431 lines
22 KiB
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431 lines
22 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-1-observatory}{%
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\chapter{Observatory}\label{chapter-1-observatory}}
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\epigraph{``Those who withstood the sword, I laid low with ink.''}{Words carved into the tomb of Dread Emperor Terribilis I, the
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Lawgiver}
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I rarely used the council room these days. Under the Fairfaxes the
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King's Council had been the greatest organ of power in the realm, closer
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to the crown than any and wielding influence far beyond that of the
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titles of the men and women having been appointed to it. I'd retained
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only parts of it, though, the ones I found useful. I had no need for a
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Chamberlain to see to the `royal household', when mine was essentially
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me and whatever part of the Woe happened to be in Laure at the time. And
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even then I doubted Thief had slept in her chambers more than twice. She
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preferred prowling the city when she was there. Masego disdained his
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rooms as well, though for reasons somewhat more worrying. No, broadening
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the authority of the palace's seneschal had been quite sufficient. Not
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that all old roles had been so easily disposed of. With Anne Kendall in
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the seat of Governess-General, Juniper as my Marshal and Ratface as my
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Lord Treasurer there'd been only on seat left worth filling: Keeper of
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the Seals. In the old kingdom, those had been tasked with overseeing
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courts of law and making sure the decrees of the crown were upheld
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across Callow. That seemed a glorified clerk's position, until one
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remembered the way the kingdom had functioned under the Fairfaxes.
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Though laws decreed in Laure held sway across the realm in theory, in
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practice the hair-raising labyrinth of ancient privileges and
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prerogatives held by most highborn houses made it a nightmare for any
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single decree to be uniformly observed. I'd been amused to learn that
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House Talbot, whose old demesne was now my own, had for several
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centuries been allowed to trade in lands directly held by the crown
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without tariffs as part of an old deal that saw a generous loan offered
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to a king so he could build a summer palace by the Silver Lake. I'd been
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even more amused to learn that said palace had been wrecked by Praesi
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within the decade when they attempted to invade the heartlands of Callow
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through an underwater invasion -- orcs with gills, apparently -- down
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the Pening river. One of the Malignants, that'd been, I was pretty sure.
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A Dread Emperor of the worst mould, incompetent at everything but
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murderously ensuring his rivals didn't overthrow him. Regardless of
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historical curiosities, the Empire had actually allowed me to inherit a
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significantly more centralized realm in many ways. With Baron Darlington
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of Hedges and Baroness Morley of Harrow the only two remaining landed
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nobles in Callow, I didn't have nearly as many powerful people barking
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about privileges and prerogatives.
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What I did end up having, however, was my court's first real power
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struggle. Now that the governors across Callow all answered to the crown
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through the Governess-General the office of Keeper of the Seals held a
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lot more direct power than it'd used to, with a lot less pushback to
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boot. Crown decrees had a lot more teeth, these days, and the Keeper had
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a great deal of latitude in ensuring they were upheld. Everyone and
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their sister had gone after the appointment, beginning the charm
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offensive the moment I was crowned. The only ones who'd stayed out of
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the fray were the Deoraithe, and I'd almost asked Kegan to send me a
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competent cousin just for that. Brandon Talbot and his tribe of old
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aristocrats had been the most ferocious, though the northern baronies
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had tried to muscle his people out -- the fight between the powers in
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Laure and the distant northern nobles was an old one. A few eldermen in
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Laure had actually tried to bribe Ratface into putting in a good word
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for their candidate, banking on the Taghreb reputation for venality, and
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instead found themselves fined for the exact same sum and
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unceremoniously drummed out of office.
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I picked a southerner, in the end, after tasking Baroness Kendall to
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find me a suitable one. After the massacre at Second Liesse, what had
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once been the duchy of the same name and even the region as a whole had
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been on the brink of collapse. It'd only been the reparations I obtained
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from the Empress and Hakram's feverish work that kept the place from
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eating itself alive, and even now it was the most unstable part of my
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realm. A major city and over a hundred thousand people were gone form
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the heart of the south, it wasn't something that could be healed in a
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year. Or even a decade. Binding whatever powers remained down there to
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the crown had been necessary, and my Governess-General managed to dig up
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a candidate that wouldn't fuck up the duties that came with the
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appointment. Edith Westmore had once been a lady in her own right,
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before her liege lord took up arms in the Liesse Rebellion, and even
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after had remained a wealthy landowner. She had the reputation and the
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connections to be a capable Keeper of Seals, and though I wasn't
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particularly fond of her as a person neither did she grate my nerves. It
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was no lifetime appointment, regardless.
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Lady Edith was not here in my solar, not this afternoon anyway. I'd had
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the richly-panelled room furnished more to my tastes -- which largely
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meant removing all the more ostentatious stuff and filling the new
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liquor cabinet to the brim -- and these days I conducted most royal
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business in here. The comfortable surroundings helped allay the
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inevitable bouts of tediousness that seemed to accompany the work of
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making Callow into a halfway-functioning nation. My two companions at
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the table bathed by afternoon sun were the two members of my council I
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saw most often: Governess-General Anne Kendall and Lord Treasurer Hasan
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Qara. Who still insisted on being called Ratface, though he'd come to
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embrace the sobriquet of Bastard Lord as well. He got a kick of how much
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it horrified Praesi envoys.
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``We've another petition from Hedges,'' Anne said, shuffling parchments.
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``On the subject of tariffs in Laure and Southpool.''
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The silver-haired woman glanced delicately at my treasurer after
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speaking. Ratface seemed distinctly unamused, though the irritation was
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not directed at Kendall.
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``They're trying to flood the markets with wool,'' the Taghreb told me.
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``They have entire warehouses going to waste, the Jacks confirmed it.''
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`The Jacks' was a very fancy title for my ever-growing web of thieves,
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smugglers, spies and sundry informants. It was nowhere as unified and
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well-organized as the appellation implied, with Aisha's network of
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kinsmen in Praes, Ratface's guildsmen and Thief's \emph{friend}s being
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different organizations entirely. Adjutant oversaw the whole mess of
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disparate reports and pieced it together into a coherent picture before
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bringing it to me. As for the name, well, it was known in some circles
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that the Guild of Thieves was now in my pay. Mutterings at my court
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about \emph{lowly knaves} entering the crown's service had been frequent
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in early days, and Vivienne had amused herself by picking a fucking pun
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she knew I'd despise but still have to use frequently -- knave was
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another name for a jack, in Callowan card decks. Of all my companions,
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Thief was the one whose sense of humour always ended up screwing me some
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way or another.
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``They would eat at their own profits if they did,'' Kendall frowned.
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``Compared to selling to the crown they would be making a loss.''
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``We're not buying as much anymore,'' I noted. ``South's mostly settled,
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all the notable tent cities are clothed and fed.''
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``It's a farsighted ploy,'' Ratface told us. ``They're not after
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immediate profit here, they're trying to put the local guilds out of
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business. After they've cornered the market, they can start slowly
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raising prices. Thalassina tried the same thing with the spice trade
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under Nefarious, it nearly started a war with Nok.''
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``If they spent half as much time seeing to their own as they do
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thinking up ways to fuck with me, the north would be a godsdamned
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paradise,'' I said through gritted teeth.
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Baroness Kendall cleared her throat.
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``Though I cannot speak as to the mercantile effects,'' she said, ``from
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a diplomatic perspective we have already done much to antagonize Hedges.
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A concession might be in order.''
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``I prevented them from fleecing desperate refugees, Anne,'' I flatly
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replied. ``I didn't exactly piss in their morning porridge.''
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``All they see is expected gold never reaching their coffers,'' my
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Governess-General said. ``And I must remind you that our grasp on the
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region is still feeble. Fear will only get us so far.''
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Fear was what had gotten us anything at all, I thought. I had no
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illusions about the loyalty of those two holdout baronies. I doubted
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they'd truly join the fold within my lifetime. Even confirming nearly
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all their old privileges -- the right to mint their own coin being the
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largest abolished -- and leaving their holdings untouched they still
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wanted more. \emph{Aristocrats}. My growing exposure to the lot of them
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had done nothing to improve my opinion of the breed, save for a few
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exceptions.
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``Quotas,'' I finally said. ``Enough they can get a foothold, not enough
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they can eat the whole cake. And make it clear to the right people that
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I expect positions on having observing Legion officers attached to their
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armies to\ldots{} change accordingly.''
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Kendall inclined her head, the touch of the sun on her locks rather
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fetching as she did. For a woman her age she remained strikingly
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beautiful.
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``I'll have a proposal drafted,'' Ratface said. ``Now, I know we've
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spoken of this before but\ldots{}''
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I grimaced, fairly sure I knew what was coming.
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``There is too much Imperial coinage circulating in Callow, Catherine,''
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he said. ``We need to start buying it up.''
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Were I not Named, I might never have noticed the slight crease on the
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Governess-General's brow when she heard Ratface refer to me by my given
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name. She and I had once been more familiar as well, but that had gone
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up in smoke since my coronation. Anne Kendall was a patriot to the bone:
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it didn't matter how I'd gotten my crown, now that I wore it I was to be
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treated as loftily as any Fairfax.
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``You're my treasurer,'' I sighed. ``You know damn well we don't have
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the funds for that. And the Empress might see it as provocation, which
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we \emph{really} can't afford at the moment.''
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A year of regular reports had made it painfully clear to me that while
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Praesi troops might no longer garrison my cities or Praesi lords rule
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them, Praesi influence was far from gone. I'd spent so much time paying
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attentions to borders and armies that I'd never considered the Wasteland
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would still have a leash in the form of coin and commerce. Trade with
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Procer had pretty much ended after the Conquest, and trade to Mercantis
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had been dominated by Imperial governors. The wealth came from the east,
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these days, and there was precious little I could do about that at the
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moment. Not when it was the Tower's gold that had rebuilt an entire
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third of my realm. I'd had to make concessions to ensure that
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materialized, too. We'd been keeping Callow afloat for the last year by
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gouging the High Lords scrabbling for grain through trade permits and
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set prices, but the Tower had been exempted from both. To an extent,
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anyway. I'd insisted on keeping large reserves in anticipation of the
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crusade.
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``So long as nearly half the coinage in Callow is from the Imperial
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Mint, the Tower can break the realm's coffers at will,'' Ratface said.
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``All the Empress needs to do is devalue her currency and the south goes
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up in flames. It's a knife at our throat, Catherine. I understand the
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Hellhound is riding you about funding for the army, but another thousand
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men will make no difference if we can't \emph{pay} those soldiers.''
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``Our own coin is slowly displacing the others,'' Baroness Kendall
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pointed out. ``Patience might be the wisest answer.''
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The Taghreb shook his head.
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``We're replacing old Callowan coinages,'' he said. ``We barely touched
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the Wasteland portion. The Carrion Lord spent decades making certain
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Callow was dependent on Imperial coin for trade, it is not work that can
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be undone in a few years' span. Not unless we plan and invest.''
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``There has to be an alternative to just taking the Empress' gold off
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the streets by emptying our coffers, Ratface,'' I said. ``That'd be as
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good as raising a banner in her eyes. There would be immediate
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retaliation.''
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The handsome man wrinkled his nose, rather unbecomingly.
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``Using Mercantis as a third party, perhaps,'' he finally said. ``It
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would be slower and costlier, and still have us vulnerable to foreign
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influence.''
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I sighed.
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``Draft-``
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``A proposal, yes,'' he finished amusedly. ``Ah, the joys of
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queenship.''
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``Don't you fucking start,'' I muttered. ``Between this and learning all
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those godsdamned Proceran languages my eyes are going to fall off.''
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Baroness Kendall delicately cleared her throat.
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``Not to add undue burden, but there is one last petition,'' she said.
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``Go on,'' I grunted. ``As long as it's not our man in Vale whining
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about granary distribution again.''
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``Officials have presented a formal request that the court return to the
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use of the Alban calendar,'' she told me.
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I snorted.
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``Yeah, that's not happening,'' I said. ``The Legions all use --``
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I heard the movement behind the door before the knock sounded. My ears
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pricked. Man, late thirties, fine health. He smelled of anxiousness,
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though well short of fear.
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``Enter,'' I called out before he'd finished knocking.
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I felt the gaze of the other two on me. Ah. I really needed to stop
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doing that. It did tend to make people uncomfortable. It was a servant,
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who I did not recognize though the livery made it clear he was one of
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the palace staff.
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``Your Majesty,'' he greeted me, bowing low before offering shallower
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bows to the others.
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He'd been slightly reluctant when it came to Ratface's turn, I noted.
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There'd been a lot of that since the moment I first appointed the
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Taghreb. I raised an expectant eyebrow at him.
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``There is word from, uh, the Observatory,'' the man said. ``Your
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presence has been requested. The Lord Hierophant allegedly spoke of a
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`major phenomenon'.''
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Translation: Masego had summoned me while, again, forgetting you weren't
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actually supposed to summon queens. I didn't really mind, but his brutal
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lack of regard for etiquette did seem to unsettle the servants whenever
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they came in contact with it. I rose to my feet, pushing my seat back.
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``We'll reconvene in an hour to finish this,'' I told the other two.
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``You speak so queenly, these days,'' Ratface grinned. ``I haven't seen
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you spit on the ground in months.''
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``Yeah, well, I own all the carpets now,'' I muttered.
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We made our courtesies, some more courteously than others, and then I
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dismissed the servant who seemed intent on accompanying me. I knew the
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way to the Observatory: I'd paid for the damned thing to be built out of
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an uninhabited wing of the palace. I wasn't keeping a mistress, or a
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husband for that matter, so luxurious rooms reserved for one had been
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more than a little unnecessary. It wasn't a long walk, but I lengthened
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my stride out of impatience. Still took the time to greet the servants
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and officials I came across, though. Actually learning all the names was
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a daydream given their sheer number, but if I could get at least half
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right it'd be a start. Better than Archer, anyway, who just called them
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whatever she felt like at the time. Getting this damned thing built had
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been strolling right into a series of rows with most my closest
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advisors, Juniper and Ratface the worst of them. My former Supply
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Tribune had been appalled at the costs involved, especially since some
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materials had to be brought directly from the Wasteland, while the
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Hellhound had bluntly told me that for the same amount of coin we could
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arm and armour over a thousand men and that'd be a lot more useful in
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the long run. It was rare enough for the two of them to agree on
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anything that I'd seriously reconsidered my commitment.
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It'd still been built, in the end, and Masego had proved that his work
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had value beyond gold or steel. Without the Observatory at least three
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heroes would have slipped into Callow unseen, and the results of that
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could have been disastrous.
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I felt the outer wards long before I arrived at the end of the corridor.
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As the only way in or out of the Observatory, it was now the most
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scrupulously protected part of the palace. The full line of legionaries
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guarding the corridor saluted as I went by, and I nodded back. Hakram's
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people, these. The amount of soldiers and bureaucrats under Adjutant's
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direct command had steadily increased along with his responsibilities.
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My blood was keyed into the outer wards, which were more trap than
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boundary, and so I got to the bronze gates with only a mild headache to
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show for it. I rapped my knuckles against the metal, careful to moderate
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my strength. There was still a dent left from the one time I'd
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forgotten. The bronze doors opened after a few heartbeats, and behind
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them stood a dark-skinned woman. She hastily knelt. Fadila Mbafeno had
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been one of Akua's minions once, before I spared her at Hierophant's
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request. She'd since served as an assistant in his mage's tower, and now
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effectively ran the Observatory. On parchment Masego's word was law
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here, so long as I did not contradict him, but his utter disinterest in
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the logistics of the place meant all the responsibilities were in the
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Soninke mage's hands.
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I disliked her, though not enough to do anything about it, but I would
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not deny she was extremely competent. Diabolist had always picked the
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cream of the crop, when it came to minions. Not that it'd ever stopped
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her from sacrificing them at the drop of a hat.
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``Your Majesty,'' Fadila said. ``I invite you within.''
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Nothing changed, visibly at least. There was a subtle current of power
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beneath her words, but even trying to feel it out would disperse it. I
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knew better than to think that'd been an empty sentence, though. I still
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vividly remembered the searing pain that had followed trying to pass the
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threshold without explicit permission.
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``Rise,'' I said, and strode by her.
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Passing the threshold was not painful, per se. It was more like being
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squeezed through a very narrow gap, a temporary constriction of my
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being. Once inside the room proper there was a sense of relief, but I
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knew from experience it would be short-lasting. A bigger cage was still
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a cage. The inner Observatory was warded up something fierce, some of
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those defences specifically against fae. They were deeply unpleasant for
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me, but I'd deal with the discomfort if it meant Larat couldn't ever set
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foot in here. Falida rose as bid, and followed three full steps behind
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me a little to the left. Wasteland etiquette, I thought sardonically,
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though in all fairness Callow had its fair share of little quirks as
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well. What had once been a full wing of the royal palace had been ripped
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out of even load-bearing walls, discreet arcs instead supporting the
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weight of the domed ceiling now. It was a single massive room and awake
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with quiet activity. Circling at the feet of the walls a boardwalk of
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granite made an outer ring, linked to pebbled paths that made up the
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spokes of a giant wheel from a bird's eye view. Within those spaces
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pools of dark water lay still, save for when mages stirred them to life
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with whispered spells. Scrying pools, particularly powerful ones.
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Getting the mages to keep them manned had been difficult, since the Army
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of Callow was already short on spellcasters, and ultimately I'd had to
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draft a few competent officers then draw heavily upon the now-disbanded
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Guild of Hedges. Getting Masego to teach those middling sorcerers how to
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scry properly had been a rough conversation, but he'd ultimately
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conceded than an empty Observatory would rather defeat the point of
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raising it in the first place. The legal status of the sorcerers had
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been a thorny matter to handle even after they were trained. They could
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not part of the Army of Callow or the Legions of Terror, as Juniper was
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still a general in the Empress' employ as well as my marshal and that
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would give Malicia a degree of influence over them. I'd not wanted to
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give the court any sway over them either, but placing them under my
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direct authority would meant the moment Hakram and I went on campaign
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they fell in a legal morass. I had to be careful about things like that,
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these days. Taking the crown had brought nearly as many complications as
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it had solutions. As an awkward compromise they'd been made into a
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guild, approved by my seal, the head of which was Masego. In his absence
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it was Fadila who ran things as his appointed second, with just enough
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independence she could do whatever needed to be done while the fact that
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the Observatory was the crown's property meant Anne Kendall had enough
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authority to step in if things got out of hand.
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I pushed aside the thoughts as I tread one of the pebbled paths to the
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centre of the room, where Masego awaited. A second smaller ring of
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granite had been laid there, but it could hardly be seen. From the dark
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waters grew a massive alder tree whose roots spread into every pool and
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whose summit rose to touch the ceiling of painted runes and night sky.
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There was nothing natural about it, from the overly pale bark to the
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almost crimson leaves. Growing from the trunk a handful of branches
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formed a structure halfway between a bed and a seat, and before it a
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depression in the trunk made room for an item pulsing with power. It
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didn't look like much to the naked eye, a wide bowl of baked clay whose
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supports were shaped like men and devils supporting the rim. It'd taken
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Archer the better part of a month to find it and get it out of the ruins
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of Liesse, but I'd never seriously considered leaving the scrying
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artefact of the Sahelians among the wreck no matter the difficulties.
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Once Akua's discreet trump card, it was now the heart of the
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Observatory. In the wooden seat before it, Masego was laying down and
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looking half-asleep. I could see his pupils moving beneath the black
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eyecloth, but aside from that Hierophant was eerily still.
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He'd lost weight again, I saw as I got closer. Even now that Fadila was
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under strict instructions to make sure he ate he still spent most hours
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of the days and night in that seat and rarely moved unless he was forced
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to. I almost hesitated to touch him, for he tended to be confused for a
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bit when wrenched out of his scrying. The decision was made for me, in
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the end. The branches above rustled, and someone casually tossed a
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sloppily sculpted wooden duck at his forehead. He wrenched back to
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Creation with a yelp as Archer emerged from the foliage dangling upside
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down.
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``Evening, Cat,'' she grinned. ``Congratulations, you're getting
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invaded.''
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I considered this, then smiled back.
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``Evening, Indrani,'' I said, and wrenched her down to splash noisily in
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a pool.
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Eyes turning to Masego, who looked only half-here even now, I sighed.
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``Tell me everything,'' I ordered.
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