334 lines
16 KiB
TeX
334 lines
16 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-55-reunion}{%
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\chapter{Reunion}\label{chapter-55-reunion}}
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\epigraph{``The heart of succession is always murder. The new cannot grow
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where the old remains.''}{Theodore Langman, Wizard of the West}
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Four Calamities had gone south, and Scribe with them, but only two
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awaited on the other side of the fairy gate. I'd not expected to see
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Assassin, but looking at Warlock and Black standing side by side my
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heart broke a little. It was the way they stood: slightly apart, as if
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they expected a larger person to be behind and leaning over their
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shoulders. Captain had left a gaping hole behind her in more ways than
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one. Out in the open our greetings were polite, friendly even, but
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distant for all that. None of us were inclined to emotional theatrics in
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front of so many watching eyes. Warlock made himself scarce without
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bothering to explain, hard eyes lingering on me even as his handsome
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face smiled without a speck of sincerity, and my teacher silently led me
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to a tent in the heart of the Fifteenth's camp. Before I even came in
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sight of it I could feel the wards pulsing, a least two dozen woven
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tigether that reeked of coiled and contained violence. Not Masego's
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work, this. There was a depth and sophistication to it Hierophant had
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yet to reach.
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It was where my teacher had been sleeping, I saw with a start. The
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inside was sparse and austere, functional Legion furnishings surrounding
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a standard issue cot. A handful of scrying tools could be glimpsed in a
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corner, glinting softly in magelight, and the short folding table that
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stood to the side was flanked by two rickety stools. The second most
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powerful person in the Empire slept here, and I could have bought
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everything in the tent with a mere month's salary. I'd never been too
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inclined to luxuries myself, but Black took it a step further. The
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tent's flap closed behind us with a quiet swish, leaving the two of us
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standing in the soft sorcerous glow. I was taller than him now, I
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realized. By a little more than an inch. How long had it been, since
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we'd last seen each other? A year, or close. He was still pale in that
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way that was more corpselike than Callowan, all the life in him gathered
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into those eerie green eyes. Named did not get tired the way normal men
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did, did not feel that burden as acutely, but in the lines of his face I
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read something like exhaustion.
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The silence stretched on for a long time, me looking at him and him
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looking at me. If we were different people, I thought, he would be
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embracing me. But that wasn't who we were, so instead his fingers
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fleetingly touched my shoulder, using the excuse of brushing off lint
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that did not exist, and I forced myself not to lean into the touch.
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Those were the lines we lived between, even now.
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``I'm so sorry,'' I said, ``about Sabah.''
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For what couldn't even have been the full span of a heartbeat something
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like raw anguish flickered across the man's face, before it was whisked
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away into the void.
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``So am I,'' he said, and there was something almost tired in his voice.
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``So am I.''
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I couldn't remember moving but found myself on a stool as Black claimed
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his own, watching as he broke the clay seal over a roughly-hewn bottle.
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He poured himself a cup of the red liquor within, and looked askance at
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me. I nodded and was handed cup of my own.
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``Those who leave are met again,'' he said quietly, the words cadenced
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and formulaic. ``Be it Above or Below.''
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Our cups clinked dimly and we downed the drinks. It tasted like wine, I
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thought, if someone had dumped half a bottle of hard liquor in a bad red
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vintage. I kept myself from grimacing.
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``What happened?'' I asked. ``Last I heard the situation south was under
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control.''
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He poured himself another cup.
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``I have grown arrogant,'' he said, and it was not a recrimination so
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much as a statement of fact. ``I was caught up in my own cleverness,
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convinced I understood the nature of the opposition. So blind a nascent
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Name escaped my attention, that I failed to realize I was facing perhaps
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the most dangerous opponent of my long career.''
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``The Wandering Bard,'' I said.
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Almorava of Smyrna, though now she went by a different name and face.
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I'd thought her a nuisance and not a threat, when I'd fought against
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her, a meddler that could help along defeat but never cause it. It
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appeared I'd been very, very wrong about that.
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``You will face her too, in time,'' Black said. ``Do not make the same
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mistakes I did. No matter how powerful the heroes she will align herself
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with, she is the greatest threat among the opposition. If she is not
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contained, she will make you rue that failing.''
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I studied him silently. The Empress had called him a \emph{raw, bare
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nerve}. I'd hoped that she was wrong, but there was a shadow in the man
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across from me that gave me pause. It wasn't the dark spiral of doubt
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and recriminations I knew best, but something\ldots{} colder. As if he'd
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cut away the human parts of him, deemed them useless and to be set aside
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until the current messes could were fixed.
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``It's all right to grieve her,'' I said. ``I do, and I never knew her
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the way you did.''
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The dark-haired man's smile was mirthless.
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``I will grieve her properly when affairs here allow it,'' he said.
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``There will be a funeral in Ater, in a few months. I expect you to be
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there.''
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I nodded slowly. He drank from his cup, fingers steady yet somehow
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fragile.
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``I will have to tell her family,'' he said softly. ``I haven't yet. It
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feels like less than her due to scry her husband for that
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conversation.''
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He closed his eyes, finished his drink and the sliver of vulnerability
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there'd been on his face was gone when the green stare returned.
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``I've been spending the last few days reading reports,'' he said.
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``You've done well here, Catherine. There are few people that could have
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so deftly handled the fae.''
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``The Empress helped me clean up the mess,'' I replied honestly.
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``Couldn't have done it without her.''
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``Another pleasant development,'' he noted. ``I was glad to hear of your
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cooperation. You will need to rely on her in the future, and she on
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you.''
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``You talk,'' I said, ``like you're going to die.''
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He laughed cuttingly, but the edge did not feel like it was directed at
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me. Or at him. It was the laugh of a man who looked up at the Heavens
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with only contempt.
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``Oh there's still a few years left in this hide, if I avoid the right
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mistakes,'' he said. ``There will be dangers in facing Diabolist, to be
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sure, but I am aware of the stories I must sidestep.''
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Gods but I was glad to hear that. Because there was a picture that could
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be painted in Liesse, one that involved my mentor and my rival and the
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bloody succession that had been the way of villains since the First
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Dawn. I wasn't\ldots{} Fuck, I knew Black was a risk. That as long as he
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lived there would always be limits to how far I could push things with
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the Tower. But I wasn't ready for him to die. I wasn't sure that I would
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ever be. It wasn't even just that I felt safer with him, the hazy memory
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of a warm cloak around my shoulders threaded with the bone-deep
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certainty there was not a line he wouldn't cross to keep me alive. I
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worried my lip. It'd been easy to tell Grandmaster Talbot that the
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monster in front of me was the closest thing I'd ever have to a father,
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when he was so very far away. It was harder to do it now that he was
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here with me. It would have been breaking a pane of glass we'd always
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been careful to keep there, even if sometimes our hands pressed against
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that divide close enough to feel the other's warmth. \emph{The hard girl
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with a distant father figure}, I thought mockingly. \emph{When did I
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become such a hackneyed banality?}
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``Be careful,'' I said, voice rough. ``You're still useful to me.''
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Something like a smile quirked his lips and he nodded. I poured myself
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another cup to avoid looking at him even if the liquor had tasted like
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bad decisions, and felt a sliver of gratitude when he changed the
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subject.
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``Diabolist must be dealt with before summer's end,'' he said. ``We had
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a conversation, you and I, while I was in the Free Cities. About changes
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that must be had in the Empire.''
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``I'm not sure the Empress will agree to the kind of changes I want,'' I
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said. ``I've made promises, Black. I thought I had it under control,
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but\ldots{}''
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``In Dread Crowned,'' he said, lips curving around the name of the song
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my legionaries and thousands more had sung. ``A lovely tune. Almost
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lovely enough one cannot hear the clamour for war under the words.''
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``I made a deal with her for the vicequeenship of Callow, like you said
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I should,'' I told him. ``But the Wasteland is \emph{sick}, Black.
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There's centuries of rot set in. We can't build anything that'll last
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without clearing it away first.''
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Because, much as I'd come to like Malicia, I could not help to think
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that our deal would not survive her. That all it took was a knife in the
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back by some ambitious High Lord and the armies would march, because the
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Empress was a creature of pragmatic reason but she was the exception and
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not the rule. If we were to really, truly make this work then the cabals
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of scheming highborn had to go. Or it was just a matter of time until
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another version of the coup in Laure took place, and we'd come too far
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now for that to lead to anything but rebellion. I hadn't forgotten it
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wasn't the Truebloods that'd made a grab for power in the capital, when
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I'd disappeared for a few months. It had been the Empress' own allies,
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supposedly mine as well. To trust men like them was like throwing tea in
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the sea and expecting it to turn brown.
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``And so, summer's end,'' Black said calmly. ``Procer will not begin
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their campaign in autumn, not if it means taking the risk of fighting
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through the winter in foreign lands. We will have until the first pangs
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of spring to do what must be done.''
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The tone had been serene, measured. Cold as the Winter running through
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my veins, and I was not ashamed to admit it scared me.
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``And what exactly is that?'' I asked.
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``Praes,'' he said mildly, ``will be purged. From Court to gutter. I
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will not allow knives to be bared at our back as we prepare for the
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greatest war the Empire has seen in half a millennium.''
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I looked into those pale green eyes and glimpsed the house of steel
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behind them, grinding wheels of steel that knew no pity or pause. There
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had been weight to those words.
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``The Empress has already broken the Truebloods,'' I said. ``Most of
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them call themselves the Moderates now, and the rest is on the run.''
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``Twenty years, I have kept my tongue as Alaya ruled Praes her way,''
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Black said. ``She has done much with that time. Won a civil war without
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ever mustering a single army, and so much more I could never have done
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in her place. \emph{But} \emph{it is not enough}.''
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His fingers clenched.
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``I look west and I see the chosen daughter of the old ways, sitting
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atop a throne of death and sorcery in naked challenge to the Tower,'' he
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hissed. ``I look east and I see the remains of the same fools that
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fought us decades ago, defeated but not yet defanged. Those that kneel
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may be spared, Catherine. There is still use for them. The rest will
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burn, and from those ashes we will fashion an Empire that can turn back
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Hasenbach's crusade.''
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Strange, how fear could make a moment grow crystal-clear.
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``That means going against the Empress,'' I said. ``Is that your
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intention? Rebellion?''
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The cold intensity that had wrought the man's frame went out like a
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smothered candle and he passed a hand through his hair. It was, I
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thought, one of the most human gestures I'd ever seen him make. More
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than his power or his words, the complete control Black held himself
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with had always been what made him feel unearthly. That made it thrice
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I'd seen the control slip tonight. It had my stomach clenching.
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``No,'' Black said. ``Never that. Alaya rules. But she must understand
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that the time for long games is past. Praes now faces an existential
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threat. Compromise is no longer an option.''
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``And what happens to Callow, in that path of no compromise?'' I asked.
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``You have a crown,'' my teacher said. ``Let us dispense with the
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bastard fig leaf that is putting \emph{vice} in front of your title.
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Your people already call you the Black Queen, Catherine. Take Callow in
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hand. Deal out justice and authority as you see fit, so long as the
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kingdom is ready for war.''
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My blood thrummed. I'd heard that title whispered, by legionaries and
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sundry soldiers. I'd been very careful not to claim it though. There
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were implications to it that would undo some very delicate balances that
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had been struck. But if Black was going to break those anyway\ldots{} I
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did not look forward to it, what it would mean to be queen. The tedious
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matters of statecraft, the never-ending petitions and burdens on my
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hours. But who else would I trust to take the throne? I would leave the
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ruling in hands better fit for it than mine. But I would wear the crown
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and command the armies. And when peace was finally bought by enough
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death, I would put down my sword and make ploughshare of it. Find a
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successor that had the talents of peace I so damnably lacked.
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``They won't go quietly,'' I warned him. ``The last of the old breed.
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There will be blood.''
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``They should have been put down like rabid dogs forty years ago,''
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Black said coldly. ``Their mages conscripted into the ranks, the rebel
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holdings confiscated and their treasuries used to raise additional
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legions. For centuries they have hoarded secrets and rituals to use as
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knives in their bids to power. Let those be used on our enemies instead:
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the days were dissent could be tolerated are over. All of Praes will
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fight for the Empire.''
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\emph{And whatever parts of it refuse will be destroyed}, he did not
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say. He did not need to.
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``You want to turn the Empire into a great war machine,'' I said. ``And
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it's a tempting thing, I'll admit. Legions boots over ever smug highborn
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throat. But what happens to it, after the war? If you make a Praes that
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is all forges and army camps, then it's not going to put down the swords
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after we win. It'll start looking for another conquest.''
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I did not mention the possibility that, even after all that, we might
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still lose. There was no point in having that conversation at all\emph{.
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Except I'll have to take precautions}, I thought. \emph{Prepare Callow
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for the possibility, so that it would survive the defeat.} I missed
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Hakram like a godsdamned limb.
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``I imagine I will be dead, by then,'' Black said. ``But Alaya will
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rule, and you will have learned to do the same. The two of you can make
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the Empire what it should be. In this I have no regrets.''
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``Cut out that fucking talk,'' I sharply said. ``You're not dying so
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easily. If you're helping me make this mess, you're helping me clean it
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afterwards. There's too much I don't know, Black. Too many gaps in need
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of filling.''
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He smiled, suddenly, and for the first time I'd seen him today he felt
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as young as he looked. His hand hesitantly extended over the table and
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patted my own before withdrawing. It felt awkward. I wished he'd kept it
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there longer.
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``Do not try to become me,'' he said. ``I was a tool that served a
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purpose, and that purpose is coming to an end. This Empire will outgrow
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me and so will you. To linger beyond that would be to become a crutch,
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and do disservice to us all.''
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``You don't get to quit halfway through,'' I said through gritted teeth.
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I hated that my voice broke just a little.
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``Oh, child,'' he said, almost tenderly, and took my hand in his. ``Do
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not grieve this. You will surpass me, Catherine. I saw that in you the
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moment we first met, that glint in your eyes that was the best of me
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without the worst.''
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``This isn't about surpassing anyone,'' I hoarsely said.
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``It always is,'' he whispered. ``I will gracefully leave the stage,
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when the time comes, and leave it proud of what will come after me. I
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knew this to be the outcome the moment I began.''
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I squeezed his fingers and closed my eyes. \emph{No}, I thought.
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\emph{This is just a story, Black.}
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And I'd already proved I could break those, if I was willing to pay the
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price.
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