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523 lines
21 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-23-recoup}{%
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\chapter{Recoup}\label{chapter-23-recoup}}
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\epigraph{``Take no comfort in that, hero. For though dawn ever comes, night
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ever does precede it.''}{Dread Empress Regalia II}
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``Well, this is a fine fucking mess,'' I frowned.
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The reports had been unfortunately delayed, mostly by the fact that the
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Red Flower Vales were apparently now the Red Flower Mountains. Only with
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brimstone instead of granite, because why would Warlock just make it a
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little bit worse when he could make thoroughly worse? If those things
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cracked open and devils started pouring out, I was going to be
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\emph{cross}. That the current location of Masego's father was still
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unknown did not improve the situation in the slightest, since it meant I
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had no idea whether he was still guarding the region or not.
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``The passes are closed,'' Hakram said. ``Strategically, that is a
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victory. The only way into Callow is the northern passage, and it will
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be barred for at least six months.''
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I flicked a glance at the tall orc, still basking in the satisfaction of
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having him by my side again. It never seemed quite as bad, when Adjutant
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was with me. He'd arrived only a few days after the peace conference,
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and remained with us as the Army of Callow escorted the crusaders back
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up north. It'd been a month since the Battle of the Camps now, since I'd
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snatched a peace from the butchery and put ink to what might quite
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possibly be my own death warrant. I shook my head and reached for the
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small silver thimble at my side, knocking back the brandy in a single
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swallow.
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``I don't mean that,'' I said. ``I mean whatever the Hells \emph{he}'s
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up to.''
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I touched the bottom of the thimble to the unfolded map occupying much
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of the desk we were sharing. The map itself was ours, but nothing else
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in this room was. This was the private solar of the Baroness of Harrow,
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who'd insisted we use it while we stayed in her keep. The liberation of
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her ancestral lands had apparently put me in her good books. That, or
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seeing me drop a lake on an army had made her reconsider her stance on
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royal taxation even though the Pilgrim had knocked me the fuck out after
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barely ten heartbeats. The silver thimble was touching the edge of the
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Principality of Bayeux, where news now a fortnight old had Black and his
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legions sacking towns for supplies on their march west.
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``Well, at a glance,'' Hakram drily said, ``invading Procer.''
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``With fifteen thousand men?'' I sceptically said. ``We're not even sure
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he has siege with him. Even if he somehow starts taking cities without
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engines he can't \emph{hold} them.''
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While on the surface the Tenth Crusade had tried to enter Callow and
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twice found the door shut on its fingers, the situation was a lot less
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promising than it appeared at first glance. The map held a handful of
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figurines standing for armies and their last reported locations, and the
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picture they painted was not pleasant. The three Proceran hosts we knew
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well: one down south in Tenerife guarding the border with the League,
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one marching out of northern Callow according to truce terms and the
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last, unfortunately, still camped in front of the Vales. Digging through
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the wreckage to reopen the pass. That alone would be bad, since the
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Jacks told me Papenheim should have between forty to fifty thousand
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soldiers under his command.
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What was making it much, much worse was the Dominion of Levant was
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joining the fray. Half a year ago, Thief had passed me a report
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estimating they'd send an army about thirty thousand men. She'd been
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right, in a way. There \emph{was} an army of that size marching to
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reinforce Papenheim. Unfortunately, there was also a second one by the
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shore of Lake Louvant -- the massive lake in the centre of the Procer --
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currently preparing to embark on barges. Its destination was, allegedly,
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Salia. The seat of the First Prince, the capital of the Principate. And
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where Black would be headed if he continued to march in a straight line.
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At a guess, every single garrison in central Procer would be pulled
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together into a ramshackle army then swelled by the Levantines before
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they threw all of that at Black's fifteen thousand. The result seemed
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fairly obvious, veteran legions or not.
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``It is an unusual gamble, by my understanding of the man,'' Adjutant
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conceded. ``If those legions are lost, the Empire is crippled.''
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``That's a pretty way to put it,'' I grunted. ``More honest is that
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without those men on the field, Praes is left so bare even \emph{we}
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could feasibly invade it.''
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Odds weren't good for a reverse of the Conquest, I'd admit. I was pretty
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sure I could break Malicia's own legions on the field and seize most the
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countryside, but taking Praesi cities would be impossible without
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breaking my army. What I could do might still be enough for her reign to
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collapse, though, and that made it slightly tempting. Or would have,
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anyway, if there wasn't a decent chance that by the time Papenheim's
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army was done digging I'd be facing a host of eighty thousand men
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invading my kingdom. There was, to be blunt, no way the Army of Callow
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could beat them if they had heroes on their side, which they most
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certainly would. Not after the losses we'd taken at the Battle of the
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Camps.
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``It may be safe to assume, then, that he does not intend to lose those
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men,'' Hakram said.
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``If he'd at least gotten Papenheim to chase him I'd sleep better at
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night, but the man \emph{stayed},'' I sighed. ``I mean, Gods, I see the
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strategic sense in it. The damage Black can actually do is limited, and
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if Callow falls the crusade is half-won. It's still a damned cold call
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to make, though, basically writing off the heartlands of his own
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country.''
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``We do not have a monopoly on ruthlessness,'' the orc reminded me.
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``It'd be a simpler war if we did,'' I said. ``But we have to face the
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facts, I suppose. Let's be conservative and say it takes them four
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months to make a passage through the wreck. By that time, the Levantines
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will have reinforced them. They'll invade together.''
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The orc leaned over and filled my thimble for the second time this
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evening -- he'd quietly claimed control of the bottle, perhaps for the
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best -- before tending to his own.
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``The Army of Callow will have largely recovered by then,'' he said.
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``And Duchess Kegan has reinforced us.''
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``The Deoraithe need to hold the northern passage, otherwise there's a
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decent chance our truce gets shredded and the princes turn back,'' I
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bluntly said. ``It's one thing to trust them with a sword in hand,
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another if the passage is left empty. No, down south we'll be on our
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own.''
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Hakram raised his sliver thimble.
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``Dust and misfortune,'' he said in Mthethwa.
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I clinked mine against his.
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``Doom pass you twice,'' I replied, finishing the old Soninke toast and
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tossing back the brandy.
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The harsh burn -- Gods, this was rough stuff even by my standards --
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went down my throat pleasurably. I set the silver down.
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``We're not winning that battle,'' I admitted. ``Not against those
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numbers.''
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``Then we seek an alternative,'' Adjutant serenely said.
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Not a hint of doubt there to be found. It felt like spring water for my
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soul. I snorted, and got to my feet.
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``Not tonight,'' I said. ``It can wait until tomorrow. Get the others, I
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need to spend a few hours looking at something that's not a godsdamned
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report in Vivienne's chickenscratch.''
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``By your command, Your Majesty,'' Hakram drily replied.
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He'd mouthed off, I noted, but took the bottle without my needing to
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tell him. Truly a prince among men, my Adjutant.
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---
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``You're mad,'' Archer said. ``I knew you'd be mad. See, Zeze, it's just
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like I told you.''
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Hierophant frowned, smoothing his robes.
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``You did not,'' he noted. ``You said, to be exact: `Trust me, Masego,
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she'll love it. This will have no consequences whatsoever.'\,''
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I eyed the dark-skinned mage with chagrin.
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``And you \emph{believed} her?'' I asked.
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``Trust is the foundation of a healthy friendship,'' he told me. ``I've
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acquired a book on the subject. Very informative.''
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Hakram smothered a laugh by faking a coughing fit. Naturally, I elbowed
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him in the stomach. Questioningly. Considering how often I did that to
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him, he'd learned to tell apart the nuances.
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``It's actually a religious text from one of those love cults in
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southern Ashur,'' the orc whispered, leaning towards me. ``You know, the
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Face of Love folks? The real payoff is when he'll get to those
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illustrated parts in the middle. Most lurid thing I've ever seen.''
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``If he starts talking about sex rituals, you'll be the one to clean up
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that mess,'' I hissed back in a low voice. ``I'll use a royal decree if
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I have to.''
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``It's too far from Harrow to Baroness Ainsley's personal property,''
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Vivienne considered out loud. ``A household knight's, maybe?''
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``Hey, for all we know they're already dead,'' Indrani offered. ``So no
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harm done, right?''
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What had once been a lovely garden with stone benches and tasteful
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statues continued to burn down. A firepit with an entire stag roasting
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on a spit -- another crime right there, I mused, we didn't have hunting
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rights in the barony -- had been dug in the heart of what'd previously
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been an elegant bed of flowers. I raised a finger, then put it down.
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``All right, before I crack the whip I have to know,'' I said. ``I get
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why the pit is on fire, although Masego using hellfame seems like both
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horrible overkill and a good way to spoil the meat. But why are the
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\emph{trees} on fire?''
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``Zeze and I had a philosophical argument,'' Indrani explained. ``He's a
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terribly sore loser.''
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My gaze turned to Hierophant, who looked vaguely embarrassed.
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``She dropped a branch on me,'' he admitted. ``And she's quite good at
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avoiding fireballs.''
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My brow rose.
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``That's seven trees, Masego,'' I patiently said.
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``I am the \emph{best} at dodging,'' Archer boasted without an ounce of
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shame in her body.
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I closed my eyes and counted to five, then opened them.
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``All right,'' I said. ``First, after we're done here the two of you are
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going to rebuild this.''
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``That's fair,'' Indrani said.
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She had the look in her eyes of a woman fully prepared to lounge with a
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drink in hand while Masego did all the work.
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``By hand,'' I added. ``Not a drop of magic involved.''
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``Vivi, how would you like to be Queen of Callow?'' Archer said without
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missing a beat. ``I have ever been a sworn enemy of tyranny in all its
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forms.''
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``Please,'' Thief drawled. ``Who'd be fool enough to want to rule this
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mess?''
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\emph{Thank you, Vivienne}, I thought, \emph{for your unflinching
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loyalty and support. Really warms the cockles of my heart in these
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trying times.}
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``You can't be serious,'' Masego said, glaring at me. ``\emph{Manual
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labour}?''
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He spoke those words, I mused, in much the same tone other people spoke
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about raising the dead or your average black-hearted betrayal.
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``You have hands, Zeze,'' I said. ``What do you think they're for?''
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``Oh, \emph{that} was a mistake,'' Hakram muttered.
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Hierophant's back straightened.
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``According to the writings of Seljan Banu-'' he began.
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``According to the writings of Catherine Foundling, you're doing it,'' I
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interrupted flatly. ``And the material costs are coming out of both your
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pay, split equally.''
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``You don't even pay us!'' Archer protested.
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I blinked in surprise.
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``Of course I do,'' I said. ``All of you have been gathering general's
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pay since Second Liesse. Indrani, you have a vault in Laure. I handed
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you the key myself, remember?''
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``Yeah, but it was empty,'' Archer said. ``I thought you were just
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yanking my chain.''
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``Fadila assures me I've been paid punctually,'' Masego contributed
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hesitantly.
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Indrani cast him a discrete look at the mention of his assistant.
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``Mine was full, last I saw,'' Hakram agreed.
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Slowly, I turned to Thief. Who looked the very picture of maidenly
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innocence. \emph{I've seen you stab people, Dartwick}, I thought.
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\emph{Pretty incompetently, but still. Try harder.}
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``Vivienne,'' I said very mildly. ``Have you been secretly robbing one
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of your beloved comrades for almost a year now?''
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The dark-haired woman batted her eyes in lovely confusion.
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``Masego's book said that earthly possessions only distract from the
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holy principle of eternal love,'' she said. ``How could I let them
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burden such a dear friend?''
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Archer let out a delighted cackle that would likely terrified any birds
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around into flight if the fire had not already done so. At first I was
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pleased they weren't brawling in a garden they'd already set on fire,
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but then I frowned.
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``Wait, Indrani, how have you been paying for your tavern crawls all
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this time?'' I asked.
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``I \emph{haven't},'' she cheerfully replied.
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``They send the bills directly to the palace,'' Hakram told me. ``It's
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under `sundry expenses' in the treasury books.''
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``I thought that was, like, bribes and stuff,'' I faintly said.
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The orc hummed.
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``Well, I mean, from a certain point of view\ldots{}''
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I snatched the bottle out of his hands, a tithe for his perfidious
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treachery.
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``All right, you incompetent gaggle of vandals,'' I said. ``Someone put
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out those trees. And get me a skewer of that stag, I want to find out
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how it tastes when you use hellfire to roast it.''
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As it turned out, genuinely awful. By that time, though, we were too
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drunk to mind.
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---
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I found myself glaring blearily at the moon.
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I'd rested my eyes for some time but never actually fallen asleep. Most
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the others had, though. Masego was seated on the ground, lying against a
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toppled stone bench. He was snoring very daintily, which brought the
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shadow of a smile to my face. Indrani's feet were on his lap,
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occasionally kicking his legs as she moved in her sleep. She'd made a
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pillow out of her cloak, indifferent to the chill of the night. Vivienne
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was draped in actual sheets, which appeared to be \emph{mine} and from
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the palace to boot by the cloth of gold bordering them and the
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embroidered heraldry. She was utterly still in her sleep, and unlike the
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others I could feel she was only a sudden movement away from waking. I'd
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not brought cloak of my own, since the one I usually wore did have the
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soul of a foe inconveniently attached to it. Besides, I hardly minded
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the cold these days. I'd remained close to Hakram, but instead of a
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comfort the warmth that emanated from him had me feeling restless.
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``Awake?'' Adjutant said, moving slightly aside.
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Ugh, he'd been a comfortable mattress even if he was way too warm. How
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dare he.
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``Wasn't quite asleep,'' I said. ``Just not thinking. Closest I get to
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slumber, some nights.''
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``You should try anyway,'' he said. ``You're always better, afterwards.
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More human.''
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``Since when do you think so well of humans?'' I snorted.
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``They've grown on me over the years,'' he gravelled.
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``The opposite, for me,'' I admitted, more honestly than I'd meant to.
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``Not them you were glaring at,'' Hakram pointed out.
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I hummed.
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``I still feel like destroying the moon, whenever I look at it too
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long,'' I said. ``I know it's irrational, but it's like having as stone
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in my boot. The boot in this terrible metaphor being my soul, probably?
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Let's be honest, it's not the worse thing that tattered old mess has
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been compared to.''
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``Who knows?'' he said. ``It might be for the best if you do. There's an
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old Praesi story about Dread Emperor Sorcerous having bound his soul to
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it, that he's still scheming his final escape from death.''
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``There's a distressing amount of Tyrants with stories like that,'' I
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noted. ``We're going to have to get around to cleaning up all those
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loose ends some day.''
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``Probably just a story,'' Hakram shrugged. ``He was one of the better
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ones, anyway. Made a place for the shamans at his court, treated them
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with respect.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``Didn't he also try the sentient tiger army?''
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``The Tower's tried worse over the centuries,'' he mused. ``If he'd
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gotten the tigers to pay taxes afterwards, it might even have counted as
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a gain.''
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That surprised a laugh out of me.
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``Imagine having all that power,'' I said. ``And using it for a
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godsdamned \emph{tiger army}. The more Praesi histories I read the less
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I understand the Empire.''
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``Funny thing, power,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``Never quite as
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straightforward as you'd think.''
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``Preaching to the choir there,'' I said. ``Used to think that if I
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could blow up a fortress with a snap of my fingers it would all be so
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much simpler. Now I can, and so very few of my problems can be solved by
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that.''
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The orc shuffled against the bench.
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``The Clans have few written histories,'' he said. ``Oral tradition is
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how we pass it all down.''
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``Miezans did a number on your people, yeah,'' I said. ``I remember.
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They had that nasty habit when conquering places.''
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``There was a great repository of scrolls in the lands of the Broken
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Antlers Horde, or so I was taught as a child,'' Hakram murmured. ``They
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put it to the torch. I suppose they had reason to, from where they
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stood.''
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``The reasons of conquerors tend to be acceptable only to them,'' I
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said.
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In this, I spoke as Callowan.
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``Not that,'' Hakram said. ``The scrolls, most of them were parchment.
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Human skin.''
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I blinked in surprise.
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``Your ancestors were certainly a charming bunch,'' I said.
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``They were what they were,'' Adjutant said. ``The tragedy, I think, is
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that we only remember the worst of them. The excesses. We were more, in
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the dawn of days. And when they ripped out the heart of us they made it
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so that we could never be that again.''
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``It's getting better, though, isn't it?'' I said. ``I remember when I
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first joined the College. Seeing orcs read and write and talk,
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like\ldots{}''
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I hesitated.
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``Like we were a people whole, and not the hissing shade of our
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heyday,'' Hakram finished gently. ``There is something taking shape,
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Catherine, that is true enough. But it is not what we once were. No more
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than Callow under your rule is the Callow of the old Alban kings.''
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``That's an old refrain, Hakram,'' I said. ``The same the Trueblood
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sang, and the rebels in Liesse. We only remember the golden parts of the
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good old days. They had their failings too. You can't look at our own
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failures and match them to barely remembered victories. The comparison
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is false.''
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``Oh, we were a terrible enough people in those days,'' the orc
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murmured. ``Glorious too, at times, but terrible always. But I was
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speaking of old stories. There is one I remember, that the old raiders
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past their prime would tell us when the snows kept us in our tents. It
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is a conversation, between the Warlord Gazog and her son. One of many,
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though few are remembered. We call it the Riddle of Power, learned from
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an ancient stele.''
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I closed my eyes, leaning back against the stone.
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``Tell me,'' I said.
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He remained silent for a moment, gathering his memories, and when he
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spoke it was in Kharsum cadenced.
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``After her spear had broken and she had grown fat and grey from the
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tributes of mankind's kings, Old Gazog took her young son to the great
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gathering of the thaw, where many clans assembled to trade and prepare
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the making of war,'' he said. ``With cups of blood-brew they sat beneath
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their banner in silence until the sun had passed. Under the dark sky,
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Old Gazog spoke this: my son, you have witnessed the multitude of our
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people before you. Young and old, warrior and chieftain, lorekeeper and
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bronzesmith. I ask you now, where lies power among them?''
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Hakram's voice lightened, as if he were a young boy of his kind.
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``Honoured Mother, her son said. This is no riddle, for the answers has
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always been thus: it lies with chieftain and warlord, for their power is
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command over all. Old Gazog laughed, her teeth grown soft from many
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victories. Foolish son, she said. If their power comes from command,
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then how can their command come from power? How mighty is a chieftain,
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without obedience given?''
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Adjutant clicked his fangs, and his were not soft at all.
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``Old Gazog's son pondered this, and saw her wisdom. In this he was
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enlightened, and so answered once more. Honoured Mother, he said, power
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then lies with the lorekeepers. For they hold much wisdom and learning,
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cunning and law, and in teaching it does their power manifest. Foolish
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son, she said. What is wisdom, without hand to carry it? Was it a word,
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without ear to hear it? But wind, and wind is no mother of glory.''
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The orc's voice grew rough.
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``Honoured Mother you speak true, her son said,'' Hakram said. ``The
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birth of empire is bronze, and so power lies with the bronzesmiths for
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they alone know the secrets of fire and forge. They hold in their palm
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the source of war, and only in war can glory be found. Foolish son, said
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Old Gazog. You learn nothing. The whelping of fire is as wisdom,
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worthless without hand to wield it. Would a hoard of a thousand
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axe-blades bear the name of empire?''
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He paused and I heard him lick his lips.
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``Old Gazog's son grew wroth, for he did not know of his foolishness.
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Hateful Mother, he said. You speak many words, yet deny all save the
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hand. Is this your wisdom, that an empire is naught but swing of blade?
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All the peoples of the world know this, and there can be no further
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learning of it. Foolish son, she said. Be silent if you cannot be wise.
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There is terrible truth beneath the riddle of power, and it I will
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reveal it to you now.''
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Hakram went silent. I did not open my eyes.
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``And?'' I asked. ``What did she say?''
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The orc laughed harshly.
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``No one knows,'' he told me. ``You see, the Miezans broke the stele.''
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I heard him look up at the sky.
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``Sometimes,'' Hakram Deadhand said softly, ``I think that a truer
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answer than what was written.''
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