494 lines
24 KiB
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494 lines
24 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-3-chat}{%
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\chapter{Chat}\label{chapter-3-chat}}
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\epigraph{``I must say, Chancellor, you've become quite the
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conversationalist.''}{Dread Empress Maledicta II}
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The room had been a gaol, once upon a time. Not one the Fairfaxes ever
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owned up to having, but the ruling dynasty of Callow had not remained on
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the throne by being faint-hearted. Unlike the luxurious prison that was
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the Songbird's Cage, this was a dark and ugly pit. Not the kind of place
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you sent someone if you ever expected them to come out. The late and
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unlamented Governor Mazus had apparently used it as dumping grounds for
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people he believed would cause more terror by being disappeared than
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known dead, and expanded what had once been a single pair of rooms to a
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large underground complex of seven. I'd had it sealed off before my
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coronation, and not a soul was allowed here now. Bare stone walls
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surrounded me, cleared of manacles, and the only ornament was the seat
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I'd brought down here myself. I closed the steel door behind me and
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froze it shut before taking a deep breath. Winter came easy.
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It always did.
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Ice crept across the walls hungrily, gaping maws of frost that devoured
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every nook and cranny until all that was left was a hall of glittering
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mirrors. It'd been as difficult as snapping a finger, and there was a
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part of me that delighted in using the might of my mantle. But then the
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world sharpened. Grew jagged. I could feel, with dim horror, everything
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that I was begin to calcify. To set in immovable stones. That would have
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been dangerous enough, but I was not merely fae. My title was Winter's
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and Winter knew nothing as intimately as darkness and hunger. I sat down
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on the chair and forced myself to think as little as I could. It was
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almost cowardly, but I'd rather not have to confront the kind of
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thoughts that would surface if I pondered anything too deeply in this
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state. Gods, I could use a drink. The alcohol was one of the few things
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that blunted the edges of this. That made me feel like I was still
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human. But even if I'd been willing to embrace that crutch right now, I
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could not. Hakram had, before he left, exacted an oath from me.
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\emph{Never while on campaign, or attending affairs of state}. The oath
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was to end with our reunion, whenever that may be. Adjutant had
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expressed\ldots{} worries to me in private, twice now. I'd been
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irritated, considering Indrani drank like a fish and no one ever
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lectured \emph{her}, but he was right in that Archer wasn't wearing a
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crown. Unlike me. The sharpness of the ache for a cup in my hand was
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whispering to me that Hakram might just have been right. He did have
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that nasty habit, didn't he? I breathed in and out slowly, then reached
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for the power again. This had been an aspect, once. Fall. Now it was
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just a part of me, true as hair or toes. When it'd been crystallized
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into a single word it'd been stronger -- no perhaps not that, simply
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more \emph{rigid} -- but whatever had been lost was more than made up by
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the breadth of what I could now achieve with this power. Before, I would
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never have been able to forge this half-world I was now painting over
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the room with brushstrokes of night. The threshold of my domain, the
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thought came, forged of instinct and inhuman certainty. I bit my lip,
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strong enough to draw blood.
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Pain, that most human of sensations. It cleared out some of the ice and
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I let out a relieved breath. I had to see to myself before the First
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Prince graced me with her presence. That and play the card up my sleeve.
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``I grant you leash,'' I said, voice echoing. ``I grant you eyes and
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ears, tongue and feet, at my sufferance.''
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With a throaty chuckle Akua Sahelian's shade stepped out of the Mantle
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of Woe. Even in this half-death, she remained beautiful. High cheekbones
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and perfectly styled eyebrows, her dress of red and gold tightly
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clinging to curves I could only envy. The only thing marring that beauty
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was the gaping bloody hole in her chest where I'd ripped out her heart.
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``Freedom,'' the Diabolist mused. ``Limited, but then is that not true
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of all freedoms?''
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``Now that I've let you out of the lamp,'' I said, ``for the first of my
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three wishes I would like peace for Calernia.''
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She cast me a disapproving looks.
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``You know very well that djinn do not grant wishes,'' she said. ``That
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is mere Callowan ignorance.''
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``You make a terrible genie, Akua,'' I told her. ``I'm going to trade
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you for a lantern one of these days, you know? They're about as useful
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and \emph{they} don't talk back.''
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``Your insistence on levity is a mark of poor breeding, dearest,'' she
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said. ``You must overcome it.''
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I had a few less than polite things to reply to that with, including a
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reminder that if she was so clever she wouldn't have ended up sown into
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my collar, but it would have to wait. I could feel my guest arriving.
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The darkness shivered, and just like that the First Prince sat across
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from me. I'd not been sure that she'd bite when I sent Thief with the
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amulet I'd woven strands of my domain into, but to my pleasure she had.
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She was covered with so many miracles she almost glowed and she was very
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careful never to leave her seat, but she was here anyway. Hasenbach was
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not a reckless woman by nature, by my reckoning, but I knew exactly why
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she'd taken the risk to venture into even the outskirts of my domain:
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the Augur. How deeply that woman's visions ran was still a subject of
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much speculation across the whole Empire, but I'd banked on her being
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able to tell I genuinely had no intention of turning this into a trap. I
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needed the First Prince too badly to ever consider taking her life, even
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if it'd been possible. There was a moment of silence, as the Proceran
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gathered her bearings. I said nothing, patiently waiting.
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Her Most Serene Highness Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer,
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Prince of Rhenia and Princess of Salia, Warden of the West and Protector
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of the Realms of Man. Quite a mouthful of titles for a woman who was
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only twenty-six years old and had become the sovereign ruler of the
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largest -- and arguably most powerful -- nation on Calernia before the
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age of twenty. This was likely as close to meeting in person as we'd
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ever come, so as always I took a moment to study her. She was impeccably
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clothed in dark blue I'd been told was part of the heraldry of her home
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principality Rhenia, the dress rather conservative but still flattering
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to her frame. It made her shoulders look slimmer, I thought. Hasenbach
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was best known for her skill as a diplomat, but she'd been born with a
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warrior's frame. Her long golden hair cascaded down her neck in perfect
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ringlets, needing no ornament but their own richness, but there was a
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discreet touch of golden eye shadow that made her blue eyes stand out
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even more vividly. On her brow was a circlet of white gold, tastefully
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understated considering the power it represented. I'd seen beautiful
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women in my day, some hauntingly so, and honestly would not count the
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First Prince among them. She was not plain, not exactly, but all the
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most striking parts of her appearance were careful artifice.
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That did nothing to detract from her presence, even in this half-realm
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of mine. Though seated on a mere cushioned and sculpted chair, she
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radiated that\ldots{} something. The unspoken pull that surrounded
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people like Black and Malicia, or even Juniper. That spark that made the
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weight they bore into something that dragged others into their orbit.
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No, she was not someone to ever underestimate. The more I learned about
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her ascension to the throne and the years that had followed, the warier
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I was becoming of her. The pit of vipers she ruled was as deadly as the
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Imperial court in many ways, and she'd retained rule of it without
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having a cudgel like Black to call on. She met my eyes, but did not
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speak. Akua softly laughed, walking around the First Prince's silhouette
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with the grace of a cat before leaning her head over the Proceran's
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shoulder.
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``She will never speak first, my heart,'' the shade of my most hated
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enemy said. ``It would be improper, you see. Her people believe that
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First Prince is the greatest of all titles, and so she must never be
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first to offer courtesy.''
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I inclined my head towards Hasenbach.
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``Your Most Serene Highness,'' I said, voice calm.
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``Your Grace,'' Cordelia Hasenbach replied.
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The proper address was `Your Majesty', though never once had she
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referred to me as such. The etiquette she employed recognized me as
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noble, though at best one of equal standing with any of the many princes
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of the Procer.
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``Look at how her lip curls around the words, Catherine,'' Akua laughed,
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moving around the unseeing First Prince to better study her. ``She would
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prefer not to grant you them at all, but she must -- and \emph{how} it
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displeases her. To call you queen would be recognition of your
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legitimacy, and end to her crusade's own. But to deny you any title at
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all would make any negotiation between you worthless.''
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Akua rose, stretching languidly.
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``And she needs you to keep speaking to her, my lovely,'' the monster
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said silkily. ``Oh yes. Even should you never come to terms, to be able
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to gauge you with her own eyes is priceless advantage.''
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Diabolist had grown increasingly fond of using endearments with me,
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since I'd ripped out her heart and stolen her soul. Fucking Praesi.
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Fucking highborn, really.
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``Let's begin with the usual,'' I said. ``Terms?''
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``Unchanged,'' the First Prince replied. ``Immediate abdication and
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disbanding of your armies. Your soldiery to undergo fair trial after the
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crusade. Yourself and no more than five of your comrades allowed exile
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without pursuit, under condition of never returning to Callow.''
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I hummed, and idly reached for my pipe. I used the process of stuffing
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it with wakeleaf and striking a match as a deferral of answer to allow
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me to gather my thoughts. I'd half-expected Hasenbach to offer starker
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terms now that she'd struck the first blow and begun crossing into
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Callow catching me flat-footed.
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``Do you feel that?'' Akua murmured. ``That is \emph{caution}, dearest.
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She does not harden terms of surrender because she fears you. What you
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might do if cornered. Use that fear, Catherine. It is the sharpest prick
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of the mantle you claimed.''
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I puffed at my pipe and let out a stream of smoke, making myself more
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comfortable in my seat.
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``I'll have to decline, for now,'' I said.
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Akua was useful, too useful to shove back into the box right now, but
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more for her perceptiveness than her advice. The terms remained
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unacceptable. Abdication would be a relief, to be honest, and something
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that was going to happen regardless if my plans came to fruition. But
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not like this. I couldn't trust a crusader tribunal to pass sentence on
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the Praesi under my command, much less the greenskins. And that the
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First Prince and her allies would be deciding Callow's fate without a
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single check on their decisions was the least acceptable part of it all.
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``You are calmer than I expected,'' Hasenbach said. ``The dossiers we
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have of you led me to expect conversation of a harsher tone.''
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Akua clucked her tongue.
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``Do not let her turn this towards you, my heart,'' she advised. ``Any
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answer at all will be revealing in ways you cannot control. That is too
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dangerous a woman to be given the lay of your thoughts.''
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I inclined my head, agreeing with Akua while masquerading it as
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acquiescence with the First Prince's sentence.
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``I've been reading about the Principate, lately,'' I said. ``About how
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it functions in practice.''
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The First Prince smiled, as if she were sharing a drink with an old
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friend.
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``Interesting,'' she said. ``And have you come to any conclusions?''
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``It doesn't,'' I bluntly said. ``Function, that is. The fault line in
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Procer's foundation has been made exceedingly clear over the last twenty
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years.''
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Not so much as a speck of emotion crossed the First Prince's face. Akua
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laughed delightedly.
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``See how her brow stiffened, Catherine?'' she said. ``That is anger, my
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lovely. The recognition that the Empress' game was no great plot. That
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all her people ever needed to claw each other bloody was means and
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excuse. Feed that wroth. That is the only way for you to glimpse truth
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behind the mask.''
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Praesi diplomacy, I was learning, was more like a pit fight with
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slightly pulled punches than anything I'd recognize. It was all about
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testing the other side, making them blink and then capitalizing on that
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weakness. That Akua could not recognize tussling like that with Cordelia
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godsdamned Hasenbach was a bad idea was a good reminder that for all her
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cleverness the Diabolist had heavy blinders. That was the rotten heart
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that always made the designs of the High Lords collapse: they could not
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ever conceive that they were sometimes in the inferior bargaining
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position. Fortunately, I'd learned that lesson early when I grew up with
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the Tower's boot over my throat. \emph{No doubt I have blinders of my
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own}, I thought. \emph{But if I knew they'd hardly be blinders, would
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they?}
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``Not overly surprising conclusion, given the manner in which you have
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ruled,'' the First Prince said. ``For all that your throne is in Laure,
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you have adopted many of the manners of the East.''
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Ruled, I noted, not reigned. How carefully she always picked her words.
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``Don't misunderstand me,'' I said. ``I'm not touting the Tower as an
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alternative, or even how I've been running things. I just grafted Praesi
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bureaucracy to the court, and it's a clunky solution. But I've gotten my
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hands on a history of the League Wars, and it's not a pretty story.''
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Akua clucked her tongue disapprovingly.
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``This is the chorus of the losing side, dearest,'' she chided me.
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``Beneath the dignity of one who triumphed over me.''
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It was a small shift, but I saw Hasenbach's eyes brighten with interest
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after I spoke. I'd been careful, during our little talks, to try to find
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common grounds. Something we could discuss and disagree over without it
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getting personal. So far, what had worked best was Proceran history. I
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wasn't reading those books solely because I no longer needed to sleep,
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or even to get an idea of my opponent's weaknesses.
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``You refer to the Right of Iron,'' she said. ``I would, in fact, tend
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to agree with you in this matter. The prerogative of waging war without
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the agreement of the First Prince has been the source of much trouble
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over the centuries.''
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``So why haven't you tried to revoke it?'' I asked, genuinely curious.
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``I know that'd have to go through the Highest Assembly and that means a
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vote, but just after your civil war people were sick enough of the
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killing you would have had a decent chance of pushing it through.''
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``I considered this,'' the First Prince admitted. ``Yet in doing so, I
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would have created cohesive opposition to any further reform. Many of
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which are, as you have said, direly needed.''
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``That opposition you're talking about,'' I said. ``They're the exact
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same people that spent nearly twenty years ravaging the Principate on
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Malicia's pay.''
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``A generalization,'' Hasenbach said. ``One with some shade of accuracy,
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I will concede, yet there is important difference in having been funded
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by the Empress and having sought to do her bidding.''
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I acknowledged the point with a nod. From the corner of my eye I saw
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Akua meandering away from the First Prince, coming to stand at my back.
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Even knowing she was powerless, utterly at my mercy, having her behind
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me was raising the hair on my neck.
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``What I'm wondering is -- why listen to them at all?'' I asked. ``I saw
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the Imperial estimates for the remaining armies after the Battle of
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Aisne. There wasn't a force in the Principate that could have stood
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against you, if you'd twisted their arms into backing your reforms. And
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I don't mean the small ones, I mean \emph{everything}.''
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``You were taught,'' Cordelia Hasenbach said, ``by two of the most
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brutal tyrants in living memory. That is not your fault, though your
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embrace of their methods remains your sole responsibility. That is why
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your perspective on the subject is tainted. I did not attempt to make
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myself an absolute monarch because I believe such a manner of ruling to
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be dangerously flawed.''
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``If you count civil wars, Procer's been on the field more often than
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any other nation on Calernia,'' I pointed. ``That includes \emph{Praes},
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Your Highness.''
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``You blame this on lack of centralized authority,'' the First Prince
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said. ``That is not entirely inaccurate, yet you miss the central tenet
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of the Principate: it is, unlike Praes, a nation built on consensus. The
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Highest Assembly is prone to squabbles, and inefficient. This I will not
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deny. That is because it is not an institution meant to empower the
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office of the First Prince, it is meant to \emph{check} it. No single
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man or woman should ever be able to wield the full, unrestricted might
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of the Principate.''
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``Now,'' Akua whispered into my ear. ``Now is when you slide the
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knife.''
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I smiled pleasantly.
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``Then why,'' I asked, ``is the host crossing into Callow made up almost
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entirely by your opposition in the Assembly?''
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The shutters went down on the First Prince's face, even as I pulled at
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my pipe and allowed smoke to stream out of my nostrils. \emph{This}, I
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thought, \emph{moments like this. They're why I let you out of the box,
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Akua.} I had much to learn from Diabolist, when it came to this kind of
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game.
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``She did not expect you to understand her intent,'' Akua said, still at
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my side. ``Watch the eyes, how she reconsiders the kind of threat you
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pose. She thought you a dull thug, a brute of a child with a stolen
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crown. Now she wonders if you've taken as much from these talks as she
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has, and it \emph{worries} her.''
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The shade laughed.
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``Do not talk,'' she said. ``Let her silence damn her more the longer it
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stretches.''
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I spat out another mouthful of smoke, studying the First Prince. When
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she finally spoke, her tone was perfectly calm.
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``I am forced to wonder,'' Hasenbach said, ``what game it is you truly
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play, Catherine Foundling.''
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``The only game I've ever ever played,'' I said. ``Keeping my people's
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head above the waterline.''
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``Yet you ally with monsters and murderers,'' the First Prince said.
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``The very same whose fellows committed the single greatest massacre of
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Callowans since the days of Dread Empress Triumphant.''
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``May she never return,'' Akua murmured.
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``I'm also talking with you,'' I said. ``The thing is, Your Highness,
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that right now the Tower's my only possible bedfellow. I can't take your
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crusade on my own.''
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Not entirely true. Juniper was the opinion that if I was willing to let
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most of Callow burn while I struck deep in crusader territory, I might
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be able to force a draw by sheer dint of massacre. She'd played out the
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theory with her general staff. No part of that path was acceptable to
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me, though. I was not willing to pile up the bodies until no one was
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able to keep going. If I was ever forced to that, well\ldots{} Better to
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abdicate. And to backstab Praes as brutally as I could beforehand, so
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that the crusade ended quickly and not in Callow.
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``A villain ruling over Callow is not an acceptable outcome for this
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war,'' the First Prince said.
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``People I don't trust in the slightest deciding what happens to Callow
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isn't either,'' I frankly replied. ``If I have to cut a deal, I'd rather
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do it with you than Malicia. After Liesse\ldots{} Well, if this is the
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best I can expect from the Empire, the Empire's not an entity I can
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trust to uphold their part of a deal.''
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``Trust has nothing do with it,'' Akua dismissed. ``You have power
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enough that the Empress cannot cross you lightly. Treaties are only ever
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gilding added to the deeper truth of power, dearest. This one does not
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consider you of sufficient might to treat with.''
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``Trust,'' Hasenbach said, her tone almost amused.
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``Trust,'' I echoed.
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The First Prince smiled.
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``Did you never pause to wonder, Your Grace, why the only powers willing
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to deal with you are monstrous?'' she asked softly.
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My jaw clenched.
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``Did you never wonder if you \emph{belong} amongst that number?''
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My fingers tightened.
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``Careful now,'' Diabolist warned. ``She goads you not by accident.''
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The urge was there to lash out. To remind that sanctimonious fucking
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Proceran that her own hands were far from clean. She'd sent out her
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enemies for me to savage, and her reasons for starting this crusade
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weren't nearly as squeaky clean as she'd like her allies to believe.
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She'd played the shadow game with Malicia for over a decade, too, and
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there's wasn't a person in Creation who'd manage to get through that
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without some mud on their shoes. Why were her killings less a sin than
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mine? Because she went to the House of Light for sermons and paid her
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alms? Because her intentions were some kind of nebulous greater good?
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Hells, so were mine. Instead I took a deep breath. Slowly, I raised my
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pipe and pulled at the dragonbone shaft. The wakeleaf no longer brought
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the sharp focus it once had, but the act itself was soothing.
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``I have,'' I admitted quietly, ``utterly failed Callow.''
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Whatever answer she'd expected, it had not been that. The flicker of
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surprise in her eyes did not lie. I felt Akua begin to speak, but I no
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longer had need of her services. All it took was an exertion of will and
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back into the collar she went. Blind and deaf and furious.
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``After First Liesse, when the Ruling Council was formed,'' I said.
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``No, even before that. When I did not answer Akua Sahelian being named
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governess with gathering an army and hanging her from the nearest tree.
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I betrayed everything I had set out to do the moment I allowed a woman I
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knew a cold butcher to be the steward of Callowan lives for the sake of
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political expediency.''
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I'd had months, now, of sleepless nights. Of going back over everything
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I'd done. Thinking of the paths I could have taken that didn't result in
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a hundred thousand of my people dead. And there had been so very many of
|
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them, hadn't there?
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``I fucked up the Ruling Council,'' I acknowledged. ``I had the leverage
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to make real changes, the same kind I've been saying I want to achieve
|
|
since I was a girl, and instead I let a council stacked with High Lord
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cronies run Callow for me. And then got furious when they acted the same
|
|
way Praesi always have, the moment I wasn't there to make them afraid.
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|
I've been complicit through inaction or ignorance in every catastrophe
|
|
that struck Callow since the moment I got power and did absolutely
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|
nothing with it.''
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The First Prince watched me in silence, her face unreadable.
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``I could make excuses,'' I said. ``That I was ill-prepared for that
|
|
kind of authority. That I spent so much time and spilled so much blood
|
|
getting on top I forgot \emph{why} I wanted to be there in the first
|
|
place. But that'd be hypocritical, wouldn't it? I was given exactly what
|
|
I clamoured for, and when I got it a city was turned into a graveyard.
|
|
Hells, it's on my fucking standard: justifications matter only to the
|
|
just. I started out with the intention of burying anyone who tossed
|
|
around sentences like that in a shallow grave, but now I'm the one
|
|
having them sown on battle flags. Second Liesse made it clear that I've
|
|
slowly crawled into being the kind of person I swore I was going to
|
|
remove.''
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|
``And yet,'' Cordelia Hasenbach said, ``you still wear the crown and
|
|
muster your armies for war. Sentiment is only meaningful if followed by
|
|
action. If your grief at all the woe you have caused changes nothing, it
|
|
is merely self-pity.''
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|
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|
``I know exactly what I have to do, Hasenbach,'' I said. ``And letting
|
|
you carve up Callow like side of pork isn't part of it. Not when the
|
|
people doing the carving have no real incentive to care for the realm
|
|
under the knife.''
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|
``Self-pity, then,'' Hasenbach said. ``You still believe you can win
|
|
this war.''
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|
``War,'' I said, ``is the very opposite of what I'm after.''
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|
My pipe had finally gone out, I saw.
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|
``We'll talk again,'' I told her, and the darkness collapsed.
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|
|
I stayed in my seat for a long time, alone with my thoughts. \emph{When
|
|
does a lesser evil simply become an evil?} That was the line I needed to
|
|
find, the one that could not be crossed. The moment where I became a
|
|
greater wound than the one I was trying to prevent. I rose as the ice
|
|
receded around me. It was going to be a long night.
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|
They always were.
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