476 lines
22 KiB
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476 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-33-promises}{%
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\section{Chapter 33: Promises}\label{chapter-33-promises}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``No matter how good the horse, it can only bear one saddle.''}
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-Callowan proverb
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\end{quote}
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Our march through Summer had taken a month, from the perspective of
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Creation. Longer than I would have liked, but still miraculous compared
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to how long it would have taken me to come down from Denier the old
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fashioned way. Juniper agreed.
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``Hugging,'' she sneered. ``You've gotten soft, Foundling.''
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It was awkward embracing an orc with a solid two feet on me and broad as
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a barn, but I put the effort in. For all that the Hellhound mocked me,
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her grip was tight as well. We'd not gone this long without seeing each
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other since the Fifteenth was founded.
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``You haven't,'' I said. ``Gods, what do you eat? It's like they carved
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you out of slab of muscle.''
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She tried not to look pleased at that, but I'd been dealing with wilier
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operators of late. My general was a refreshingly open book. Ratface had
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apparently gone mad with power since I'd suborned the Smugglers' Guild
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to him, but since he'd abused his power to find me a fresh crate of Vale
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summer wine I was going to let that one go. Pouring myself a full cup of
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the pale wine, I allowed myself a little sigh of pleasure after sipping
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the alcohol. The stuff I'd dragged with me through Arcadia just wasn't
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the same, mostly cheap red vintages from the south. The two of us
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claimed the folding chairs in her own tent, not having bothered to
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gather people in the larger command pavilion. We'd have a proper
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briefing with the others at some point, but I wanted to talk with her
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before Marshal Ranker and the Deoraithe were dragged into the
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conversation.
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``You'll have news for me,'' I said.
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She grunted in assent, sniffing at her goblet full of aragh before
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downing it. A sure sign this was to be informal: Juniper never touched
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anything stronger than watered wine in the usual officer meetings.
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``Holden is back into the Imperial fold,'' she announced. ``General
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Istrid and her legions annihilated the fae garrison and are now
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fortifying the grounds.''
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It was one of Juniper's little quirks that she only ever referred to her
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mother by her rank even in private. As for what she'd told me, I was
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pleased. I needed to herd the Summer Court through known grounds and
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allowing them two footholds into Callow would have muddied the waters.
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Now they'd have to come through Dormer, which made it a great deal
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easier to plan for them. It was shame three legions and some of the
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finest battle commanders in the field had to be left where I couldn't
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use them, but anything less and I was fairly sure the Summer Court would
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try to force passage. After our last scrap they'd be wary of picking a
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fight with the Legions of Terror on a chosen field, though. They might
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win but their losses would leave them too weak to be able to handle the
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army I'd assembled. Some days it gave me pause, that I'd become someone
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who could use twelve thousand veterans of the Conquest as a mere
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deterrent. I'd come a long way from pit fights and waiting tables.
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``Losses?'' I asked.
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``Light,'' the orc noted. ``It was only the bare bones of a garrison.
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You kicked the hornet's nest when you invaded Summer.''
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``Oh, I pissed them off way beyond that,'' I grunted. ``I've got a
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Princess of Summer in chains, Juniper. They'll be out for blood.''
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``Keeping that prisoner secure is a logistical nightmare, I'll have you
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know,'' the Hellhound growled. ``Kilian and half our mages had to be set
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aside permanently so we'd never lack practitioners for the rotations.''
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``It'll be worth it,'' I said. ``Largest bargaining chip I could get my
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hands on short of taking the seat of the Summer Court itself.''
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``You assume the fae can be bargained with,'' the Hellhound said.
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``They always cut deals, it's in their nature,'' I said. ``And if for
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once I can avoid having to pay the price by scraping myself raw, I'll
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have no complaints.''
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``Devils and fairies always get more than they give,'' the orc warned.
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``Then it's a good thing I stole a lot of their shit,'' I replied
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bluntly. ``I don't mind overpaying as long as I get what I want. I'm not
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going to get stuck in games with them, Juniper. I'll get exactly what I
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need not try for an inch more. Only way I can get away without getting
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fucked too hard.''
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``We'll get nothing if we're not winning,'' she said. ``Don't lose sight
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of that.''
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That was the Praesi way, wasn't it? No, maybe not Praesi. The way of the
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Legions, Black's way. Compromise could be reached, but only from a
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position of strength. On their own terms. Our way, I must confess.
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Kilian hadn't been wrong when she'd said I had no taste to compromise
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when I could get things how I wanted them instead.
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``Masego's getting ready for the Queen,'' I noted. ``Or as much as he
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can, with an entity like her.''
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``The Hierophant now, I hear,'' Juniper said. ``Fancy Name. Never heard
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of it before.''
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There was hint of doubt there. Older Names, those better known, tended
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to be more powerful than relative outliers like my friend's. They'd
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accumulated more weight over the centuries, greater legends to draw
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from.
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``He'll pull through,'' I said. ``Always does. But I'll admit, for this
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kind of work I almost wish Diabolist was on our side. There's a lot of
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bad to be said about the old school, but they have a peerless record
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when it comes to things like this.''
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``She might pull it off,'' the Hellhound said. ``But whatever she gained
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from that victory she'd use to screw us the moment the battle was
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over.''
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``I know,'' I sighed. ``The competence doesn't come without the rabid
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crazy. And speaking of dear old Akua, where the Hells is she?''
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``We have no idea,'' Juniper grunted. ``Scrying doesn't work, and the
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last time we had eyes on her was when she took Liesse above the clouds.
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She could be anywhere by now.''
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I frowned.
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``She can't stay up there forever,'' I said. ``She's got over a hundred
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thousand mouths to feed, and if she starts dragging civilians to altars
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she'll have riots on her hands.''
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I wasn't sure what a riot would look like a dozen leagues above solid
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ground, but I'd guess it wouldn't be pretty. Akua's mind was like a sack
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of angry, treacherous badgers but she wasn't stupid. She had pretty
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thick blinders on, sure, but I'd never seen one of her schemes collapse
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on its own. She wouldn't be nearly as dangerous if they did.
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``Ratface says she can manage two months at most,'' the Hellhound said.
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``A guess based on what she reported to your Ruling Council when she was
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Governess, with the assumption she was lying through her teeth on the
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numbers.''
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I'd trust the Taghreb's judgement in this. He was a middling tactician
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at best but when it came to supplies and logistics, there was no better
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man in the Fifteenth. I'd been lucky to get my hands on him back at the
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College, and even Juniper occasionally offered praise of his abilities.
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Never where he could hear, and always tempered with generous criticism
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about his more underhanded dealings, but that my general said anything
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at all was telling.
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``So now we have to guess at the where she'll be coming down,'' I said.
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``We don't know enough about what she's after to be remotely accurate,''
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the Hellhound grunted. ``Will she be after supplies? If so, Vale will
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likely be the target. Is she aiming to cripple the Legions in Callow, to
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carve a realm from the ruins of the south? If so, she must turn her eyes
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to Holden.''
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``Or she could be after sorcery,'' I said.
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``Legion mages don't have the learning to even try to unpack that,''
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Juniper said. ``You'll need the Hierophant to write a report about
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possible targets.''
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Then I'd need Hakram to go through it and cut out all the unnecessary
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parts Masego would have added, I noted silently. Odds were Hierophant
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would write me a damned volume with an annex twice as thick. The Soninke
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was ridiculously wordy, when given ink and parchment. I drank deep from
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my cup, mood soured.
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``So we have a month before the Queen of Summer can enter Creation, if
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Masego is to be believed,'' I said. ``Then another month before Akua
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drops down from the sky to fuck everything up, as is her sacred and
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solemn duty.''
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``Busy year,'' Juniper snorted.
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``At least Procer hasn't invaded,'' I said, trying for a bright side.
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``And no one's unleashed a demon in a year.''
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``High Lady Tasia did, in Wolof,'' the orc reminded me.
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``I can't believe I have to lower my standards lower than they already
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are,'' I complained. ``Well, nobody's opened a permanent portal into the
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Hells. There. I refused to go any lower.''
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``Give it time,'' Juniper grinned, ivory fangs flaring.
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She'd meant it as a jest, but there was too much truth to it for me to
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laugh.
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---
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It would be two days before the armies marched south, beginning the trek
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to Dormer. We were still waiting on supplies and we had a horde of
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wounded to deal with. I could have begun to put a dent into the pile of
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urgent scrolls that no doubt awaited me, but for tonight I decided I'd
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done enough. My body could go on, but I was exhausted in a deeper way.
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There were only so many twists and turns I could take before it was too
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much. I slogged my way back to my tent, painfully aware that no one
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would be awaiting me inside. I'd passed by Ratface's quarters beforehand
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and ignored his many requests for me to look at the books in favour of
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bullying him to hand me another bottle. Juniper and I had polished off
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the last one after she'd finished her aragh, talking for a few hours
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until it got dark. It still amazed me that the two of us had gone from
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being at each other's throats to people who could actually enjoy the
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other's company, no matter how much she insisted otherwise. It was rare
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thing for me to seek two bottles in a day, but I had a feeling I'd need
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another drink if I was going to sleep at all tonight. I could still
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smell the incinerated corpses of the soldiers I'd failed in Arcadia, the
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hundreds that had died at the whim of two vicious creatures beyond my
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understanding.
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There were Gallowborne around my tent and I spent a few moments chatting
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with them before going inside. They'd gotten off light from the last
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battle in Arcadia, and Tribune Farrier was already recruiting to fill
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the ranks left empty by the dead. I hoped the volunteers would
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understand what they were in for. I'd gotten half my retinue killed
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because I'd been sloppy and arrogant, and while I didn't intend to ever
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make that mistake again there were harder fights ahead. I wished Black
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was there so he could tell me about his own guard. He'd had his for
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decades, he must have known ways to keep them safe without making them
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irrelevant. Or maybe he didn't. My teacher might not share my qualms
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about people being killed in his name, not even people he knew. I'd
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gotten harsher in the last few years but I was still a long way from
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being iron as cold as the Black Knight. There was no candle lit in my
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tent, but to a Named that made no difference. That was why I saw the
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silhouette sitting on the edge of my cot, and though for a hopeful
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moment I thought it was Kilian the notion disappeared when the details
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sunk in.
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It was a woman. Soninke, dark eyes, and while shy of pretty not exactly
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ugly. I'd seen her before, known her under the name of Lady Naibu.
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\emph{Lady Deputy}, in Mtethwa. My hand left the grip of my sword and I
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inclined my head respectfully.
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``Your Most Dreadful Majesty,'' I said.
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This was Empress Malicia's own puppet, the soulless flesh simulacrum she
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could use to be two places at once.
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``I've already told you there is no need for such formality,'' the
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Empress dismissed, using someone else's hands.
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I glanced at the flaps of the tent but the Gallowborne had yet to move.
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``You may consider this a private audience, Catherine,'' Malicia smiled.
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Fuck. My tent was in the middle of an army over thirty thousand strong.
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The boundaries of the Fifteenth's fortified camp were set with wards
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Masego had designed personally. I had thousands of sharp-eyed goblins
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running around. And yet there she was, on my own godsdamned bed. This
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could have been an assassin and no one would ever have known. I wasn't
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ashamed to say that it was almost enough to scare me, this reminder
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about how far the Empress' reach went. I set the bottle on the table and
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ripped out the cork.
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``A glass as well, if you please,'' the Empress said. ``It has been ages
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since I've tried anything from Vale.''
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And she knew my favourite wine. I wasn't even surprised, to be honest.
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Black had already told me he'd had a file about me before I ever became
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the Squire, and it was pretty much a given the Empress would have one
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twice as thick somewhere in the Tower. I poured her a goblet as well and
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handed it to her.
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``Thank you,'' she said. ``I hear you've finally met Ranger.''
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I blinked.
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``This is turning out a lot more civil of a conversation than I
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expected,'' I frankly said.
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The meat-puppet chuckled. It would not do forget that was what I was
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looking at, to be taken in by the charm and the pleasantries. I was
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dealing with a woman who'd hollowed out a body of its immortal soul for
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the sake of convenient conversation.
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``Did you expect me to come storming in, demanding justifications?'' she
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said. ``The Empire is a balancing act, Catherine. I do not introduce
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weight without careful consideration.''
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There was silence after that, until I realized she was still expecting
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to answer her first sentence. Gods, I was exhausted. And near enough to
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tipsy.
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``She came real close to killing me,'' I said. ``Just for suggesting I
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could help her in a fight, if I'm not mistaken. She's not much like the
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stories.''
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``I am not particularly fond of her myself,'' the Empress said. ``And
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not only because she attempted to talk Amadeus into running me through
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and seizing the throne after the Conquest.''
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I grimaced. I'd gotten hints from Scribe there'd been undercurrents of
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that in the past, but never heard it so bluntly stated before. Or been
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sure the Empress knew of it.
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``She's a monster,'' I said. ``Bad as the Diabolist, in her own way. I
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don't get why Black likes her so much.''
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``Love,'' the Empress said. ``It is love, my dear. She's an
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extraordinary creature, I'll grant that. Her little philosophy is what
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drew him in, and eventually what parted them.''
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I raised an eyebrow. That the puppet managed to see that in the
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still-dark tent was another detail I filed away for the future.
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``Be all you can be,'' Malicia murmured. ``Do anything you want. If
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someone stands in your way, end them. If you cannot, respect that rule
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until you can end them.''
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``That's just anarchy,'' I said. ``I won't lie and say I don't break
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laws when it's useful, but I still recognize there's a need for them.''
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``It is easy to believe your whims are the only law of Creation, when
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you grow powerful enough,'' the Empress replied. ``She will kill herself
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sooner or later, crossing something she could not afford to cross.''
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``She got into a death match with the Summer Queen,'' I said. ``I doubt
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that'll do the trick but she won't walk it off easy.''
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I was getting tired of standing up with a goblet in hand, so I downed
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the wine and grabbed a chair. I set it to face the Empress, sagging
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against the wooden frame.
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``Hye always did overestimate herself,'' Malicia shrugged. ``A matter of
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little import, in the end. She's remained in her little hovel in the
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woods for decades and shows no sign of greater ambitions.''
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I could have told her otherwise. That Archer believed her teacher was
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the best thing to come along since the Gods had whelped Creation, that
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I'd lost three hundred soldiers because Ranger couldn't be fucked to do
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anything about them. But those words I kept for people I trusted. I
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respected the Empress, what she'd accomplished and the people she'd
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crushed to get where she was, but I didn't trust her in the slightest.
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So instead I leant over to grab the bottle and filled my goblet. Fishing
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out a satchel of wakeleaf from my pocket, I grabbed my pipe as well and
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looked at Malicia.
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``Do you mind?'' I asked.
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``By all means,'' she said. ``A filthy habit, but one I tolerated in
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Wekesa for over forty years.''
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Good enough. I struck the match and lit the dragonbone pipe, taking a
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deep breath. Time to get to the meat of this conversation, I believed.
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``I created a chivalric order,'' I said, and blew out a stream of smoke.
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``I am aware,'' the puppet replied. ``The obtainment of cavalry, I do
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not begrudge you. We've never managed to secure more horses than needed
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to replenish the ranks of the Thirteenth Legion without risking
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rebellion. But this is more than cavalry. It is a Callowan
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institution.''
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``You tried to kill it,'' I said bluntly. ``The both of you. It failed,
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so I'm making use of it instead.''
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Malicia raised an eyebrow.
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``Another decade and it would have disappeared painlessly,'' she said.
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``It takes coin to train armed men, Catherine. Their means had to be
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running low, especially given the numbers you managed to gather.''
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That was true enough, and the reason the knights had approached me in
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the first place. A little more honesty, then. I drank from my cup and
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chose my words carefully.
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``I won't allow them to disappear,'' I said. ``They're a keystone of
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what Callow should be.''
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``There lies the issue, my dear,'' the Empress said. ``The abolition of
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the Imperial governorships, I can stomach. You will have to be
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publically given sanction for it and pay for the gain of authority, but
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as a tool they have effectively run their course. The forging anew of a
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Callowan state, however, is a different matter. In large part your
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people have defined themselves as nation by their resistance to outside
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invaders. Some of which currently occupy the country.''
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I pulled at the pipe, inhaled the bitter smoke and let it out.
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``I've never called for rebellion against Praes,'' I finally said.
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``That is irrelevant, and untrue besides,'' she replied flatly. ``You've
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preached the destruction of the aristocracy of the Wasteland, which
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cannot feasibly be achieved without warfare. That is rebellion, no
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matter your semantics. Even if you personally never raise your banner,
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Catherine, you will not live forever. Your successors will inherit a
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well-armed and centralized ethnically Callowan state, trained at the
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expense of Praesi gold in the methods of the Legions. It is a certainty
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they will seek independence, by force of arms if need be.''
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I grimaced. She wasn't wrong, not entirely. Fifty years for now, if I
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got myself killed, I could easily see the next Governor-General call on
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mostly Callowan legions to give Praes the boot. And it was not the
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outcome I wanted, seductive as the idea of a resurgent Kingdom was
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sometimes. Even if they managed to win, which I knew better to assume,
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half the country would be ruined for a generation. And should they
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succeed, it would just be going back to the old cycle of invasion and
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death, the plague on my birthplace I'd taken it upon myself to end.
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``I tried the Ruling Council,'' I said. ``It \emph{failed}, Malicia.
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Badly.''
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``You botched the Ruling Council,'' she corrected. ``It could have been
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in the palm of your hand, but you disdained the methods to see this
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through. All the while chipping at Praesi authority by hanging one
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governor after another. It was a functional method of rule, Squire. You
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dislike Wasteland influence, but you seem to forget that we \emph{won}
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the Conquest. I've already compromised a great deal. Almost more than is
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reasonable.''
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``You also engineered the destruction of an entire culture,'' I bit
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back. ``You won, yeah. But I'm not in this seat across from you because
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of my sunny personality. I'm here because you want Callow to be brought
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into the fold without having to put down another dozen rebellion and
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assorted heroes. You had to know there would be costs to that.''
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``Then present me with alternatives,'' Malicia said. ``I could attempt
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to craft one myself, in truth, but that would be a mistake. If you want
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to hold the power and authority you do, both granted to you by the
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Tower, then prove you deserve them. You are not a partner, if I have to
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salvage your every blunder. You are a burden.''
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That was harsh, but I recognized it for what it was. An invitation. An
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opportunity to actually become a player in Imperial politics. That
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wasn't the kind of offer that came twice in a lifetime. I set aside the
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half-empty cup and breathed out the wakeleaf smoke.
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``Name me Vicequeen of Callow,'' I said.
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``An empty title,'' she replied. ``Your Governess-General will be doing
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the governing while you lead your legion.''
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``I won't keep it long,'' I said. ``A few years at most. And you'll have
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set the precedent that the Tower appoints them.''
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She did not reply but studied me instead, which I took as prompting to
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continue.
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``They have to be Callowan, that's what I ask,'' I said. ``You still get
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to pick someone that won't hinder Praesi interests.''
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``And the knights?'' she said.
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``Folded into the Legions,'' I said. ``Malicia, you and Black have
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occupied this country but you haven't really made \emph{use} of it. You
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got taxes out of the governorships, but what else? If all you want is to
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shake a land until gold comes out, there's easier targets. You can still
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get your cut from the viceroy, but there's so much more that could be
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had. How many Callowans are really in the Legions, aside from the
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Fifteenth? There should be a portion in every one, even those in the
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Wasteland. Callow has population on par with Praes, and if you don't
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need to use your armies to keep it in check that population goes to fill
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your armies. You could get cavalry that doesn't need to eat its full
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weight in meat every month. Hells, you could start fielding priests with
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the Legions if you name someone who has pull with the House of Light.
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But to get all that, you need someone Callowans will actually
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\emph{listen} to.''
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``And you can accomplish all this?'' the Empress said. ``Without
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breaking from the Tower?''
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``Yes,'' I said hoarsely. ``No matter who gets in my way. Whether they
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be gods or kings or all the armies in Creation.''
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On the second evening I'd ever spent with Black, I'd remembered a sermon
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from the House of Light. One about the really dangerous devils. How they
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gave you exactly what you wanted, and let you find your own way to the
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Hells with it.
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I took her hand anyway, Gods forgive me.
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