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404 lines
17 KiB
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\hypertarget{villainous-interlude-cadenza}{%
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\section{Villainous Interlude:
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Cadenza}\label{villainous-interlude-cadenza}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Taxes. Taxes and triplicate forms.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Terribilis I, upon being asked what powerful sorceries
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he would use to humble the High Lords
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\end{quote}
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Warlock had eyes on it from the beginning.
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Not scrying, for that could be traced, but delayed relays that caught
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images at regular intervals. Wekesa had formed enough alternating way
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stations that while it was possible to follow the trail back to the
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beginning, it would take months at a flat minimum. What Amadeus saw was
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puzzling, at the start. Procer sent decoys caravans, armed to the teeth,
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but those were seen through easily. He sent Sabah to hit the lone carts
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using lesser known paths, and these carried the ingots of silver and
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gold that were being fed to Nicae. The two first true caravans were
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ambushed and seized at the same location, which led him to a possible
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answer: consecrated grounds. By having blood spilled at the same hands
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at the same place, ritual weight could be crafted. That might signify
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his initial notion that this was a trap put in place by the Tyrant was
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correct, because the heroes under the White Knight would not lower
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themselves to use blood magic in this manner. Not with a man sworn to
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the Choir of Judgement at their head. Then the third caravan used a
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different path, and blood was spilled in a different location. He had,
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evidently, been incorrect. Reassessment was needed. Scribe had begun
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placing agents in the ranks of the Helikean army long before the war
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between League members began, and he turned to her for clarification.
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``He caught my agents,'' Eudokia said.
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``All of them?'' Black frowned.
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``Yes,'' she confirmed. ``They still serve as soldiers, but any
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information they try to pass gets replaced by the words to a Helikean
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drinking song about a shepherdess and her three husbands.''
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The Tyrant's doing, then. The boy did like to pretend he has a sense of
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humour.
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``Extraction?'' he said.
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``Even removing the soul from the bodies doesn't sidestep the issue,''
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she said.
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Name application, then, possibly an aspect. There were few sorceries in
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existence that could truly affect a soul in a manner more complex than
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cutting out parts and outside the Empire that branch of magic was not
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often studied. Infiltration of Helike was a resource sink, then, though
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one he might revisit should he need to busy the villain for a span of
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time. Scribe turned her focus to Nicae, at his instruction, and
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continued the other task he had assigned her. The fourth caravan took a
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different route again, and this contradicted his read of the matter.
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\emph{If the intent is opaque, change the perspective.} Amadeus marked
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the locations on the map, and had Wekesa study them.
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``If the next one dies here, there's an arcane pattern being formed,''
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Warlock said, tapping a cattle path that would begin to sketch out a
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circle from a bird's eye view.
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It was not the location where the fifth caravan was destroyed.
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Repetition in the face of failure, Amadeus believed, indicated either
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incompetence or that what was perceived as `success' by the beholder was
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not the objective. The sixth caravan passed through the initial route,
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and he ordered Captain to let it pass. It was possible that the later
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caravans had been a smokescreen to draw him away from his first thought,
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that of consecrated grounds.
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``If that's what they're doing his mages are botching it,'' Wekesa said.
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``He can still consecrate the grounds to Below like that, but if he
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doesn't maintain a regular pattern then it'll be so weak it'll be
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useless. There's a reason the old crowd uses prisoner sacrifices for the
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effect, it allows you to control the alignments.''
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``The drivers have been women more than men,'' Amadeus said.
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``There's rituals that take gender into consideration, but not this
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kind,'' Warlock said. ``And they're exceedingly imprecise, so there's no
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way they could take out Sabah. It's too fluid a concept to be used as a
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solid anchor.''
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That was usually the way, with cultural mores. \emph{If the intent is
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opaque, change the perspective}. Neither consecration nor geographic
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location. Temporal placement? The hours where the caravans had been
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taken formed no useful arcane pattern, according to Warlock. Using the
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date by the Imperial calendar led to a dead end, but then outside Praes
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it was rarely used. The Free Cities counted the years from the founding
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of the League, but that was another dead end. The ancestral calendar of
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Helike was similarly useless.
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``Keteran Calendar,'' Warlock finally murmured, peering at a table full
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of opened books with a cup of wine in hand.
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Amadeus adjusted his thinking, bringing the corresponding numbers to
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mind. Nothing that seemed relevant to him.
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``Take out the second killing,'' Wekesa said. ``Then instead of using
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only the date as is, subtract using the year Sabah was born.''
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The Black Knight closed his eyes, assembled the answers.
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``Spell formula,'' he said. ``But this is ridiculously indirect.''
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Warlock ignored him, scribbling ink on parchment and translating numbers
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to runes then speculated requirements from there.
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``It's not just that,'' the Soninke grimaced.
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``It would take thousands to create even a minor effect with so weak a
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sympathetic link,'' Amadeus pointed out.
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``The effect itself is how I know we're on the wrong track,'' Wekesa
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sighed. ``Look, this is a projection of the illusion that would be
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formed if this formula was empowered.''
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Warlock tapped the table once, and spell light glowed softly. In front
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of them, a hand was rotating in the air. Only the middle finger was
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raised.
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``This is the Tyrant's play, then,'' the green-eyed man murmured. ``That
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as good as confirms it.''
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The combination of childish insult and advanced understanding of
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spellcrafting mechanics was telling. That a secondary pattern inserted
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into the primary one purely for the sake of the taunt was there at all
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was somewhat worrying. Amadeus had not been under the impression the
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Tyrant had mages this talented as his disposal, or such understanding
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himself. Another change of perspective was needed, but before that more
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information must be obtained. In a calculated risk, he sent Sabah to
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sack the seventh caravan. A different route, once more. Amadeus drank,
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watched the flames and thought. Eudokia came with her reports when the
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moon was high.
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``The magisters were open to negotiations to have their army returned to
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them,'' Scribe said.
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``But?'' the Duni prompted.
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``Distraction,'' she said. ``They've already secured other means to
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accomplish this.''
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The Tyrant. That he'd bothered to involve Stygia at all spoke volumes:
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they had a role to play in his ultimate intent.
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``He rules Helike,'' the Black Knight said. ``Occupies Atalante. Has a
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representative from Bellerophon, struck a pact with Stygia and prepares
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to siege Nicae.''
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Eudokia nodded without a word. She'd understood the order perfectly.
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``The Bard?'' he said.
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``Still gathering,'' she replied, and disappeared into the night.
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Amadeus closed his eyes and thought. Eliminating theories one after
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another would take too long, and the caravans could not simply be
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allowed to pass. The longer Nicae could afford to import supplies from
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Ashur, the longer the siege stretched out and the longer he would have
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to remain. He could not afford to stay away from the Empire for that
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long, not with the\ldots{} colourful rumours about what was currently
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unfolding there. To find the pattern, then, he would need to begin with
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the individual or individuals thathad crafted it. Necessary common
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factor? \emph{Understanding of High Arcana}. Nothing less could be used
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for a ritual of this class. Still and silent, Amadeus counted. He had
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known seventeen individuals capable of using High Arcana, in his life.
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He brought up every single conversation he'd had with one of them, and
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sought commonalities in perspective. In the back of his mind, the gears
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ground. Too shallow a pool of information. He repeated the exercise,
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adding everything he'd ever read from an individual who cleared the
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condition to the process. Two days he stayed there, his companions
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knowing better than to disturb him. It was night again when he opened
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his eyes.
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``Planar perception,'' he told no one at all.
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The understanding of sorcery of that level led to a different
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understanding of Creation as well, one divorced from the material
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concerns that shaped his views. To Wekesa, for example, the lay of the
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land they both looked at was fundamentally different. Looking at the
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situation through the version of this filter he could construct, he
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found his answer. \emph{Height}. No topographical map of the region
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accurate enough for his purposes could be obtained, which meant direct
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observation. Warlock handled it, putting together the images obtained
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through relays.
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``You're right,'' Wekesa admitted. ``If you look at the pattern using
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the height they were killed at instead of the location, I can recognize
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the shape.''
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``How many do they need?'' he asked.
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``Assuming I'm correct and the first killing was a decoy, four more,''
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his old friend said.
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``Nine in total,'' Amadeus said. ``Thrice three. A killing stroke?''
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``Offensive in nature, at the very least,'' Warlock said. ``We stop shy
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of what they need?''
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The Black Knight smiled, very mildly.
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``No,'' he said. ``I think not. They will get exactly what they need.''
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Eudokia found him as he ate for the first time in days, methodically
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replenishing his strength.
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``An offer was made to the Secretariat,'' she said. ``Penthes as well.''
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The pale-skinned man chewed thoughtfully.
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``He aims to be Hierarch, then,'' he said.
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How the Tyrant had managed to exert pressure on Bellerophon enough they
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would agree to this would have to be found investigated. Such a lever
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was too useful to be left solely in the boy's hands.
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``Assuming he secures all the votes,'' Amadeus said. ``Intent?''
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``Broader games,'' Scribe suggested. ``His methodology requires constant
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opposition.''
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That was a possibility, the green-eyed man thought. A straightforward
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one, however. That did not immediately disqualify it as a possible
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objective, but it was not a mark in its favour.
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``Worst case scenario,'' Eudokia asked, changing the approach.
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``Tenth crusade, involving the entirety of Hasenbach's coalition,''
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Amadeus replied without missing a beat. ``Dead King uninvolved. Chain of
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Hunger unable to exert strength. Drow situation unchanged.''
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``Kingdom Under?'' Scribe said.
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``In another expansion phase,'' the Black Knight reminded her. ``They
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will profiteer through weapon trade, at most.''
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They'd left behind the question of what the Tyrant was after, and were
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instead studying what effect he could have on the Empire under the worst
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circumstances possible should he ascend to the position.
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``He would be a destabilizing factor,'' Scribe said, and there was no
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greater insult in her eyes than what she had just uttered.
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``One without the ability to grab land or hamper commerce outside
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affordable losses,'' Amadeus said. ``By nature, even should he manage to
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align with Procer he will be damaging to them.''
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\emph{Not worth directly opposing in this}, the verdict was. Not unless
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other information surfaced that changed the forces in play.
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``I've assembled an initial dossier,'' Eudokia said.
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Amadeus raised an eyebrow.
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``Different face, but she has been active in Procer,'' Scribe said.
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``She's behind Hasenbach?'' he asked.
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If the Wandering Bard had enabled the First Prince to rise, the failure
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in intelligence that had resulted in him being unware of this
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was\ldots{} massive. It put everything he knew of the Proceran situation
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in question.
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``No recorded contact,'' Eudokia said. ``But she was in Rhenia.''
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The Black Knight was too old and far too removed from the boy he'd once
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been to let the dismay touch his face.
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``The Augur,'' he said. ``There could be indirect influence. Anything
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further back?''
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``No link to the Troubadour or the Magnificent Minstrel,'' Scribe said.
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``But getting anything prior to the Conquest has been\ldots{}
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difficult.''
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The records had been tinkered with, she meant.
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``There's no precedent for an uninterrupted stream of consciousness,''
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Amadeus said.
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``Heavier inheritance,'' Scribe suggested.
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Name dreams writ large. It was possible. Few things were not, when it
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came to Named.
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``A line of Wandering Bards going back for centuries, advancing some
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collective purpose,'' he said. ``That is\ldots{} an issue. There must be
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limits.''
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``She has never intervened directly,'' Eudokia said, and he waved his
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hand in irritation.
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They'd both known what. It was a staple of bardic Names, being able to
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influence the story but rarely change it with their own hands. Power
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only through fronts, never wielded personally.
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``Has she ever been linked to anyone not Named?'' Amadeus said.
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Reluctantly, Scribe shook her head. Given the incomplete records at
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their disposal, she was unwilling to commit fully to that theory.
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``When attached to the Lone Swordsman, she operated within his moral
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boundaries,'' Eudokia said.
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Limits to her actions dictated to the story she was bound to and the
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nature of its heroes. Another theory to test.
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``It's her blind spots we need to to find,'' he said. ``The majority of
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the threat she represents comes from her awareness of our movements.''
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Eudokia nodded. Amadeus frowned.
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``Pick a target,'' he said. ``Assassin is at your disposal. I cannot
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know.''
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``Risk margin?'' she asked.
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``I trust your judgement,'' he replied.
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No more need be said. Sabah killed, four more times. But as skilled as
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the mages of the Tyrant were, they were not Warlock. A single strand of
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hair was placed in the centre of the runic circle, and the curse meant
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to kill Captain found another target. Usurpation was, after all, the
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essence of sorcery. After it was done, Wekesa complimented the ritual.
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It was, apparently, not derivative of Praesi work in the slightest
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though it had been designed under the shared Trismegistan theory of
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magic. Behind the tall walls of Nicae, the Ashen Priestess died
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screaming. There was no warning, and no saving her. The ritual had been
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performed to kill a Named much more physically able. Amadeus approved,
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when he learned of it. \emph{Always kill the healer first.} Targeting
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the White Knight might not have succeeded, and of the others the
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Priestess was the most apt to tip the balance in a clash. Before dawn,
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every practitioner involved on the attempt on Sabah's life was dead.
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They left behind a note indicating they had taken their own lives out of
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guilt. Assassin's sense of humour had grown whimsical of late.
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``Your reasoning?'' Scribe asked, after.
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``No hero was involved in the story until the very end,'' he said. ``It
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was a struggle purely between villains.''
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``Ah,'' Eudokia said. ``She can only see us when we stand opposed to her
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narrative?''
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``Possibly,'' Amadeus frowned. ``Otherwise she sacrificed a heroine for
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no visible gain.''
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``If she is bound by the White Knight's morality, she could not do so,''
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Scribe said.
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``Possibly,'' the green-eyed man repeated. ``I am\ldots{} unsettled,
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Eudokia.''
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Her eyes were still as ponds.
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``The word for `bard' we use comes from Old Miezan,'' he said.
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``Language has evolved, even in our lifetime.''
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``If the line were that ancient, there would be records,'' Scribe said.
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``Unless.''
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``Unless,'' Amadeus agreed softly.
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Unless something was cleaning up behind them, be it their Role or the
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Gods Above. Such a direct intervention would allow similar direct
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meddling from the Gods Below, of course. Balance in spirit, if not in
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practice. Yet he could think of only one event in Calernian history that
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would qualify. \emph{The creation of the Kingdom of the Dead.} Which
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preceded written history in Praes by centuries, by conservative
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estimate. If the line of `Bards' was that old, the Heavens had been
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playing a longer game than any of them. The ramifications of that were
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beyond the scope of his understanding, a feeling he was unused to and
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did not particularly care for.
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``It could be Triumphant,'' Eudokia said.
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\emph{Triumphant cost us so much more than we gained}. If she'd been the
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intervention of the Gods Below, they had let themselves be robbed by the
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opposition. Black closed his eyes.
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``If she cannot be killed, she must be trapped,'' he said.
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He felt Scribe nod. She sat at his side, close enough to touch but never
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quite getting there.
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``You are tired,'' Eudokia said.
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Innocuous words, but the deeper meaning was there.
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``I am dying, I think,'' he murmured.
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There was a long silence.
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``If Catherine wields the knife, I will destroy her,'' she said, as if
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she was speaking of the weather. ``And if I fail Hye will not.''
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Amadeus did not reply. If he'd been the kind of man to pray, he would
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have prayed then. But he was not, so instead the gears began to turn and
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he wondered how many of the people he loved he would have to kill,
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before it was all over.
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