525 lines
23 KiB
TeX
525 lines
23 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-26-plunge}{%
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\chapter{Plunge}\label{chapter-26-plunge}}
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\epigraph{``If war is to be understood as the pursuit of statecraft through
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violence, then the Principate is a failure as a nation: the Highest
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Assembly has proved chronically incapable of either agreeing on or
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seeing through a single ambition through the undertaking of warfare.''}{Extract from `The Ruin of Empire, or, A Call to Reform of the Highest
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Assembly' by Princess Eliza of Salamans}
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It would have to be Cordelia Hasenbach first. The odds were not in my
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favour -- but when had they last been, truth be told? -- yet if this
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could be settled without the involvement of the Pilgrim it would be
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infinitely preferable. Now more than ever, every interaction with the
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Peregrine would carry dangers beyond the obvious. A single careless
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conversation could see me stripped of power or afflicted with opinions
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just \emph{slightly} to the side of my own. For all that the Gods Below
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were the ones with the reputation for manipulation, I'd come to suspect
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the reason Above wasn't saddled with the same was just that they were
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better at it. Evil tended to drop the bottom of how far you were willing
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to compromise and allow you to dig ever deeper on your own when the
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consequences came calling. Even the most deluded villain, I thought,
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must have hade one glimmer of cold clarity when they realized they'd
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brought it all on themselves by crossing that one line they wouldn't
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have before. Above, though? It dealt in the guise of conscience. A
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whisper urging you to be the person you could be, if you were just a
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little \emph{better}. It didn't seem so terrible a thing, until you
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found that first choice seamlessly leading you into the next and the
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next and the one after that. Pilgrim had called Evil the edge of the
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cliff, once, but if that was true then Good was the tired metaphor of
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the slippery slope. Once you started going down, you had no more control
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over where you were headed than a cart rolling down a hill.
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The revulsion that welled in me at that notion was an old friend, and
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not one I was willing to part from. Black had gotten to me young enough
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that the thought of having my choice taken away from me brought only
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bone-deep disgust, even for the worst of them.
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The cool darkness of my domain soothed the sharpness of the emotions as
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it filled the room. There would be no shade whispering advice in my ear
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tonight. Akua already knew too much of my plans for comfort, and though
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Masego assured me it was possible to learn to make her invisible to the
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sight of others again it would take me days to properly master the
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trick. Days I could not afford: an entire month would go by before my
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opportunity to speak with the First Prince came again. Hasenbach came
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out of the dark glowing with the weight of miracles in the dozens, her
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dark blue dress touched by long golden curls. The understated circlet of
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pale gold on her brow found no match on my side: I wore no regalia
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tonight, nothing but the worn tunic and boots of a soldier on campaign.
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It was a truer glimpse of who I was than jewels and gold, though it did
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lack the expected formality. The First Prince took a moment to gather
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her bearings, though it was noticeably shorter than the last time. She
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was getting used to it, or at least getting better at faking situational
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awareness. I didn't bother with the usual duel of silence that tended to
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precede our conversations.
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``Your Most Serene Highness,'' I greeted her.
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``Your Grace,'' Cordelia Hasenbach replied.
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I hesitated, and in that heartbeat she took the lead.
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``It has been some time since we last conversed,'' the First Prince
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said.
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``I saw no need to waste either our evenings by engaging before there
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was resolution to the battle,'' I replied. ``There has been, and now
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here I am.''
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``It would have been courteous to notify me of this intent,'' Hasenbach
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chided me.
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``War is the graveyard of courtesies,'' I said in Chantant, quoting one
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of her predecessors.
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``Julienne Merovins never truly spoke those words,'' she noted in Lower
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Miezan, sounding somewhat amused. ``It was a courtier under the reign of
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her successor, and the \emph{bon mot} was only attributed to her fifty
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years after her death by a family historian.''
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``It always feels snappier when it comes from someone who wore a
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crown,'' I shrugged. ``Harder to tell with Dread Emperors, though, since
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so many of them really \emph{were} that insane.''
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``Praes does tend to straddle the line between laughable and
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appalling,'' the First Prince said. ``A tragedy for us all, that these
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last few decades have seen it settle firmly on the latter.''
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``Lots of tragedies going around, these days,'' I smiled thinly. ``One
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might argue we're both in the business of making those.''
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Cool eyes considered me in silence.
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``Shall we empty the proverbial bag before speaking with purpose then,
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Your Grace?'' Hasenbach said. ``I suppose you must have recriminations
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to utter, if only for your personal satisfaction.''
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``I left personal at the door,'' I replied. ``It has no place in this
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conversation. Looking backwards just means stepping blind. I'm here,
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First Prince, because I want to cut a deal. The rest is noise.''
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``You have shown fondness for that measure, of late,'' the blonde said
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mildly. ``Your bargain with my subjects was a particularly vicious breed
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of mercy.''
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I frowned.
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``I spared lives,'' I said. ``Thousands of them. Your own people's
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lives, it is worth remembering.''
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``You removed from the campaign for several months a force that would
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have been too costly to destroy by violence,'' the First Prince said.
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``It was cleverly done, and I can respect the achievement, but let us
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not pretend you meant to save men you attempted to drown mere days
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earlier.''
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``That working would have been limited, and only inflicted enough
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casualties to force a retreat,'' I said.
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She did not quirk a brow, though I got the impression she very much
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wanted to.
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``An easy assurance to make, after the attempt was foiled,'' she said.
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I forced my fingers to unclench and breathed out slowly. \emph{Temper,
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Catherine, temper.}
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``I have taken great pains, Your Highness, to display moderation in how
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I've waged this war,'' I said flatly. ``At no small cost of my own.
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There is a point where doubt becomes denial.''
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``It has not gone unnoticed,'' Hasenbach conceded, to my surprise. ``You
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must understand, however, that you are a villain. Deception is the trade
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of your kind. There is a chance, however slight, that you are genuine in
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your intentions. Yet precedent remains a stone around your neck, as it
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has been around mine.''
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``I've wrecked a third of my army to prove goodwill,'' I said bluntly.
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``Against the advice of most my generals, it should be said. I have to
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ask, in your eyes what would actually prove I mean what I say?''
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``Abdication,'' the First Prince replied without hesitation.
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``That,'' I said flatly, ``is the kind of demand you get to make if
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you're winning. You are not. I'm offering a treaty, not serving you
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Callow on a silver platter.''
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``Your `offer' has made its way to Salia,'' Hasenbach said. ``Bringing
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our hosts to Ater through Arcadia, if I am not mistaken. A process that
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assumes you will not merely strand those armies in a realm of hostile
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fae.''
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``I'm willing to swear oaths I won't,'' I told her.
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``Which would yet leave the Tenth Crusade almost completely dependent on
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you for supplies, while its hosts bleed their strength against Praesi
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cities,'' the First Prince said. ``Assuming the occupation of the Empire
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can be successful under those circumstances, the war still ends with you
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in a fine position to massacre the weakened armies of Procer and Levant
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after you spent several years raising armies in peace.''
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``A possibility that can be warded off,'' I said calmly, ``if I am a
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signatory of the Grand Alliance. You should have received the scroll by
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now.''
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The Warden of the West studied me expressionlessly.
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``A well-penned request, observing every requirement as set out by the
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current treaties,'' Hasenbach said. ``My compliments to Vivienne
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Dartwick.''
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It'd actually been Black that sent us a horrifyingly thorough
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transcript, but I saw no need to disabuse her of the assumption.
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``In case you were wondering, it's genuine,'' I said.
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``I assumed as much,'' the First Prince smiled. ``It would, after all,
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involve suspension of all military action between members and subject
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any matters of conflict to neutral arbitrage.''
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``And also involve a declaration of war on the Dread Empire,'' I pointed
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out. ``Which means Callow won't be preparing to backstab you, it'll be
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on the front with your own armies. I'm even willing to take the Blessed
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Isle from Malicia and hold it while your soldiers make their way east as
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a sign of goodwill.''
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``You are being deliberately obtuse,'' Hasenbach said. ``I have already
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informed you that a villain ruling Callow is not an acceptable outcome
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for this crusade.''
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``I've been told more than once it's bad form in a negotiation for your
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starting position to be your \emph{only} position,'' I said. ``A bargain
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does tend to involve actual bargaining, Your Highness.''
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The other woman's eyes went cold.
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``You are a warlord, Catherine Foundling,'' she said, pronunciation
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excruciatingly precise. ``Your reign was built on catastrophe and
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butchery, and has been maintained by the same. You are not the Queen of
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Callow, or even the Queen \emph{in} Callow. The only claim for rule you
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have is that of steel, and with every passing month that claim weakens.
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You believe I am being undiplomatic, evidently.''
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She paused and her lips thinned.
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``That I must even pretend you have the right to speak for the souls
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under your yoke is a concession greater than any you have right to ask
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of me,'' the First Prince said. ``Even a usurper would be more
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palatable: you have merely ridden from one field of corpses to another,
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waiting and swelling in might from the deaths of your own people until
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none were left to gainsay your crowning. Well, here we are now. Consider
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yourself \emph{gainsaid}, Black Queen.''
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\emph{Calm}, I thought, as Winter raged. \emph{Calm. Insults don't
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matter, if you get what you want.}
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``And is that the stance of every signatory of the Grand Alliance?'' I
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asked with forced politeness.
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``There is not a ruler among us who will tolerate your remaining on the
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throne,'' Hasenbach coldly said.
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I breathed out. \emph{Calm. Yelling is for children.}
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``Abdication within ten years of the signature,'' I replied instead of
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screaming. ``With the understanding that other nations will have no say
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in the succession, in exchange for which I will give assurance it won't
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be another villain.''
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I saw her visibly master her anger and that had me frowning. A diplomat
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that practiced, having a fit? It irked me I couldn't read her heartbeat,
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because I was beginning to realize I might just have been played. The
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scathing rant had felt genuine, but that didn't mean it hadn't been used
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as a way to pressure me. Pressure me into giving something I'd been
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willing to give, sure, but what I'd intended to use as a bargaining chip
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for further concessions had just been put on the table just to keep
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negotiations going. Fuck. Horrid as the thought was, I wished I'd had
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Akua along for the ride.
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``Abdication immediately following the end of the crusade,'' Hasenbach
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said. ``And binding oaths on both it and the matter of succession.''
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``Five years, regardless of the crusade ending or not,'' I countered.
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``I'll need time to settle matters so the succession is stable. Agreed
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on the oaths.''
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There was a beat of silence.
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``An accommodation might be possible,'' the First Prince finally said.
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I kept my face blank even as relief welled up. Of thank the fucking
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Gods. I had \emph{not} been looking forward to trying my hand with the
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Dead King. Ignoring an invitation from the Hidden Horror would likely
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have consequences, but I was an old hand at lesser evils.
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``A truce until it's reached, then,'' I said. ``Including your uncle
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ending digging operations in the Vales.''
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``A passage there will be necessary to the prosecution of the war,''
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Hasenbach said.
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``In can gate his entire army across the Vales in less than a week, if
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you don't trust me to get them all the way to Praes,'' I replied flatly.
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``Keeping him pointed at my belly can't be considered anything but
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coercion.''
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``You are being coerced,'' the First Prince frankly replied. ``That is
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the very reason we are having this conversation.''
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I watched her, the strongly-cast face and the patience painted upon it.
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``There is a very real chance,'' I said slowly so she knew I wasn't
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being flippant, ``that agreeing to what you just said will lead to civil
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war in Callow. It will be seen as annexation, or at the very least
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effective vassalage. You badly underestimate how hated your people are
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in the kingdom.''
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``You have asked me to consider you as the ruler of Callow,'' Hasenbach
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said. ``Rule, then. Exert your authority to prevent the unrest.''
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Gods, she was serious.
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``No,'' I said. ``I've made \emph{significant} concessions. You want the
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pass open? Give me more than your word to work with. Withdraw the army,
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make the truce public. I'll have Hierophant work on a ritual to clear
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the wreckage, to be used when the treaties have been signed. Otherwise,
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this is starting to look a lot like I'm baring my neck for the knife.''
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``I am the First Prince of Procer, not a petty tyrant,'' Hasenbach
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replied tightly. ``I do not go back on my word once given.''
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``And I am Callowan,'' I snapped. ``We have more than few songs about
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the worth of Proceran promises. You're asking me to extend a lot of
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trust. Do the same damned thing.''
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``You are overestimating the strength of your bargaining position,'' she
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warned me.
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``So are you,'' I barked. ``You sent two armies after me, and they both
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got \emph{whipped out of Callow}. You have Black in your heartlands with
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four legions and you'd rather argue with me about not putting a knife at
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my throat than deal with it?''
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``I have near every hero on the continent and thrice his number
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containing him,'' Hasenbach said. ``His survival is a matter of months,
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if not weeks.''
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``So this is what it looks like,'' I said quietly. ``An intelligent
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woman making a very grave mistake.''
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``Oh, spare me the heaps of praise for the murderer,'' she said. ``He is
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a skilled general and an effective killer. He is not invincible.''
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``You are about to get mauled,'' I said, appalled. ``I don't even know
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what he's up to, but I know that. Sure as day. Gods Below, what about
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how this crusade has been unfolding could possibly make you this
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\emph{arrogant}?''
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``Posturing will yield nothing,'' the First Prince said.
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``I know what you're trying to do, Cordelia,'' I said. ``You think than
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in a month we'll be speaking again and I'll have to bend my neck a
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little lower. Brinksmanship. I need you to believe me, because I'm
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\emph{begging} here, that it's not what's going to happen. I cannot
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gamble this entire kingdom's fate, start a civil war, on grounds so
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thin. I'm already cornered. This is as low as I go.''
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``Six months ago,'' she said softly, ``you might have said the same. And
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yet here we are.''
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I closed my eyes. Should I? Give her even that small assurance I was
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holding out for? It'd be seen as a capitulation because, to be honest,
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it was. There'd be riots, and at least half the Army of Callow would
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desert. Thief might actually kill me. She trusted Procer even less than
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me. Hells, she might be \emph{right} to if it came to that. There were
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good reasons I had those contingencies in place. I opened my eyes.
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``One last time,'' I said. ``Don't do this. We could avoid so much death
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-- beyond the politics and the interests and the schemes, that has to
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count for something.''
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``Appeals to emotion,'' she said, not unkindly, ``are the last resort of
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one without argument.''
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I stared at her for a long time.
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``I think,'' I said quietly, ``that this conversation is going to haunt
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the both of us, in years to come.''
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She hesitated for a moment.
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``I am not without sympathy,'' she said. ``But there is more at stake
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than you know.''
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It wasn't an opening. Gods, I wished it was, but there was no invitation
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to negotiate again in the way she was looking at me.
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``Woe to us both, then, Cordelia Hasenbach,'' I said.
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I ripped away the darkness and rose to my feet. One last try, before I
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went into the devil's lair.
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---
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There were guards around the Pilgrim's tent, a full line. I dismissed
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them as gently as my mood allowed, which by the way the Taghreb
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lieutenant paled wasn't very. A few months ago, I thought, I would
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probably have been frosting everything around me. The old man was awake,
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even this late at night, and seated at a writing desk with a mage lamp
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atop it. He was penning something, I saw, on a scroll. That had me
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curious, however reluctantly. He wasn't allowed letters even as an
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observer, so what was he writing?
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``Pilgrim,'' I said, lingering at the entrance of the tent. ``May I?''
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``Catherine,'' he replied with a kindly smile. ``By all means.''
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I strode into the tent and moved a folding chair from his bedside to
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face him across the writing desk. He saw my glance at the scroll and
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chuckled.
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``Your Marshal asked me to provide my recollections of the Battle of the
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Camps,'' he said. ``As much as can be revealed in my position. I believe
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she may be penning a history of the last few years.''
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Juniper's `Commentaries', inspired by the second Terribilis'. I'd known
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about that, and that Aisha apparently kept memoirs of her own though she
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was very noncommittal about ever showing them to me. I supposed someone
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should be keeping records, since I sure as Hells wasn't.
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``I'm surprised you're willing to contribute,'' I admitted.
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``I have always thought it a great disservice to all, that histories are
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so often written by the victors,'' the hero said. ``Much could be
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avoided by having a broader perspective. If an old man's recollections
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can be of any help I am glad to provide it.''
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That was the trouble with the Pilgrim, I thought. He would say those
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wise, beautiful things and seem to genuinely believe them. But then I'd
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find him on the battlefield, wielding miracles like a knife for a cause
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that was as empty as it got. There might be a good man, somewhere in
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there. I wanted to believe that. But that man answered to the Heavens
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before anything else. And if I could hold it against Black that he could
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love me but still set it aside, then I could hold it against this
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stranger that his pretty ideals only mattered as long as the Heavens
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agreed they were convenient. They weren't really principles if they were
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always discarded at the first frown from Above, were they?
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``You seem in a pensive mood, tonight,'' the Pilgrim said.
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I weighed the risks, for a moment, then took the plunge.
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``I've just had a very exhausting conversation with the First Prince,''
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I said. ``So I'd like to be blunt, if you don't mind, because I don't
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have a lot of coyness left in me.''
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He didn't seem surprised by the revelation that I had a way to talk
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directly with Hasenbach, but that meant less than nothing. The Peregrine
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wasn't someone I'd want to play cards against.
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``You attempted to make peace,'' he said.
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I smiled thinly.
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``I very nearly did,'' I said. ``But then she pushed just a little
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further than I can go. And I know, Gods I \emph{know}, that maybe she
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wasn't out to screw me and everyone in this kingdom. That the other
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choices I can make are so much worse they're indefensible.''
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I met his eyes.
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``I'm willing to take leaps of faith with people, Pilgrim,'' I said
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honestly. ``I have before, and I will again. But not with the Heavens.
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Because you don't negotiate with Above, you \emph{obey}. And I don't
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think Cordelia Hasenbach holds the reins of what she unleashed nearly as
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tightly as she thought she would.''
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``And so now you come to me,'' the old man said. ``With a request.''
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``Do something,'' I asked quietly. ``Intervene. Offer to arbitrate.
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Thief tells me you could be king of Levant with a snap of your fingers,
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if you felt like it. You have influence to wield.''
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``Seljun,'' he said calmly. ``We do not have kings, in Levant. And there
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is a reason I do not sit the Tattered Throne, Catherine. Your Good Kings
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have done well by Callow, but the Dominion\ldots{} It is a different
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land. It would end the honour duels, the forays into the wilds, but it
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would be a \emph{call}. To the kind of war best left in the past.''
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``I'm not saying usurp your ruler,'' I said. ``But Gods, you're not
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\emph{nobody}. If you make a truce with me Levant will fall in line.
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That'll force Hasenbach to reconsider.''
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``It would break the Tenth Crusade,'' he gently said.
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``So do it behind closed doors,'' I said, frustration mounting. ``You're
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trying to shove redemption down my throat, and don't bother denying it.
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Fine. I'll fucking lean in, even if it'll probably get me killed. Just
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\emph{act}. I'll kiss the hem, quote the Book. All you need to speak up
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and thousands don't have to die.''
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``It would smother in the crib,'' the Grey Pilgrim said sadly, ``what is
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perhaps the last chance for peace in our time.''
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``I'm \emph{offering} peace,'' I hissed.
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``Peace on your terms would unseat the First Prince,'' he said. ``She
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has spent years forging an alliance with Levant, fighting her Assembly
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tooth and nail every step of the way. For that same ally to twist her
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arm into making a pact with one of the most famous villains alive would
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see her removed within the month. And everything she seeks to accomplish
|
|
vanish with her.''
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A long moment passed and the only sound in the tent was his steady
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|
heartbeat.
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``You can't be serious,'' I said. ``If you'd said the Heavens were using
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their veto, I would have been furious. I won't pretend otherwise. But at
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least I wouldn't be disappointed.''
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He opened his mouth but Winter flared like half a world howling for
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blood and he closed it.
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``No, disappointed is too mild a word,'' I said, voice barren of any
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speck of warmth. ``This, Pilgrim, is worthy of \emph{contempt}.''
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|
``The treaties she has made and would deepen will end wars in the
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|
west,'' the old man said. ``Callow restored and Praes humbled will allow
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Calernia to finally turn towards the true face of the Enemy. The King of
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|
the Dead. The Chain of Hunger.''
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|
``It's funny,'' I said, smiling mirthlessly. ``How it's never the lot of
|
|
you that have to make the sacrifices. Us, this entire fucking kingdom
|
|
since the dawn of time? Well, that's just how things have to be. Someone
|
|
needs to take care of Praes so the rest of the continent can kill itself
|
|
in peace. But then someone else has to do the bleeding, for once, and
|
|
suddenly there's all these considerations.''
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``This is not fair,'' the old man said. ``Nor it is just. I will not
|
|
pretend otherwise, child. But I will not offer you succour at the price
|
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of Cordelia Hasenbach's dream. It is too great a good to be slain in
|
|
this manner.''
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``So we burn again, for the greater good of everyone else,'' I laughed
|
|
harshly.
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|
I rose to my feet.
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|
``You know, when I make decisions like that, they call me a monster,'' I
|
|
said, meeting his eyes without smothering a single ember of the fury I
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|
felt. ``So why do \emph{you} get a pass?''
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``I will suffer the price of this, in time,'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
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|
``Service is no absolution.''
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|
He looked old and tired and sad. But so did a lot of people, and they
|
|
didn't sign death warrants for dozens of thousands. I was out of
|
|
sympathy to offer for the likes of him. I had no pithy comment to offer,
|
|
no cutting parting remark. I left the tent before I could talk myself
|
|
into murdering him in cold blood. I needed to talk to Hierophant.
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|
We were, after all, going to Keter.
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