429 lines
20 KiB
TeX
429 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-49-wrangle}{%
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\chapter{Wrangle}\label{chapter-49-wrangle}}
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\epigraph{``Forty-two: should a disagreement lead one of the party to leave,
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you should expect combat within the week as you will either be captured
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to be rescued by the departed or the opposite. Let it happen, as a
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common enemy will heal all internal disputes and you can share a good
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laugh over the corpse of your nemesis' dead lieutenant.''}{Two Hundred Heroic Axioms, author unknown}
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We were pretending it was a spirited debate. It wasn't. These were the
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bitterest arguments I'd had with the Woe so far, and currently I wasn't
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winning either of them. Figured. War on two fronts was never a good
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idea, but it didn't look like I was going to have a choice about it.
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``It's a trap, Masego,'' I said. ``You know that as well as I do.''
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``My father would not harm me,'' the blind man replied evenly.
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``I'm not saying he'll knife you,'' I said. ``I'm saying that if you set
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foot in the Empire, there's no fucking way Malicia's letting you leave
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regardless of what Warlock says. Assuming he doesn't agree with her in
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the first place. He and I aren't exactly bosom friends, Zeze: we came a
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heartbeat away from drawing on each other last year.''
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``Were I still the Apprentice, your objection would have merit,'' Masego
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said. ``That is no longer the case. Nothing short of my father's full
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wroth would stop me, and he will not go that far even for the Empress.''
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My fingers clenched. Then my flank got hit while I was still engaged.
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``I'm not going,'' Vivienne flatly said. ``You need me here, especially
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if you're going into the Everdark.''
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I shot her a glare.
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``We'll continue that conversation in a moment,'' I told her.
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``No,'' she said, shaking her head. ``Because you're going to lose your
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argument with Hierophant, and when you do you'll dig your heels in about
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this. You hate to lose, Catherine. We settle this now, when you're still
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reasonable.''
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``There's nothing to argue about, Thief,'' I said with forced calm. ``It
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has to be you.''
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``I am a spymistress,'' Vivienne replied. ``Not a ruler. Send Adjutant
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instead, it is clearly the appropriate response.''
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``No,'' Hakram quietly said, looming tall at my back. ``It can't be me.
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Vivienne, think about this for a moment. Whoever is sent back will need
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the highest authority possible to settle affairs without trouble. You
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know what that means.''
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The dark-haired woman frowned.
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``That's irrelevant,'' she said. ``Hakram, I admit without qualms that
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in matters of rule you are my superior. I will not achieve half as much
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as you given the same mandate.''
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``It's not irrelevant,'' I darkly said. ``It's unpleasant to talk about
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and it's unfair, but it's true anyway: If I appoint an orc regent of
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Callow in my absence, there will be riots. Maybe even rebellions.''
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Indrani didn't want anything to do with this mess, thank the Gods, and I
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wasn't giving Diabolist this close a look into the inner workings of the
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Woe so I'd sent her to keep Archer entertained. This would have been
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much, much worse if there'd been an audience.
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``Hakram is broadly known to be your second in command,'' Vivienne said.
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``And respected by many. His authority would be observed even without
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the regency. Your court has been butchered, Catherine, it needs to be
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rebuilt before the chaos spreads any further. That is not my wheelhouse,
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it's \emph{his.}''
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``You know whoever I send needs the fucking title, Thief,'' I hissed.
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``Stop being obtuse. I've been away from the kingdom for months, the
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person taking charge needs the legitimacy behind them or it'll start
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coming apart at the seams.''
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``Then appoint him Governor-General,'' Vivienne said. ``It carries
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enough power that-''
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``That would make the highest authorities in matters both civil and
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military greenskins,'' Hakram broke in calmly. ``We are not dealing with
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a blank slate or arithmetic empty of emotion. I may be an organizer of
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some skill, but that is immaterial. The amount of resistance I would
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face would be much larger than yours. You argument is only correct if
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stripped of context.''
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``I can't handle all the balls you have up in the air, Catherine,''
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Vivienne said, voice rising. ``You need the entire kingdom's granaries
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reorganized, you need to get massive amounts of steel to arm all those
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soldiers the Hellhound is recruiting, you need someone to steady the
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treasury and rebuild the King's Council and -- Gods, do I need to go on?
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I can't handle all of this, not while also running the Jacks. Hakram
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could. His entire Role is about taking care of loose ends.''
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The thing was, she had a point. I knew she'd been very careful not to
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use the reason she was being so aggressive about this, of course. She
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didn't want me around Diabolist without her keeping an eye on it. Not, I
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suspected, because she thought I would suddenly forgive Akua Sahelian
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for her sins. She knew me better than that. But she saw Diabolist as a
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weed, and thought it was her duty to burn out any attempt to grow roots.
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I forced myself to set that aside, and address what she'd actually been
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saying. Which, unfortunately, wasn't untrue. I trusted Vivienne to run
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the Jacks and to undertake some other discreet matters, but it was a
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fact I'd never dropped so much responsibility in her lap before. She'd
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had the education of a minor noble as a child, even though her family no
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longer formally held title, but that would only take her so far. What
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she did remember, she would be out of practice at. \emph{And we don't
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have forever}, I thought.
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Procer would be occupied with the Dead King for the foreseeable future,
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but there was no guarantee part of the crusader host would not try
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Callowan borders again if it saw weakness. The Dominion still had two
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armies on the field, and the League's intentions were opaque to me. My
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instinct had been that the Tyrant of Helike and his madman of a Hierarch
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would be taking a swing at the Principate, but that'd been while it was
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still the dominant force on the board. With Keter on the march, the
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League might be feeling adventurous enough to aim for other territories.
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And that was without even considering Malicia, who sure as Hells
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wouldn't let me bind the wounds of Callow in peace. If Warlock was in
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Thalassina and cooking up something dangerous enough he wanted Masego to
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lend a hand, then the Ashurans were about to get a very nasty surprise.
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That left me the only direct threat at the Wasteland's gated: the
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Empress wasn't going to stop after a few assassinations. She was only
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getting started. \emph{And the only person I trust to lead the Jacks in
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hampering her plans is Thief.}
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Vivienne was leagues above Hakram, when it came to shadow games. My
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second was skilled at sifting through what our informants brought us and
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digging out the nuggets most important, but he didn't quite have the
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knack when it came to actually using the Jacks for more than spying. I
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needed someone to start a knife fight, and Adjutant wasn't the man for
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the job. But Vivienne wasn't the woman for the rest of it, was she? She
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wasn't wrong about that. If I forced too many duties upon her, she'd
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only end up failing at what she was actually good at. Which left me only
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one way through the mess. I knew what I needed to do was poor tactics,
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but it still needed to be done.
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``You're right,'' I admitted, and there was a glint of triumph in
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Vivienne's eyes. ``Hakram will go with you. For the sake of appearances
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you'll still be named Regent.''
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And there went the glint.
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``No,'' they said, more or less at the same time.
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I cast a look at Masego, who seemed mildly irritated our own chat was
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left unfinished but unwilling to press the matter. He would be. Knowing
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him, he was probably mentally organizing his arguments without listening
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to a word of what went on between the rest of us.
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``Catherine, you can't go into the Everdark with so weak an escort,''
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Hakram gravelled. ``This is madness. The drow are infamously violent and
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treacherous.''
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I kept my face blank. He'd never\ldots{} There was a first time for
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everything, I told myself. It didn't matter. I had an argument to win
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and getting emotional about it wasn't going to help.
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``I'll have Archer and Diabolist,'' I said. ``It's enough. I'm not going
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to war with them, I'm going to secure an alliance.''
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``And who will handle the diplomacy, then?'' Vivienne harshly said.
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``Indrani? You? Or will you allow the butcher of Liesse to speak in
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Callow's name?''
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``Better we dispense with the drow entirely than risk you going into
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their realm with so light a force,'' the orc said. ``They would be a
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useful addition, but they are not crucial and results are uncertain. Not
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worth the dangers.''
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``It was one thing to put all our coin on the Army of Callow when we had
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the leash on the Dead King, however laughably feeble that leash was,'' I
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replied. ``It's another when Malicia's the one who let him out, on
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unknown terms. There will be battles, Hakram, and there's only so many
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Callowans of fighting fit. Only so many we can \emph{afford to lose}. We
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need someone to share the casulaties with, or it won't matter that we
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have good farmland: there won't be enough people left to till it. If you
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have another candidate for alliance, I'm all ears.''
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``You did not answer me,'' Vivienne said.
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``Because what you said was pointless, Thief,'' I said. ``I would prefer
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Diabolist to serve as an adviser, but if I need to let her do the
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talking then that's what going to happen. I know you don't like it. I
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don't either. But there's no point in letting her out of the box if we
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don't actually \emph{use} her.''
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``There's a difference between using and trusting,'' Thief hissed.
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``\emph{Enough},'' I said, voice rippling with power.
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Not Speaking, no, I was not that far gone. I hoped I would never be.
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Vivienne flinched, and Hakram looked chastened for reasons beyond the
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obvious. He usually brought his objections to me in private, and I
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thought he might already be regretting this. He should have known it
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would sting he'd side openly with Thief in an argument, even if he
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disagreed with me.
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``Callow was just crippled,'' I said. ``You can both argue all you want,
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that is a godsdamned fact. And we all know the Empress is far from done.
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Now, the two of you can disagree with me heading into the Everdark with
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only Archer and a mass-murdering spectre for company, but at the end of
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the day I have to be the one to go and someone needs to fix the mess
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back home. Vivienne, you argued you couldn't do it alone. You're right.
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Hakram goes too.''
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``He could-'' Thief began, but I raised my hand.
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``No, he can't,'' I said. ``I've heard your issues with this plan. I
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have answered them and made a decision. Unless you have something new to
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add, the only question left if whether or not you'll obey when I make
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this an order.''
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Hakram stirred uneasily.
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``You're the one who gave me the speech about needing to assert
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authority,'' I told him. ``I just have. I won't deny the risks. But you
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can't deny that Callow needs the two of you to get back on its feet,
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either.''
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The orc licked his chops.
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``The drow are a gambit,'' he said. ``Promise me you will treat them as
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one. Do not carry your anger over the failure in Keter into this,
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Catherine. We can survive without them. If the situation spins out of
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control\ldots{}''
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``Hakram,'' Vivienne cried out, sounding betrayed. ``You know she won't
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listen if it's just me. Gods Above, stick the damned course.''
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``There is no perfect solution,'' the orc said, turning to her. ``We
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take the risks we have to. It's not the choice I would have made, but
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I'm not the one making the choices. Neither are you.''
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``I won't bet it all on a long shot,'' I told Adjutant. ``There's a
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limit to how long I'm willing to stay there as well. But I believe it's
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worth trying.''
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He nodded, though his discomfort was still plain on his face. I turned
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to Vivienne, who was worrying her lip.
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``I could refuse to go, even if you make it an order,'' she said.
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She could. The Woe were not sworn to me, save for Hakram, and his oath
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was not one between queen and subject. It was a deeply personal thing,
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and not one I would sully by equating with simple obedience. There were
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few things I still considered sacred, but what the two of us had said on
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that hill beneath moonlight was one of them. No, for all that I was
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Queen of Callow I would not call Thief my subject. She was, like most
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the Woe, my companion. When she deferred to me, it was out of trust and
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respect. Not because a sister from the House of Light had put a chunk of
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metal on my head and spoken a few dusty words. Forcing her hand here
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would shatter the fragile trust the two of us had built since we'd made
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our pact in Laure. I would have to convince her.
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``You're making this about me,'' I said. ``That is beneath us both.''
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``This is about your decision,'' Vivienne replied, frowning. ``Not your
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character.''
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``My decision shouldn't matter to you,'' I told her. ``The question you
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should be asking is this: is it better for Callow if I accompany
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Catherine or if I return?''
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Her eyes narrowed.
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``You are the queen of said kingdom, in case you forgot,'' she said.
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``I'm a warlord who got oil smeared on her forehead,'' I replied
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bluntly. ``I'm useful to the kingdom, it's true. There would be
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consequences if I died. If. I'm not exactly easy to kill these days,
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Vivienne. And while it's \emph{possible} my heading into the Everdark
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without you will end up biting our home in the ass, it's a
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\emph{certainty} that if you don't return some of our people will bleed
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for it. Hakram will have too many duties on his plate, as you pointed
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out. He won't be able to use the Jacks like you would.''
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``You can't leverage Callow against me, Catherine,'' Vivienne said,
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sounding resentful.
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``You didn't join up because you liked the look of me,'' I said quietly.
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``There was a reason, and you were quite blunt about it. I'm not using a
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damned thing, Viv. I'm reminding you what we're actually about. It's
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easy to forget, in the thick of it. I know that well.''
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The expression on her face was an ugly one, but she did not contradict
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me. She spat to the side, after a moment.
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``Fine,'' she said. ``Damn you, but fine. I'll go. Don't make me regret
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it.''
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I let out a relieved breath. If that hadn't worked, I wouldn't have had
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anything else to trot out. Tired in a way that was nothing physical, I
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turned my eyes to Masego.
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``You two can leave us,'' I said without turning.
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``Catherine,'' Hakram tried.
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``It's been a while,'' I mildly said, ``since I've had to repeat myself
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so often.''
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His fangs clicked together, but he didn't say anything more. Hierophant
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had been sitting silent this whole time, growing increasingly impatient.
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``Quite finished?'' he said.
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``Yes,'' I replied without a hint of apology.
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I gathered myself together for another verbal brawl.
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``I spent most of your squabbling mustering arguments,'' Masego admitted
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frankly. ``I have several, some grounded in fact others in my personal
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opinion. It took me some time before I realized it was unnecessary to do
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so. I do not need your permission to go.''
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``You need my gate, if you want to get there before the year's over,'' I
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replied.
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``If necessary I will summon and bind a fae of sufficient rank to serve
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as a gate-maker,'' he said without hesitation. ``Though I would be
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disappointed by the pettiness of your choice.''
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I grimaced. He'd be right to be. It was easy to simply think of the Woe
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as my companions, my closest friends, and leave it at that. The truth
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was a little more complex. The ties binding them to me were different
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for all, and though that'd never brought conflict until now I could
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admit that'd been mostly luck on my part. It'd been going to happen
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sooner or later. Masego and Indrani were not invested in my fight the
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way the other two were. For the latter it was an entertaining enough
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diversion, and she liked me enough to carouse away the `boring' parts,
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but for all that Archer was arguably the least tightly bound to me she
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also had few other calls on her time. She wanted to travel, one day, but
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she was in no hurry. Masego had first joined the Fifteenth because he
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believed it would allow him to witness sights nothing else would, and in
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this we had delivered. He truly liked us, I was sure of that. Even
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Vivienne, who'd come late to the band. But his first and paramount love
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would always be sorcery. After that came family, and though some days I
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suspected we were half-that in his eyes his fathers had been entrenched
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in that position for much longer.
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If Warlock sent for him, as the man had, Masego would go. Because even
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after that sting of that betrayal revealed by the echoes of the fall of
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Keter, he loved the man deeply. I'd almost considered not passing along
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the message, truth be told. He might not have heard it when I spoke with
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Juniper, as he'd not been so close. But that would be a betrayal, what
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was left of my principles had whispered. But he would learn eventually,
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and it would cost you, a colder part of me had noted.
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``I won't withhold a gate no matter your choice,'' I sighed. ``I didn't
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mean that, and I apologize for implying it.''
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``Apology accepted,'' he said, nodding politely. ``Though the choice has
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already been made. This a formality I will entertain until you have made
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your peace with that.''
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I rubbed the bridge of my nose.
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``For future reference,'' I said. ``When you're humouring people to
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avoid hurting their feelings, it's best to avoid telling them that.''
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The dark-skinned man frowned.
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``That's rather backwards,'' he noted. ``Would their feelings not be
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more likely to be hurt if they believed at the start they had a real
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chance of success?''
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``That's -- you know what, we can finish that conversation at another
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time,'' I sighed. ``Masego, I know you have reasons to want to go.''
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``I do not care in the slightest for the fate of Thalassina,''
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Hierophant said. ``Some ritual components of use come from the city, but
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none irreplaceable. It is my understanding that the Ashurans are your
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enemy as well, however, so out of politeness I will kill as many as I
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can before taking my leave.''
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``And that's appreciated, believe me,'' I said. ``But I need you with
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me, not on the other side of the continent. If half of what I've heard
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about the drow is true, your presence would make talks go a lot more
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smoothly.''
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Having a mage capable of flattening a mountain in attendance tended to
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make people a great deal more civil.
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``You are quite skilled at terrifying people into obedience,'' Masego
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said, and he sounded like he believed it was a compliment. ``My presence
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seems like it would be helpful, but necessary is overstating the case.''
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``The grand total of what I know about the drow is four pages from
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Surley's first volume of \emph{Realms of Calernia},'' I told him. ``I'd
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be going in blind, without you.''
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``There is little I have read on the subject that Diabolist has not,''
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he said. ``And much of the reverse that is true.''
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This wasn't going to work. I needed a different angle.
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``You won't be safe in Praes,'' I said. ``I'm essentially at war with
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the Empress and you're my most dangerous sorcerous asset.''
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``Malicia cannot lay a hand on me without incurring my father's
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enmity,'' Masego said. ``Which I do not believe she wishes to happen, as
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he would kill her brutally.''
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``She could still-''
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``Catherine,'' Masego said gently. ``I know you would prefer I remain at
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your side. I am not displeased by this. Yet there is nothing down your
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current path that matters more to me than getting answers from my
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fathers. We are not debating. I am awaiting your final silence.''
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And there it was. I wondered if this should feel like a betrayal,
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because it didn't. Hakram siding with Vivienne had, and it was still a
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pebble in my metaphorical boot to remember it, but this\ldots{} It would
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be like getting angry at a fish for swimming. Masego would always do
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what he wanted. It was the way he'd been raised: essentially untouchable
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in a nest of scheming and murder, people bending over backwards to curry
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his favour or accommodate him. In a way, he was no less highborn than
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Diabolist. He'd had all the privileges of the old blood with none of the
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duties, and still the heart of him was pure Wasteland. His desires would
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always come first, and it was unthinkable to him that they would not. I
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passed a tired hand through my hair.
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