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436 lines
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\hypertarget{chapter-22-govern}{%
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\section{Chapter 22: Govern}\label{chapter-22-govern}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``We do not forget.''}
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-- Official motto of the House of Iarsmai
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\end{quote}
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I hadn't set foot in a House of Light since becoming the Squire, though
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to be fair my attendance at the daily sermons had always been shaky.
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This wasn't just any house, though: it was the Alban Cathedral, the
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beating heart of the faith in Callow. There were hundreds of brothers
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and sister here at all times, and Praesi occupation had done nothing to
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change it. The priests, after all, had not taken part directly in the
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fighting for the capital during the Conquest. They'd healed any who went
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through their doors, but none had taken the field. The House of Light
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did not concern themselves with who ruled the land, only the souls of
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the people who lived on it. Or so they liked to say. Some priests were
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more politically-inclined than others: a few of the sermons had been
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very harsh on the subject of Evil and its servants, though they'd always
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refrained from outright preaching rebellion. That was the line Black had
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drawn when conceding freedom of worship in the conquered kingdom.
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The main hall was filled with beds when I entered, though thankfully
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most of them were empty: with the end of the riots, the influx of
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wounded had ceased as well. I left the Gallowborne outside, and for once
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Tribune Farrier did not protest: the idea of being at risk here was as
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absurd for him as it was to me. White-robed priests stirred when I
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strode in, with an older woman coming forward. She did not have any
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marks distinguishing her from the others -- the brothers and sisters had
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no ranks, and seniority did not always mean authority -- but the simple
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fact that she was the one headed for me said it all. She had Deoraithe
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blood, I noted. Too pale to have both parents from the Duchy though. The
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sister bowed.
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``Sermons have been suspended for a sennight, my lady,'' she said.
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``The it's a good thing I'm not here for one,'' I replied. ``Take me to
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the baroness.''
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She smiled with feinted confusion and began to answer, but I cut her off
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with a sharp gesture.
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``I'm Catherine Foundling,'' I said.
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``I am aware, Lady Squire,'' she said.
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``Then you should know deceiving an Imperial dignitary while the city is
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under martial law qualifies as treason,'' I said. ``Don't make that
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mistake. It would get ugly for both us, and I'm not here to hurt her.''
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``The cathedral offers refuge to all,'' she insisted.
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``Look outside, sister,'' I said tiredly. ``There are no refuges left.
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Don't make me ask twice.''
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She looked like she'd bitten into a lemon, but didn't protest again.
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There were catacombs under the cathedral, every child knew, but people
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not sworn to the House of Light were not allowed to set foot in them.
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Most of the Fairfax dynasty was buried there, save for the few whose
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heads were in the Hall of Screams. I hadn't known for sure there were
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rooms other than the graveyard carved out in the foundations, but it was
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easy enough to suspect. They had to keep the food somewhere, not to
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mention the more contagious patients. Baroness Kendal was in one of the
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rooms that served the latter purposed, if I had to guess. I could feel
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power coming from the walls that made me uncomfortable, had the Beast
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raising its hackles underneath my skin. The whole cathedral was full of
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it, but it was particularly pure down here. I wasn't surprised,
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considering I could be more than twenty feet away from consecrated
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grounds. The sister knocked at the door and the baroness herself opened
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it, her arm in a sling.
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``Lady Catherine,'' she said, blinking in surprise.
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I looked at the priestess.
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``You may go,'' I said, and it wasn't a suggestion.
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She didn't enjoy that, but I didn't particularly care. I turned to Anne
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Kendal, taking in the sight of her. She was still pale, and not in the
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pretty way she usually was -- it was the pale of someone who'd bled too
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much, not the ivory of good breeding.
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``May I come in?'' I asked.
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``By all means,'' she replied, moving out of the way.
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The room wasn't much to look at. A cot and a small table covered with
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fresh linens. A water basin in the corner, and an open book on the bed:
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something religious, by the looks of it. The baroness closed the door
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behind me.
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``I'd invite you to sit down,'' the baroness said, ``but I seem to be
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short on furniture.''
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``I don't intend to stay long,'' I half-smiled. ``You should sit,
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though. You still look like you're recovering.''
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``The assassins punctured by lung and cut into my spine,'' she admitted.
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``Even the touch of the Heavens has been slow in working.''
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\emph{Gods}. I hadn't thought her wounds had been that bad. No wonder
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people thought she was dead. And I'd probably let the people who'd done
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it go not a bell ago. The taste of self-disgust was thick on my tongue.
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``I was aware of the risks when I accepted your offer,'' Kendal
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reassured me, misinterpreting the look on my face. ``Praesi play for
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keeps.''
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``Don't they just,'' I muttered.
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So did I, these days. I had a fresh batch of corpses in the city to
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prove it.
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``I'd heard the Fifteenth had arrived, but I hardly believed it,'' the
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baroness, smoothing a silver curl back as she sat on the bed. ``They'd
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have had to leave months ago.''
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``We went through Arcadia,'' I said.
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She stared at me like I'd just grown another head.
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``That's\ldots{} possible?'' she said.
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``If you're a Duchess of Winter,'' I replied.
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She looked genuinely unsure what to say at that. I forgot, now and then,
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that the kind of eldritch places I went and the many different creatures
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that tried to kill me in them were just legends to most people. Stories
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they never expected to see take flesh. I'd lost those kind of
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certainties: if it could be real it was and it was probably after my
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head for some godforsaken reason.
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``Will you be using that as your title?'' she finally asked, which she
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probably felt was relatively safe grounds.
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``I'm leaving that up in the air until I've had a chat with Her Dread
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Majesty,'' I said. ``I don't suppose the priests carried word of what
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happened today?''
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She shook her head.
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``They say isolation from the worries of Creation will allow me to heal
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quicker,'' she said.
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``Ruling Council's dissolved,'' I said. ``I stormed the palace last
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night and had Murad and Satang publicly crucified just before Noon
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Bell.''
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``Gods save us all,'' she whispered, closing her eyes. ``It is ill-bred
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of me to say as much, but they deserved to die. Not this painfully, but
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they did.''
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``My legionaries will put them out of the misery after sundown,'' I
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shrugged. ``Point will have been made by then.''
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That was as much pity as I was willing to expend for those two. I only
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had so much to spare, and there were many souls more deserving of it.
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``If I may ask, who rules Callow then?'' Kendal asked, eyes fluttering
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open.
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``I do,'' I said. ``But I'm going off to war for Gods know how long.
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Congratulations, Baroness Kendal: you've just been appointed
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Governess-General of Callow.''
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She eyed me carefully.
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``There is no such thing,'' she said. ``And if there was, the Empress
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would frown upon it.''
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``The Empress will have to cope,'' I said. ``And I'll have to give her
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something for it, I'm sure. No doubt she'll have her price ready when we
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speak.''
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``I suppose I should thank you for the privilege,'' she finally said.
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``Don't thank me,'' I said. ``I want you to turn this country into
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something functional while I go off to kill the people burning it down.
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I'll leave you my seal -- that gives you authority over everyone in
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Callow who's not in the Legions.''
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``The city must be in shambles,'' the baroness sighed.
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``Heal quickly, Anne Kendal,'' I said. ``Your home needs you, and so do
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I.''
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---
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In the end, it took two more days before Laure was settled. The
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appointment of the Governess-General was met with enthusiasm by the city
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-- she was well-known there and better liked -- and quiet distaste by
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the legionaries of the Fifth. None of them had forgotten that she'd once
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been the Baroness Dormer and one of the foremost nobles of the Liesse
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Rebellion. That she had been made the highest-ranking person in Callow
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after myself was a bitter bill to swallow. They'd just have to deal with
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it: I didn't have anyone else remotely as competent and trustworthy at
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my disposal. That made for one fire mostly put out, so on to the next:
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the Deoraithe. I'd used the Fifth's mages to scry Marshal Ranker and
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inform her I would be headed for Denier immediately, though I couldn't
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give her a clear date of arrival. It was a good thing I didn't even try
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an estimate, because this time travelling was\ldots{} difficult.
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What I took my soldiers through did not look like Winter. Or Summer, for
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that matter. Unless I was mistaken we'd marched through the borderlands
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between both. It had been deserted on Winter's side, but on the last few
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days of the journey we'd begun so see larger and larger patrols from
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Summer gathering in the distance. It took us a week, in the end. Still
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shorter than it would have taken us through Creation, but inexplicably
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longer than it took us to get to Laure from Machford. There did not seem
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to be any rhyme or reason to the time spent in Arcadia, and my control
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on it was erratic. I'd barely needed to do anything the first way
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through, but on this one not getting stuck for months had been a
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constant struggle. I did not believe our third way through would go
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uncontested.
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The gate opened a full day south of Denier, since I'd never been in the
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city itself. I allowed my legionaries a bell to recover on these
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less-treacherous grounds before beginning the march anew. My two and and
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half thousand men came in sight of the city's walls on the evening of
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the following day, though the Marshal's scouts found us long before
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that. I didn't bother to meet them in person -- Nauk served as a
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go-between while I spoke with Hakram. When it came to Legion gossip,
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Adjutant was without equals.
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``So,'' I said as Zombie trotted at his side. ``Fourth Legion.''
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The tall orc shot me an amused look.
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``Cognomen \emph{Blackhands},'' he said.
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``I already knew that part,'' I complained. ``Everybody knows that.''
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``They don't usually know where it's from,'' Hakram gravelled. ``Ranker
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was the Matron of the Hungry Dog tribe, before she took up with Lord
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Black. She took all goblins of age with her into war and sent the
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children to half a dozen other tribes.''
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I whistled, reluctantly impressed.
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``That's a hell of a bet to make,'' I said. ``He was still an up and
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comer back then, and the Empress a relative unknown. Still doesn't tell
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me where that cognomen is from.''
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``Hungry Dog tribe had a ritual, when time came to choose their
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matron,'' Adjutant said. ``All the candidates put their hand in a
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brazier -- the one who kept it the longest got to rule.''
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``High pain tolerance doesn't mean good leadership,'' I grunted.
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``It's about who was willing to suffer the most to get it,'' the orc
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said. ``I can respect that. Ranker kept her hand in there for half a
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day, long after everybody else had abandoned. Her left hand's a
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blackened ruin, and she's refused any healing ever since.''
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``And they named an entire legion after that?'' I frowned.
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``Officers in the Fourth kept the tradition,'' Hakram said. ``Even those
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not goblins. Most of them take healing afterwards, but everybody has to
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be willing to burn for power.''
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``That feels like it should be against regulations,'' I said, then
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glanced at him. ``\ldots{} is it?''
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The thing with being Named was that rules only applied to you if you
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allowed them to. For example, my relationship with Kilian was
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technically breaking a rule about fraternization -- she was under me in
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the chain of command. I'd learned the most important of the regs, but
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some of the smaller ones I'd, uh, only skimmed. In my defence, there
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were a \emph{lot}.
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``It's skirting the line about voluntary injuries,'' the orc replied.
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``That can qualify as desertion, if you're not careful. But the
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Marshal's been with the Carrion Lord since the beginning. Those that
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were get to run their legion however they want.''
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A woman used to getting her own way, then, and one of the three
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highest-ranked military officers in the Empire to boot. I narrowed my
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eyes, thinking back to an old Name dream of mine -- she'd been with Grem
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One-Eye and Istrid during the civil war. That'd been what, thirty years
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ago? And she'd already been a matron candidate before that. I wasn't
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clear how old you had to be for that, but at least ten years old felt
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like a safe bet. Considering it was rare for a goblin to make it past
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thirty-five, that Ranker was at \emph{least} forty was notable.
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``How old is she?'' I asked.
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``Near sixty,'' Hakram said. ``And no, nobody knows how she made it that
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old. Most common guess is that Lord Black had rituals done to extend her
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lifespan.''
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``He doesn't like using blood magic,'' I frowned, as there was no real
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question about what kind of a ritual could be used for such a purpose.
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``He would have needed a very good reason.''
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``She's the most powerful goblin in the Empire, bar none,'' Adjutant
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said. ``And she's a vocal advocate for the Tribes being involved with
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the Legions. Pickler says a lot of the Matrons were in favour of going
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isolationist after the civil war.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``They made a lot of gains when Malicia won the throne,'' I pointed out.
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``Breeding restrictions were lifted and they pretty much run the
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Imperial Forges.''
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That part hadn't been taught in the histories back at the orphanage, but
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it had been in the pile of books Black had dropped into my lap when I
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first became the Squire. I'd taken me a few years to understand that
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those were meant in part to be a primer to Imperial politics -- by
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learning how all the major players had gotten where they were, I could
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get a read on what they wanted. Before the civil war the High Lords of
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Foramen had owned all the forges in the city, though they'd used goblins
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as labour. Malicia had given ownership to the Tribes and only allowed
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High Lady Banu to take a cut from the proceeds. A significant one, but
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it'd been a sizeable blow to her power base. I'd not been surprised to
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learn that she was part of the Truebloods.
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``They've always had a bend that way,'' Hakram shrugged. ``And no one
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gets involved with the Tower for long without getting burned. I can
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understand wanting to take their win and go home.''
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I hummed.
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``So she's a key player, then,'' I said. ``If she goes, the Matrons
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she'd keeping in check get bolder.''
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``She's not someone you can bully, Cat,'' he warned. ``She's run Denier
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for twenty years and the Fourth is rabidly loyal. Get on her bad side
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and even \emph{our} goblins will get restless. She's to the Tribes what
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One-Eye is to the Clans.''
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The looming figure of an era, he meant. Even Juniper got star struck
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when she spoke about Marshal Grem, and she was not a girl who impressed
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easy. I allowed the conversation to ebb as I considered what was ahead
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of us. Duchess Kegan who'd raised her army of twenty thousand was only
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half the problem I had to deal with. I knew what the Deoraithe wanted,
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and our shared enemy was common ground enough I was more or less
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confident I could point her in the right direction. The question was
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whether I could make Marshal Ranker buy into the notion. Marshals
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weren't just the Imperial officers with the authority to command several
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legions: they had a broader responsibility put on them.
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One-Eye was charged with securing the border with the Principate,
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Marshal Nim with keeping peace in the Wasteland. Ranker was meant to
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keep the Duchy of Daoine in check, positioned near the best crossing of
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the Silver Lake's tributary to slow the Deoraithe down if they rebelled.
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I had, theoretically, the authority to give her orders. But her
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responsibility to keep an eye on Daoine came straight from the Tower,
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and that meant gave Ranker at lot of leeway. Malicia's orders came
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before anyone else's, no matter the circumstances. I remained silent all
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the way to the city, but no solution presented itself.
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---
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Denier was a sleepy little city, about the size of Summerholm but
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nowhere as heavily fortified. It had rarely ever seen fighting: whenever
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the Empire had bypassed Summerholm and crossed the Hwaerte, they tended
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to go straight from Laure. The city had been stormed during the
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Conquest, but it had surrendered after a token resistance -- it was in
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no way capable of resisting the likes of what Praesi sappers could
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unleash. Its only real military importance came from the fact that it
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stood near the easiest crossing into Daoine. Higher up the river the
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harsh currents made navigation tricky and the making of a pontoon bridge
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nigh impossible. The waters west of the city were almost lazy in
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comparison and full of large mud banks. There was no bridge into the
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Duchy, of course. That no such thing would be built without the sanction
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of the Dukes and Duchess of Daoine had been one of the conditions
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written into the treaty that saw Daoine folded into Callow after the
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First Crusade. No Fairfax had ever dared to go back on that word, even
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when the northerners flouted the authority of the throne.
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The greatest general in Callowan history, Elizabeth Alban, had famously
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attempted to invade the then-Kingdom of Daoine. By the the Queen of
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Blades had already proven her ability by occupying three principalities
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of what was not yet the Principate, crushing a Liessen rebellion and
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turning back a Praesi invasion. The expectation had been that, within a
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few months, the Deoraithe would be made subjects of Callow. Instead
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she'd had to slog through the countryside for two long years, losing
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thousands to ambushes and night attacks while her supply trains
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disappeared. Historians usually noted that given another year she might
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have won anyway by forcing a decisive battle at the capital of Daoine,
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but the invasion had collapsed when the Praesi had crossed the border
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again under Dread Empress Regalia. After the Wastelanders were defeated
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and the Empress killed as her flying fortress crashed into Laure, the
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Queen of Blades had begun planning a second invasion.
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So the Watch had murdered her in her bed, in her own seat of power.
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No ruler of Callow had ever forgotten that pointed warning. Had half the
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population of Daoine not been wiped out by Dread Empress Triumphant when
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she took the continent, the Duchy might very well be a sovereign nation
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to this day. A combination of worries about Praesi resurgence even after
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Triumphant died and Eleanor Fairfax's deft diplomacy -- helped along by
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her famous `friendship' with the Queen of Daoine -- had seen the kingdom
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made a duchy, though one so removed from the authority of the throne it
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was effectively a vassal state instead of truly a part of Callow. That
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state of affairs had been maintained after the Conquest, with regular
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tributes and fixed war time obligations being signed over to the Tower
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by treaty. My short-lived Ruling Council had changed nothing in that
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regard: Duchess Kegan's envoy had flatly refused any notion that they
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were subject to its authority and I'd recognized that as a fight I
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couldn't win. And wasn't even sure I wanted to, to be honest. Daoine had
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always gotten on just fine on its own. \emph{Don't fix it if it ain't
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broke.}
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The gates were open for us when my soldiers finally made it to Denier,
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ranks of legionaries atop the walls watching us. I rode in at a brisk
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pace, and only reined in my horse when a Taghreb with the markings of
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Staff Tribune headed in my direction with two lines for escort. I
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quietly ordered the Gallowborne to allow them passage, though Farrier
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saw to it they immediately surrounded the legionaries of the Fourth when
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they got lose.
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``Lady Squire,'' the olive-skinned man greeted me, sharply saluting.
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``Staff Tribune,'' I replied. ``You look like a man carrying a
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message.''
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``Marshal Ranker asks that you attend to her immediately, ma'am,'' he
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said.
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I cocked my head to the side.
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``My men are not yet settled,'' I said.
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``I would handle this myself, my lady,'' he said. ``The Marshal would
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like you to that within a bell Duchess Kegan will be crossing the river
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with a party to treat with us. If you're to be part of the conference,
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you will need to be briefed.''
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I smiled at the Taghreb, cursing viciously inside. Well, there went my
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plan to work on Ranker for a day or two before talking with the
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Deoraithe. One of these days, I was going to force Fate into a physical
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manifestation and then I was going to \emph{stab} it.
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