425 lines
23 KiB
TeX
425 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{villainous-interlude-decorum}{%
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\section{Villainous Interlude:
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Decorum}\label{villainous-interlude-decorum}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Morality is a force, not a law. Deviating from it has costs and
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benefits both -- a ruler should weigh those when making a decision, and
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ignore the delusion of any position being inherently superior.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Benevolent
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\end{quote}
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Two years at most: that was how long Amadeus had to live.
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Maybe only a year, if he blundered badly enough. He'd walked away from
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his meeting with the Tyrant of Helike knowing this, and was still
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exploring the implications. When no pattern of three had formed with the
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White Knight after their confrontation in Delos, Black had found several
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implications. The first was that the scope of that hero's story was
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narrower than he'd thought: it extended only to the civil war in the
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Free Cities, and as an outsider to that narrative Amadeus did not have
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the \emph{weight} required to qualify as a rival. That possibility had
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been a factor in why he'd cautiously called a retreat even though the
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Calamities had, arguably, been winning. If they were mere
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side-characters in that conflict, the most likely pattern for them was
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to be victorious early then brutally crushed after the heroes improved
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their power. A whetting stone for the blades of the Gods Above,
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essentially. By removing himself early he would not have allowed the
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pattern to truly form. And yet, the premise was flawed.
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The White Knight, Scribe had informed him, was not of the Free Cities.
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He was Ashuran, somewhat surprising given his dark skin. A little
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digging had allowed his spymistress to find out the man's mother had
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been a Soninke exile, eventually executed because of one of the
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labyrinthine laws that governed the citizenship tiers of the
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Thalassocracy. The White Knight's reason to be involved, then was not
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`right of birth'. The two sisters that were part of his heroic band were
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themselves from the Free Cities, but neither the House of Light the
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Ashen Priestess had served in nor the hidden covenant of wizards her
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sister had studied under had been harmed by either Praesi forces or
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those of the Tyrant. `Personal connection' wasn't the reason either,
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then. Amadeus had made sure that both those places of origin would
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remain untouched for the duration of the war: heroes with butchered
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families, adopted or otherwise, became infinitely more dangerous.
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The only motive that fit was `ethical opposition', but if that was the
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case Amadeus should have ended up the rival to the other Knight. He
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represented a larger and more active power than the Tyrant of Helike,
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arguably with a deeper historical connection with Evil. Unless, of
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course, some deeper unknown connection existed between the White Knight
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and the Tyrant. That theory had been buried during his conference with
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the vicious child from Helike: the other villain was not bound by a
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pattern of any sort.
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Amadeus did not consider his own intellect to be superior, in the larger
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scheme of things. He'd been at the side of Wekesa for decades and early
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understood that Warlock was perhaps the most brilliant mind to grace
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Praes in ten generations, however narrow his interests. Only Alaya stood
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in the same league, a mastermind who'd been able to fill the function of
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two Named for over forty years with sheer cunning and ruthlessness while
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facing men and women who were bloody ambitions made flesh. He was not
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the strongest, either. In matters of brute force, Sabah could snap him
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in half in the span of a single breath when it came to martial might Hye
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stood unequalled under the sky. Black wasn't even the best at killing:
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Assassin's body count dwarfed his, for both Named and mortals, and had
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been collected without ever taking a single wound. As for Scribe, the
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way she'd effectively become the bureaucracy and spy network of an
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entire kingdom without ever having a permanent office was far beyond his
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capacity. Amadeus' only noteworthy talent, in his opinion, was clarity
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of sight. The ability to look at a situation if not without biases then
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with fewer of them than anyone else doing the same.
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That same clarity was how he'd understood why he was not currently in a
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pattern of three. The White Knight was, in fact, supposed to face a
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Black Knight as a rival. That individual was simply not him.
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Midnight bell was nearing, the villain thought as he glanced up as the
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starry sky. Wekesa was already asleep inside the gaudy tent he'd taken
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out of his pocket dimension along with most of their supplies. There
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would be no waking him until dawn. Sabah was napping at his side, buried
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in blankets up to her neck like some sort of gargantuan cocoon. Sitting
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on a log, Amadeus stirred the fire ahead of him with the long stick he'd
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carved out earlier and shaped a plan. Planning with two years in mind,
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he now had to destroy or neuter every major threat to the Empire before
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Catherine became the Black Knight. He would make a second series of
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schemes in the days to come with the notion of him surviving only a year
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in mind, but first he needed to establish what the optimal results could
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be. He'd once thought he had a decade left in him still and planned to
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have his apprentice ready to replace him in half that but the timetable
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would have to be adjusted. There were four fronts he would have to
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settle: Callow, Praes, the Free Cities and Procer. In the back of his
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mind gears of iron turned as his eyes remained on the dancing flames.
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Callow and Praes, as it currently stood, were intertwined issues. The
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former kingdom was, last he'd heard, under attack by several forces. The
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Courts of Arcadia, the rebel forces of the Diabolist and a potential
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Deoraithe uprising. Alaya already had plans in the works for the
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Diabolist, but that was no longer enough. She had to be dead within the
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next six months, with minimal casualties. This much he could rely on
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Catherine to accomplish, and solidify her grip on Callow in the process.
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The Courts had been an unexpected set of pieces in this game. Amadeus
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had three standing operational plans for the Legions to turn back a fae
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incursion depending on where they crossed, but none were designed to
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handle a full-fledged invasion. Winter had been temporarily handled by
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his apprentice, but that was mitigating the symptoms instead of the root
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cause. It was necessary to find out \emph{what} had driven both Courts
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to leave Arcadia and permanently destroy that incitement. For now,
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Amadeus lacked the information needed to make a decision. Scribe would
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need a few months still to find out what he wanted, so he'd have to
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trust Catherine to hold them at bay until then.
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She should be able to, and that calibre of opponent would quicken her
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growth. Dealing with creatures whose power was massively larger than her
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own would prepare her for the fights with heroes she would be facing as
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the Black Knight. The nature of fae being so closely associated with
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patterns would also sharpen her eye in this regard, enough she would not
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be caught on the wrong side of a narrative easily. The dark-haired man
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had originally meant to train that aspect of her against the High Lords
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through the controlled battleground of rule over Callow, but in this
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case the substitute was superior to the original. The Deoraithe were a
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thornier issue, especially since he still did not know what had driven
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them to act. Alaya and he had originally allowed the Duchy of Daoine to
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remain untouched after the Conquest because it served as an ideal border
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state against the Golden Bloom, both because of the Deoraithe's rabid
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hatred for the elves and their limited avenues for growth. While
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powerful, by themselves they would never be powerful enough to be a true
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threat to the Empire -- and their culture essentially ensured they would
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never seek foreign allies.
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Now, though, it had been proved they could be made to move. Unless the
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motive for their deployment was unique and incapable of being
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reproduced, the odds of which were low, then it was possible for Daoine
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to be leveraged into action again. That made them a liability, the kind
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that could not be allowed to exist with a crusade on the horizon. By the
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end of the current unrest, Daoine would have to be either bound to
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Catherine definitively in her capacity as ruler of Callow or broken
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beyond capacity to act. If it was the second case, the best time to act
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would be after they'd fought battles in the south: wiping out the Watch
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in their own territory would be extremely costly. \emph{Destroying the
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army and culling the population of breeding age by four tenths should be
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enough.} Amadeus disliked leaving a wounded enemy still breathing, but
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logistics dictated exterminating the entire Duchy would require too many
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resources and take too long. He'd send word to Grem and Ranker to assess
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the situation and act accordingly, if he was unable to return in time to
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pass judgement.
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That left the more complicated issue of the relationship between Callow
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and Praes, or more accurately the Dread Empress and the Squire.
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Catherine was about to seize direct power over her homeland, which was
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one of the outcomes he'd considered most probable. The moment the Ruling
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Council had been formed, there were only two ways it could go forward:
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either Squire would terrify the Praesi establishment into submission or
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she would wipe it out entirely and become de facto queen. Neither result
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displeased him, as the Ruling Council had always been meant to be a
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crutch that would allow his apprentice to learn to rule. Given how long
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Amadeus had left to live, such a slow-paced process was no longer
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feasible: Catherine discarding the crutch by herself accelerated the
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process by a few months. Alaya would be furious at the loss of control,
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he knew, but she would be aware that Catherine ruling Callow with the
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backing of the population was an unmitigated victory for the Empire.
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Squire breaking away entirely from Praes was, after all, impossible.
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That was the truth under the surface current, and why he'd never once
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felt threatened by his apprentice gathering an independent power base.
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Catherine was, after all, a villain. The Principate would not consider
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Callow ruled by villainous queen any more acceptable than it being an
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imperial possession. Strife between Praes and her kingdom reborn would
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only weaken her in the face of Proceran advances: as long as Catherine
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Foundling held power in Callow, she needed the Empire to survive.
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Amadeus had taken more stringent measures as well, of course. Though
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Callowan soldiers had been part of the Fifteenth since its foundation,
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he'd made sure to give her mostly criminals in the initial batch. That
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meant that all her closest collaborators were Praesi: her general and
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all the senior staff were from the Wasteland. Though being in close
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proximity to a charismatic Named for several years ensured their
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strongest loyalty would be to her, their ties to the Empire made them
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into counter-weights against thoughts of breaking away entirely.
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Much like him, personal loyalty mattered a great deal to his apprentice.
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As long as declaring independence antagonized all the people closest to
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her, Catherine would seek a middle ground instead. Since a boundary had
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been set in that direction, the other boundary had to be established on
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the Praesi side. Alaya should already be working on a way to bind Squire
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to her, and would be well aware that coercion would result in permanent
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enmity. He did not have to bother himself with this part of the
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equation. Instead, what he would have to turn his eyes to was the
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stability of the Wasteland. Alaya's magnificent decades-long plan had
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finally come to fruition and destroyed the Truebloods in full. Three
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legions would scour Wolof clean as soon as a winner emerged from the
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succession struggle there, removing a nest of unrest in Praes for at
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least twenty years. It would not be enough. Every former Trueblood not
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currently aligned with these so-called `Moderates' would have to be
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killed and their entire family line ripped out root and stem. Amadeus
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was not above borrowing the strength of Callow to accomplish this, if
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other legions balked at the slaughter. The Clans were loyal, and need
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not be touched, but he would need to have a frank conversation with the
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foremost Matrons and explain to them that if they made a single
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questionable move Wekesa would bring down the Grey Eyries on their
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heads. Ranker would back him in this, he knew. She'd long run out of
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patience with the more isolationist of the Matrons.
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All of this would secure their back within a year, if handled properly,
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which left exterior threats. The Principate was the foremost among
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those. Cordelia Hasenbach had roped in both Levant and Ashur, which have
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her utmost naval supremacy and a quiet southern border. When Procer came
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knocking, it would be with everything but the northern garrisons. At
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least a fifty thousand professional soldiers, easily twice than in
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levies, and that was without counting any armies sent to reinforce by
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the Dominion. If most of the Legions were at the Red Flower Vales, it
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was possible to resist that strength as long as there was no unrest
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inside Imperial territories. That was not enough, he decided. If Procer
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retreated with enough of its force intact, the problem was only delayed
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by half a decade at most. The Principate had to be decisively beaten,
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its alliances sundered and the First Prince killed. She was, frankly
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speaking, too dangerous to leave alive. That meant campaigning inside
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Proceran borders in an offensive war, which would most likely lead to
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defeat given the current balance of forces.
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It was time to start using harsh measures, then. Using the Calamities to
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destroy the capital of the Principate, for a start, should incapacitate
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its ruling infrastructure. Using a surprise strike to torch and poison
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the central principalities, the main farmlands of Procer, would lead to
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widespread starvation come winter. As for the Thalassocracy, if they
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could not be reasoned with Assassin would need to eliminate their entire
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two highest citizenship tiers. That would create chaos that could buy
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the Empire two years at least, and if Procer could be dealt with during
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that time the chances of Ashur resuming the war alone were low. The
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Dominion of Levant was too far and too decentralized to cripple in one
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stroke, but their ties to the alliance were also the weakest. They would
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not remain committed if victory did not look feasible. There were even
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harsher moves that could be made, of course -- the Tower was still in
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contact with the ancient abomination that ruled the Kingdom of the Dead.
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But putting that devil back in that bottle after it was uncorked would
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be impossible, and in the long term more dangerous to imperial interests
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than the current Procer.
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Amadeus had spent over fifty years carefully making sure not to burn too
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many bridges, to avoid the very kind of crusade the First Prince was
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assembling, but the hour of reckoning had come. The Principate needed to
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be so badly damaged it would not recover for a generation, if possible
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while leaving most of Levant's strength intact -- the Dominion would not
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be able to resist the bait of a weakened south if its armies were still
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strong. Most importantly, Cordelia Hasenbach had to die. Even if another
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war of succession did not erupt, whoever replaced her would be part of
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one of the regional power blocs Alaya had made emerge. They would have
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powerful internal enemies to deal with, and given the nature of the
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Highest Assembly that meant a Principate divided in fact if not in name.
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All of this, though, would come next year. There was a more immediate
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problem at hand, the Free Cities.
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The balance of power could not be allowed to swing in the favour of Good
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down here. At the very least, neutrality had to be forced with the
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Tyrant remaining in a strong position. The threat of Helike armed to the
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teeth at her back would force Hasenbach to keep troops in the south to
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dissuade an attack. \emph{Neutrality would be better than an outright
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victory for the Tyrant}, Amadeus thought. If the Tyrant won, Procer had
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an excuse to wage war in the region and secure it before turning to
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Praes. If the balance was restored, they had a knife at their back and
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no diplomatically acceptable excuse to remove it. If Procer started
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intervening in the affairs of foreign nations, its allies would protest.
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Hasenbach could not afford to lose them if she wanted a crusade in more
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than name\emph{. And the moment the Tyrant is no longer a threat, the
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entire Free Cities will start viewing the troops she sent as an invasion
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force.} The desired outcome, then, was a truce in the Free Cities with a
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guarantee they would not participate in the larger conflict. How could
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Amadeus accomplish this?
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Currently, Atalante was under occupation and Delos out of the war -- the
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removal of the more combative elements of the Secretariat by Assassin
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had seen to that. The strife he'd begun in Penthes was keeping them
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busy, though they'd still managed to repulse an attack from the
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ramshackle army of Bellerophon. The slave armies of Stygia, headed by
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their Magisters, had joined Helike on the march to the last remaining
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active opposition in the war: Nicae. Which was filled with mercenaries,
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Proceran fantassins and its own decently skilled forces. Taking Named
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out of the story, after marked but not severe casualties Nicae should
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fall to enemy forces. With a band of heroes backing the city, though,
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the situation was different. It became `the last stronghold, besieged by
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the hordes of Evil'. Defeat was virtually assured as long as this
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remained the narrative, and Amadeus did not currently have enough
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authority with Stygia and Helike to properly influence their
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decision-making. They would have to be bypassed entirely, then.
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The lynchpin of this entire situation, as far as he could tell, was the
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White Knight. He was the Named keeping the band together. Without him
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they would either disperse or lose the coherency needed to be a true
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threat. If the White Knight was dead, Amadeus believed he could turn the
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victory of the Evil-aligned cities into a bloody draw that would weaken
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both sides enough they could be forced to negotiate a truce. The Tyrant
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would be trouble -- he'd already begun disrupting Warlock's scrying,
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which had cut off the dark-haired man's conversation with his apprentice
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-- but he was also fickle. As long as he was presented with a more
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enticing game than his current one, he could be brought to the table.
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All Amadeus had to worry about was surviving the boy's inevitable
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attempts to kill him during the battle for Nicae. Contingencies were
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already being put in place. The key to this entire situation, then, was
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eliminating the White Knight. The villain poked at the flames again.
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It could be done, with the right preparations. The lack of pattern would
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not hinder this.
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``You look like you're up to no good,'' Sabah said sleepily.
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Amadeus smiled. It was an old joke, now more comfortable than funny.
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``Did I wake you?'' he asked. ``I apologize.''
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``I sleep lighter than when we were started out,'' she said. ``We're
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getting old, Amadeus.''
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The Black Knight chuckled, sliding down the log to sit next to her.
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``You've still got a few decades in you,'' he said. ``Enough you'll see
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your both your children get grey hair.''
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``Amna's raised them well,'' she said wistfully. ``I think of them more
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often than I used to, out on adventures like this.''
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Both time she'd given birth she'd left his side for a year afterwards to
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mother the children, but inevitably Sabah had left Ater to join him --
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he'd spent most of his time in Callow, the last twenty years. Her
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husband had done most of the rearing, repeatedly refusing promotions in
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the Imperial bureaucracy to have enough time for it. Black rather liked
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the man, though how his old friend had come to fall in love with that
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diminutive, mild-mannered specimen had long been a subject of wonder.
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``I think,'' he said, ``that our time is drawing to an end.''
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The large Taghreb turned amused eyes to him.
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``You're not usually this maudlin,'' she said. ``We've handled worse
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than the Tyrant. He's like a crippled take on Heir, only with a sense of
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humour.''
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``He really \emph{was} a pompous ass, wasn't he?'' Black smiled.
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``Catherine's rival is worse,'' Sabah grunted. ``I'm looking forward to
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the kid hacking her in a few pieces.''
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``It will be a learning experience for her,'' Amadeus murmured.
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``Killing the Heir was a turning point for me.''
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``You were softer before,'' Sabah agreed softly. ``We all were. I still
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remember what it felt like back then, looking at his corpse. Like there
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was a storm ahead.''
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She frowned.
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``Feels the same now,'' she admitted. ``Like we're reaching a pivot.''
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\emph{I'm going to die soon}, he almost told her. But he couldn't,
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because if he did she would fight it. Even harder than Warlock would,
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because Warlock understood that some things were worth dying for.
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Captain didn't. She had no great cause, no febrile drive to understand
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the nature of Creation. Sabah only wanted them to live as long and
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happily as they could, and if she had to cave in other people's heads
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for that so be it. He'd always loved that about her, the purity of the
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sentiment. He'd never met another Named like her, so unconcerned with
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their own power. In that sense she was the strangest among them.
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``Do you ever regret it?'' he asked suddenly. ``Coming with Wekesa and
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I, the morning after we first met you.''
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She looked at him, bemused.
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``We've been at this over forty years, Sabah,'' he said. ``We've killed
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so many people I can't remember all the faces. We won, when it mattered,
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but there were dark days too. Those just don't make it into the
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legends.''
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The massive Taghreb patted his shoulder gently.
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``You're an idiot,'' she told him, not unkindly. ``You two are family.
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You might as well ask me if I regret breathing. Besides, f I hadn't come
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along you twerps would have mouthed yourself off into an early grave.''
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She paused.
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``And you and Hye would still be pretending you still didn't desperately
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want to bone,'' she added.
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``\emph{Sabah},'' he protested.
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``Oh, she's just teaching me swordsmanship,'' she mocked in a
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high-pitched voice. ``Like that didn't turn into an excuse for you two
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to get sweaty and handsy before the first lesson was over.''
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``I learned a lot from her,'' Black said.
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``I know,'' she said. ``Tents don't block out noise very well.''
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As one of the foremost tacticians of the age, Amadeus recognized that
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this was not a battle he could win. Retreat was required. Besides, at
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least he'd never used an entire roasted pig as a courting gift, unlike
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some other people that would go nameless.
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``I need you to do something for me,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
She raised a thick eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``Eudokia tells me Procer is still sending grain and silver to Nicae by
|
|
land convoys,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
The Tyrant, for reasons only known to him, was allowing them to pass
|
|
untouched.
|
|
|
|
``We need to turn the screws on the city before it turns into a
|
|
battle,'' he said. ``The emptier their coffers and granaries, the
|
|
better.''
|
|
|
|
It would be easier to force them to negotiate if they were all but
|
|
destitute.
|
|
|
|
``Been a while since I hunted on my own,'' Captain said, staring into
|
|
the flame. ``Might do me some good. The Beast gets wilful when I keep it
|
|
on the leash for too long.''
|
|
|
|
He nodded silently and left it at that. Eventually she drifted back into
|
|
sleep, the two of them nestled close to the fire.
|
|
|
|
``Two years,'' he murmured. ``It will be enough. I'll \emph{make} it
|
|
enough.''
|
|
|
|
The Gods could help anyone who got in his way, if they so wished. It
|
|
would make no difference.
|