kept to themselves,''
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he said. ``A few hidden runes to record sound but-``
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Light trickled between Masego's fingers and a hiss came from the hidden
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mirror, the acrid smell of smoke filling the pavilion.
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``- they has been dealt with,'' he finished. ``There will be no
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surprises. Provincial work, whoever carved these. The pathing spells to
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find double-bind runes have been known for decades.''
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If the envoys were miffed Hierophant had just casually marred what was
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probably an ancient and expensive heirloom belonging to their mistress,
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they showed no sign of it. Unlike Masego I had a decent read on the
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Diabolist, and I knew there was no way she'd have missed the fact that
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with him in the room there would be no sneaking those runes through.
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Odds were it was an old artefact, and he'd just casually burned a chunk
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of it because he disliked the quality. \emph{Either she's showing off
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her wealth and what little she cares of it as a reminder of the
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resources she has at her disposal, or it was the artefact best suited
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for this conversation and she simply didn't care since our talk is
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important enough to warrant the loss. Either way, Akua, your point has
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been received}
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``Proceed,'' I waved nonchalantly.
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The envoys rose and bowed before delicately undoing the bindings around
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the cloth covering the mirror, setting it up so that it faced us to the
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height of a standing person. Fancy. The two women touched a palm to the
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silver surface they'd revealed, sorcery sinking into the metal before
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they stepped away and joined the soldiers. There was a ripple across the
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surface, and then I looked at Diabolist in the flesh. As usual, she'd
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dressed to make an impression. Red and gold, which I'd come to notice
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were favourites of hers, made up the silks of her long and perfectly
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fitted dress. I would have been able to appreciate the sight of that
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perfect hourglass figure and and smooth long legs if the very sight of
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her didn't make me want to reach for my sword. I noticed, after a
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heartbeat, that she was seated on what appeared to be a throne. Some
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gaudy thing of gold and jewels, with arms that ended in the grinning
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faces of devils. I leaned towards Aisha.
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``Isn't it illegal for anyone but the ruling Tyrant to sit on a
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throne?'' I asked.
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``Since the Declaration, yes,'' she replied faintly.
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I snorted, turning my eyes back to Diabolist.
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``Well, apparently you're done fucking around,'' I said. ``There's a
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nice change of pace.''
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Akua's golden eyes studied me emotionlessly.
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``Its is unfortunate,'' she said, ``that someone gave you the impression
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your mannerisms are charming. Deka?''
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``This one feels power comparable in scale to a Prince of Summer,'' the
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Soninke said.
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My hand rose and she began choking as her throat filled with ice,
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clawing at the skin desperately. Aisha stilled at my side. Not a single
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other person in the pavilion moved.
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``Envoys are covered by law,'' I said. ``Spies aren't.''
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Diabolist watched my actions with detached curiosity. \emph{She wrote
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her off before ever sending her}, I realized. \emph{Trading a fresh eye
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on me for a retainer's life.} I lowered my hand.
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``Walk out,'' I said calmly. ``Present yourself to the nearest
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legionary. You are now a prisoner of war.''
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The woman looked to Akua, who inclined her head by the barest fraction.
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``This humble servant thanks you for your mercy, Your Grace,'' Deka
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bowed to me.
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``You're trying my patience,'' I noted calmly, and gave Hakram a glance.
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Understanding passed without need for words. He'd see to it, and led her
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out.
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``It was necessary,'' Diabolist said, ``to understand who I was treating
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with before we began in earnest.''
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I smiled coldly.
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``Where's all that nice flowery noble tongue gone to, Diabolist?'' I
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asked. ``Your people were being so sweet to me before.''
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The Soninke smiled like we were old friends. It never reached the eyes.
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``This noble one will, of course, be glad to offer such courtesy should
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it be returned,'' she said.
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``I'd have to stop cussing if we did, right?'' I asked Aisha.
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She nodded.
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``Carry the fuck on,'' I told Diabolist with a winning smile.
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I was being ornery mostly because I'd rather eat a bowl of knives than
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be civil to the monster on the other side of the mirror, but there was
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another intent behind it. Now and then I managed to get under her skin,
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and that had a way of tripping her up. I'd never managed it before
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outside a death match, but there was no loss to me here even if it
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failed. Flipping the finger to Akua's noble sensibilities was reward in
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and of itself.
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``You appear to have dealt with the fae invasion, Squire,'' Akua said.
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``I offer you congratulations.''
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``I don't think well deep enough in Creation to throw those down that
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would convey how little they mean to me,'' I cheerfully retorted.
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``You have done great service to the Empire,'' Diabolist said,
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unruffled.
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I supposed after actually trying to stab her verbal digs felt a little
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lacking from her side of the equation.
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``You've abducted one of said Empire's cities,'' I said. ``Don't suppose
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you'd care to give it back?''
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``That could be arranged,'' she said. ``My use for the city itself is
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permanent, but the inhabitants could be released.''
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``The two of us had a conversation on the Blessed Isle, once,'' I said.
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``You told me you'd put everyone inside my orphanage to the sword, if I
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didn't renounce my Name. Do you remember what I replied, that night?''
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``That you would make a monument to ruin of me,'' Akua Sahelian said,
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and she sounded almost fond. ``You refused me, naturally. Those,
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however, were forty lives. I hold over a hundred thousand of your
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countrymen in my palm now.''
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``You know that's not how that works,'' I serenely said. ``I let one of
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your pack of vultures pull this on me once then every High Lord will
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threaten to start summoning demons in Callowan cities for leverage.''
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Diabolist cocked her head to the side.
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``When we first met, you would have hesitated,'' she praised. ``I must
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confess I rather enjoy the woman you've become, Catherine. You've been
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scoured of your former impurities.''
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``Spoken like someone I'm going to murder before the year is out,'' I
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said. ``Is this the part where you tell me we're not so different, that
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we could work together? You burned that bridge when you let the demon
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loose, Akua.''
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``A blow meant to cripple you, that you dealt with in a way that
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demonstrated great aptitude,'' Diabolist said. ``Had you not been able
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to weather the likes of it, we would not be speaking.''
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I blinked.
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``You've never actually \emph{admitted} to that before,'' I slowly said.
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``There is a certain satisfaction in discarding the pretence,'' the
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dark-skinned beauty mused. ``You should be aware by now I've never
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seriously attempted to take your life.''
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``You were never aiming to be Black's apprentice, I know,'' I flatly
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said. ``Bit of a jump going from that to us being friendly, considering
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you did try to cripple me several times and are directly responsible for
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the death of both soldiers and innocents under my charge.''
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``The alternative to the posturing would have been standing against the
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Empress prematurely,'' she said. ``We both know the outcome of such a
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trial. It was never personal, Catherine. While I do find you grating,
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you are not without redeeming qualities.''
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Aisha leaned it.
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``She may very well mean what she says,'' the officer murmured. ``While
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her actions are those of a foe by the customs of your people, to a
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Praesi allying with her would not be unthinkable should the rewards be
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sufficient.''
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I watched the Diabolist, that genuinely friendly visage she must have
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spent years perfecting. I was not looking at a person so much as a
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collection of cold ambitions that masqueraded as one.
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``I'm being told you might mean that,'' I said. ``But we understand each
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other, don't we Akua? You know what I think of your Great Game. You know
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better than to think I'm going to link hands with the likes of you, no
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matter what you offer.''
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I heard Adjutant silently return to the pavilion, coming to stand behind
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me.
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``You speak so because you believe I am going to lose,'' Diabolist said.
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``That is not an unreasonable position.''
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``I \emph{know} you're going to lose,'' I said. ``You have a month
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before Liesse has to come down, or you have a hundred thousand rioters
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on your hands. And the moment you're grounded, I'll be leading the
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largest army since the Conquest to take your head.''
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``And so we touch upon the reason I requested the presence of the
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Hierophant,'' she said.
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I glanced at Masego. He didn't react. I elbowed him.
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``Is it over?'' he asked.
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``Pay attention,'' I chided. ``She's got something she wants to say that
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concerns you.''
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He looked dubious, but his face turned to Akua.
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``As the only son of Lord Warlock, I assume you are familiar with what
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the Calamities refer to as the `Dark Day protocol'.''
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Masego frowned.
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``I am,'' he said. ``It's a classification for workings they use. The
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best way to describe them would be \emph{kingdom-killers}. Uncle Amadeus
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has never lifted restriction on their use that I know of, though study
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is another matter.''
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``Twenty years ago,'' Diabolist said, ``Lord Warlock comprehensively
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researched what I believe came to be called the Still Water project.''
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It was distressing the way Masego paused at that.
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``That is under Imperial seal,'' he said. ``Everyone involved was killed
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and their souls bound to prevent necromancy. Uncle said if it ever got
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out we could do that there would be a Crusade mobilized within the
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month.''
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``A trial was run,'' Akua said.
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``In a closed pocket,'' Hierophant said and his voice shook.
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``You\ldots{} You have a ritual that can -- no a ritual would have been
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noticed. You have an \emph{artefact} that allows you to scry other
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dimensions. Gods, the advances that could lead to. The Hells could be
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mapped with this. Arcadia, \emph{we could learn the full boundaries of
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Creation}.''
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I'd never before seen him look hungry, desire twisting his features.
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``It is currently in my possession,'' Diabolist said. ``And could be
|
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made available for your study, should you choose neutrality in the
|
|
coming conflict.''
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Yeah, I wasn't letting that go.
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``It's yours after we kill her,'' I said. ``Hierophant, focus. Still
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Water, what does it mean?''
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``Father was trying to discover if necromantic state could be achieved
|
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almost entirely through alchemy with sorcery as only a trigger,'' Masego
|
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said. ``After consuming sufficient amounts of a reagent humans can be
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turned into undead with a minor ritual, with exponential potential for
|
|
number of affected as relative to expended power.''
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``That sounds like an undead plague,'' I frowned. ``The Empire's used
|
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those on Callow before, they don't work. The House of Light always ends
|
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them in the crib.''
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``It is metamorphosis, Catherine, not a magical disease,'' he said
|
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impatiently. ``Miraculous healing has limits. It can heal a sickness but
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|
not change the natural state of being of a human -- reconnect a cut limb
|
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but not regrow it. The power of the priests would kill the undead, not
|
|
cure them.''
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|
I breathed in sharply. Shit. If there was no cure and all that was
|
|
needed was for people to imbibe the substance, then the only limit on
|
|
that was the amount of reagents the Empire could afford -- and Praes was
|
|
very, very rich. \emph{If they play it quiet enough, half of the
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|
Principate could be a shambling horde before they realize what's
|
|
happening.} And Akua had implied she knew of this.
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|
``The refugees,'' I said. ``The people of Liesse. You fed them the
|
|
substance.''
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|
``Our understanding of the process was incomplete,'' Diabolist conceded.
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|
``It took me several months instead of the theorized one to reach the
|
|
ideal concentration. The process was accelerated when I held the only
|
|
available source of water, of course. As you can see, it is temporary
|
|
for you to have the largest army on the field. That can be remedied in
|
|
the span of an hour should I wish it.''
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|
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|
``I'm not sure I have the words to express how dire the consequences of
|
|
that would be, for you,'' I quietly said.
|
|
|
|
``I would rather not employ these means myself,'' Akua easily said.
|
|
``Yet you now understand I am not in nearly as desperate straits as you
|
|
believed. Which is now I would now make you an offer.''
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|
My fingers clenched until the knuckles turned white.
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|
|
``Would you like to rule Callow?'' the Diabolist asked. ``Truly rule it,
|
|
I mean. Not whatever ramshackle arrangement the Empress promised you.
|
|
You would be queen in truth.''
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|
``Under you,'' I said.
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|
|
``Not a dishonourable state of affairs, as the rest of Calernia would be
|
|
soon to follow,'' she said. ``I do not care, Catherine, for the petty
|
|
duties of running this continent so long as it bows to me. I understand,
|
|
of course, that by the customs of your people I have caused personal
|
|
offence. I would provide gift to even the balance. I am given to
|
|
understand one of your companions, the Legate Nauk, was wounded beyond
|
|
your means to heal. I will return him to fullness of health myself, as a
|
|
gesture of good will. Truly, so long as you limit your ambitions to the
|
|
bounds of Callow is there is no reason the two of us cannot find accord.
|
|
You would find me a most tolerant ruler.''
|
|
|
|
I closed my eyes, sought calm and found only Winter. A frozen landscape
|
|
without end, reflecting the ragged edges of my anger in a sprawling hall
|
|
of mirrors. The air turned cool. The wards around us shivered. \emph{How
|
|
many times am I going to have to betray you, Nauk?} But I had not traded
|
|
him for a boon, and I would not trade him for an empire. Eyes opened,
|
|
and the envoys ahead flinched.
|
|
|
|
``Here is my own offer, Akua Sahelian,'' I said softly. ``Set Liesse
|
|
down. Abandon everything, flee to Ashur and sell what you must to buy
|
|
passage across the Tyrian Sea. If you do that, spare me the horror of
|
|
bringing down everything you've ever built on your head, you'll keep
|
|
your life. This I call fair bargain, and more than you deserve.''
|
|
|
|
``I had hoped,'' Diabolist said, ``that I would not need to break you
|
|
before we came to an arrangement. If you march against me, terms will
|
|
not be offered when next we meet. They will be \emph{given}.''
|
|
|
|
``I give you oath, Diabolist,'' I said and I hardly recognized my voice
|
|
for it was a thing of ice and iron. ``If you do this, there is no place
|
|
in Creation or beyond that will safeguard you from me. Not Heavens or
|
|
Hells, not even if every lord in Arcadia swears to you. The doom I
|
|
promise you will have men trembling in a thousand years when they speak
|
|
of Akua's Folly and the woe that came from it.''
|
|
|
|
The Diabolist smiled tenderly, as if I had confessed my love for her.
|
|
|
|
``Oh, Catherine,'' she murmured. ``I almost regret it, that this ends
|
|
with you kneeling.''
|
|
|
|
Before she'd finished the last word I had flipped the table and crossed
|
|
the pavilion, sword in hand and shoved to the hilt through the mirror.
|
|
Ice spread through it and it broke with a deafening crack, shattering in
|
|
a hundred pieces of shining silver. I did not bother to look at the
|
|
remaining envoy or her escort.
|
|
|
|
``If any of them move,'' I told Adjutant, ``kill them all. I want them
|
|
shackled and in a dark hole before a quarter hour's passed.''
|
|
|
|
He nodded slowly as I strode out of the tent. Hierophant followed,
|
|
panting as he tried to catch up.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine,'' he gasped. ``Wait.''
|
|
|
|
I turned to him, forcing calm.
|
|
|
|
``The array on Liesse,'' Masego said. ``It's too large. The power of the
|
|
entity she bound does not make sense if Still Water is her intent. She
|
|
could achieve it with something a hundredth the size and a dozen
|
|
mages.''
|
|
|
|
I froze.
|
|
|
|
``This isn't it,'' I croaked.
|
|
|
|
Hierophant shook his head.
|
|
|
|
``She has yet to reveal her weapon,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
A city floating in the sky, a god stolen and bound, a hundred thousand
|
|
men turned undead. All of this, and it was only the opening of the
|
|
waltz.
|
|
|
|
It was time, I thought, for hard measures.
|