420 lines
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420 lines
20 KiB
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\hypertarget{court-i}{%
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\section{Court I}\label{court-i}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Ruling is to promise a man a boat and his brother the river
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while owning neither.''}
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-- Kind Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand
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\end{quote}
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``This Liessen business is fucking unacceptable, Brandon,'' the woman
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said, fist pounding the table.
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Grandmaster Brandon Talbot of the Order of Broken Bells, arguably the
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second most influential officer in the Army of Callow after the Marshal
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herself, hid his displeasure with the ease of long practice. Though he
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understood Lady Julienne's outrage, and indeed shared it himself,
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theatrics such as these would get them absolutely nowhere.
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``This reeks of Kendall's doing,'' Samuel Farron said. ``She's been
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gathering the malcontents under her banner, and now she'll get an entire
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duchy to hand out piecemeal.''
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The man was the oldest among them, and though his grandfather had been
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only a baron in the days before the Conquest he was perhaps the most
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influential of the Regals -- who boasted men and women of greater lines,
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not the least Brandon himself. What his line had lost in title, they had
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reclaimed in wealth and alliances. This did nothing to make him any more
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likeable, no matter how useful he might be: Samuel Farron had learned
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the unfortunate lesson that he was always right, and grew indignant
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whenever Creation had the gall to disagree with that state of affairs.
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``Chewing off Brandon's ear gets us nowhere, my friends,'' Valerie
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Hadley calmly intervened. ``You have all read the proposed arrangements.
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I suspect this comes from higher up than the Governess-General.''
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The unspoken shadow of the queen brought silence, however short, and
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Brandon nodded his thanks at the woman who had just spoken. House Hadley
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had been middling retainers to the Marquesses of Vale once, little more
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than jumped up landed knights, but of all the Regals it was Valerie
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Hadley that Brandon most enjoyed working with. The calm competence
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married to stark humility was refreshing, considering some of the egos
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he must corral. Her seat in this council of the greatest of the Regals
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came more because she was the only person of note from Vale to have
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joined them than because of her skills, unfortunately. Something Farron
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was not above reminding her of whenever they disagreed, which was
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frequently.
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``The queen's not used to thinking in terms of land,'' Samuel replied
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flatly. ``She was a damned penniless orphan for most her life. This is
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Anne Kendall trying to fuck us, and anyone who's not a fool can see
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it.''
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``Clearly I am a fool, then,'' Hadley said. ``For the fact that land
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grants would in large part go to retiring legionaries does not strike as
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a ploy of the Queen's Men.''
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``Greenskin and Praesi owning Callowan land, this is what the court had
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simmering,'' Lady Julienne sharply said. ``I held my tongue when the
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queen settled goblins in Marchford, Brandon, because it is her demesne
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and you raised no objection. But this? This goes too far.''
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\emph{I held my tongue because objecting would have served no purpose
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but irritating Her Majesty}, Brandon thought. \emph{And because the
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Snake Eater Tribe brought us both badly needed coin and a workforce
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capable of making siege weapons without relying on the Tower's charity.}
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Neither thought had it made it more palatable that lands by House Talbot
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for over five hundred years were now infested with skulking vermin, but
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the Grandmaster had learned early that the queen's tolerance for protest
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only stretched so far.
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``Lodging protest through the court is not possible,'' Brandon sighed.
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None of them were supposed to have even seen the proposal they were now
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discussing, though a concerned citizen had written a copy from memory
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and sent it to them. Someone would be sent to the gallows before the day
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was done, if Catherine Foundling believed her own court was leaking
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documents under seal.
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``We can express our displeasure through intermediaries,'' Samuel Farron
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said. ``Nothing touching us directly.''
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``If we do we'll be swimming in Jacks before the next bell,'' Lady
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Julienne grunted. ``I don't know about you, but I'm tired of finding my
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good bottles open and my papers slightly askew.''
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Brandon grimaced. He had already expressed to Lady Thief his misgivings
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about these little reminders to the Regals that they were being watched,
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but the Named had only been amused. \emph{It's good for fine folk such
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as you to be reminded about the consequences of wickedness}, she'd said.
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His favourite hunting knife had disappeared the same night, though Lord
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Deadhand had later returned it with a seemingly sincere apology.
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``We can't do \emph{nothing}, Julienne,'' Farron barked. ``I will not
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watch silently as Callow is handed away piece by piece to foreigners and
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toadies.''
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``He's right,'' Valerie Hadley reluctantly said. ``Her Majesty's open
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favour already emboldens the Queen's Men. If we stay our hand on so
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large a matter, we will suffer defections.''
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``Favoured or not, the queen has been\ldots{} pragmatic on the issue of
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Baroness Kendall's supporters,'' Brandon reminded them. ``One of ours
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leads the city guard in Summerholm, and we hold the docks in Southpool.
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My attempts to broach the matter of the governorship in Denier have not
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been rebuffed, either. I question the wisdom of surrendering a gain so
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close to our hand for what promises to be a losing battle.''
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``So she hasn't outright handed the keys to the kingdom to some southern
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collaborator,'' Lady Julienne snorted. ``Must we must praise Her Majesty
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for this? She's still having her Taghreb dig into our coffers.''
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Considering none but Brandon at this table was not a landowner of more
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than comfortable means, the Bastard Lord's property taxes had gotten
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stuck in the throat of most Regals. That the baronies in the north had
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been spared the sword by virtue of still being true nobles had only
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added insult to injury. It'd been bad enough there had been talk of
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arranging the Taghreb's disappearance, but Brandon had been
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uncompromising in squashing such scheming. Her Majesty was viciously
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protective of any she considered friends, and striking at a man who'd
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followed her since her early days as the Squire was a recipe for every
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Regal in Callow swinging from a noose. And that was assuming the mood
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did not take her to make another example, as she had of the sorcerers
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sworn to the Diabolist. Brandon had ridden down the Road of Woe, before
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they took the corpses down. He still shivered at the memory of bloodied
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corpses propped up as milestones as far as the eye could see. None of
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the other Regals had been on the Arcadian Campaign, or Second Liesse.
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They did not know the kind of monstrosity the queen was willing to
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unleash when she believed herself threated.
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``She's shutting us out of the army too,'' Samuel Farron growled. ``I'm
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getting tired of having fine officers refused by a fucking
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\emph{greenskin}.''
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``We \emph{cannot} try to force that,'' Hadley said. ``You should know
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this by now, Samuel. I'm not happy nearly all the senior officers are
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former Legion either, but she won the throne with the Fifteenth at her
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back. If we try to wedge ourselves into that, we chance Her Majesty
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seeing it as an attack.''
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``A certain level of intrigue will be tolerated, that much has been made
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clear,'' Brandon said. ``But let it always remain polite and lawful. Let
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us not forget the ending of that\ldots{} ill-considered attempt to bribe
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the Lord Treasurer.''
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The queen's mercy in that matter had almost been cruel, he thought. The
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fines had ruined the eldermen financially and the mark of the throne's
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wroth had ensured they would never hold a position of influence ever
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again. Considering the rising influence of officials in Laure, having
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been kicked off the boat just as the tide began to lift it must have
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stung even worse than the gallows.
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``Petty Laure officials,'' Farron scoffed. ``Mudfoots with no
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sophistication. That game is played with favours, not coin. We just need
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to find out what the orc is truly after and she'll bargain like everyone
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else.''
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Brandon Talbot had campaigned with Marshal Juniper twice now, and he
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suspected on most days what the Hellhound desired most was Samuel
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Farron's guts on her plate. It was not worth the expense of his
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influence to try to end an initiative that might yield some success,
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however. Down the line it could be suggested to the queen that reverses
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in other matters might be reconciled by some\ldots{} strategic
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appointments in the Army of Callow. Having candidates already on the
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record would only strengthen their position. Already Brandon's freedom
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to do as he saw fit with the Broken Bells had been expanded greatly, so
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it was not a matter without precedent.
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``We're certain that Her Majesty raising a new Duke of Liesse is out of
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question?'' Hadley pressed. ``I know inquiries were made, but we never
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petitioned the court.''
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\emph{The queen had to be talked out of striking down the titles to the
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northern baronies}, Brandon thought. \emph{No duchy will be raised in
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her lifetime, my friend. That one is a lost cause.}
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``Given the involvement of Lord Adjutant's new offices with the
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refugees, I suspect it would come too close to curtailing the crown's
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power to be even seriously considered,'' Talbot admitted. ``And while I
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share your disdain for this notion of turning the entire Duchy of Liesse
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into freeholds, we must admit that the region had been well taken in
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hand.''
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Grain, tents and clothes had begun flowing south within hours of the
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queen's coronation. The Deadhand was nothing if not efficient, that much
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must be conceded. That about nine in ten refugees had so far survived
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winter in the face of cold and starvation was nearly miraculous. Even if
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that miracle had been woven from Praesi gold.
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``They screwed Old Darlington out of making a killing with his wool,
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too,'' Lady Julienne smiled coldly. ``Always a pleasure to see we are
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not lowest in the queen's esteem.''
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``There is only so much distinction between bottom-feeders,'' Valerie
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Hadley said. ``We have shown restraint, Brandon, but our gains remain
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limited. I am not fool enough to talk rebellion, but something must be
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done.''
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There was a thread of frustration in the woman's voice, and the
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Grandmaster sympathized. He felt it too. Yet he also knew that what they
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considered stewardship of Callow earned by right and blood was seen by
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Her Majesty as infuriating arrogance. Now that peace had returned,
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however fleeting, the queen had ceased putting the heads of all
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opposition on pikes. Farron and Lady Julienne saw this as their ruler
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softening, but Brandon knew better. The Queen of Callow was trying to
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outgrow the savage teachings of her eastern mentors and return Callow to
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what it should be, but all she did she did with an eye on the looming
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war with Procer. Disagreement would be tolerated, but anything construed
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as obstructionism would see the blades come out.
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``We are only worth appeasing so long as we are more useful than
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troublesome, my friends,'' Brandon quietly said. ``We should all
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remember that, before raising our voices too loud. Catherine Foundling
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is not a Fairfax. She will not balk at sending the Jacks to abduct us in
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the middle of the night, if she deems it necessary.''
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``Then she shouldn't be-`` Farron began, but Hadley smacker her palm
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against the table.
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``Let us not drift too far from the subject at hand,'' the woman said.
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``Brandon, by your continuing calm I take it you have a notion as to how
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we should proceed?''
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``Tolerance continues so long as we remain within set bounds,'' Brandon
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said. ``Let us wok within these bounds, then. Anne Kendall is no friend
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of ours, but there is one that stands above even the Queen's Council.
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One who takes no sides.''
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The others watched him with considering eyes.
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``I will talk,'' Brandon Talbot said, ``with Hakram Deadhand.''
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---
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There were too few hours in a day. Hakram had, on one of those rare
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instances where Archer managed to drag Masego away from supervising he
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building of the Observatory, asked Hierophant if it was feasible to work
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in Arcadia to get around the span of time. He'd said yes, then added so
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many qualifiers to that agreement the conversation became
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unintelligible. Unfortunate. Instead he'd gotten to explore the limits
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of how little sleep he could live on before becoming sloppy. The orc
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poured himself a cup of aragh and shuffled through the piles on
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parchment on his oaken desk.
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``Drinking on the job, Hakram?'' Ratface teased. ``How irresponsible of
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you.''
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The orc growled, not that it scared the fucking Taghreb. The former
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quartermaster had not become any less of a pest now that some Callowan
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honorary address had been tacked on to his name.
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``Can't drink with Catherine anymore,'' he admitted. ``I'm trying to
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wean her off.''
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Amusement slid off the Lord Treasurer's face.
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``I know she's traded wine for liquor since Liesse, but I was under the
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impression Named couldn't get drunk unless they wanted to,'' the man
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said.
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``Her body's all fucked,'' Hakram said. ``The warlock's get wants to
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write a treatise about it, which should tell you everything. I think it
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takes the edge off Winter, though. And there's not much else that
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accomplishes that.''
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``We never talked about what went down in the city,'' Ratface slowly
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said. ``But what bits I dug up hint it was\ldots{} bad.''
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``Malicia crossed a line,'' Hakram said. ``And the Black Knight broke
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her trust. The second of those cut a lot deeper.''
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``There is an old story, I believe, about scorpions and trust,'' Ratface
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murmured.
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More than one, as it happened. The one they told in Callow was
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charmingly moral, a warning about men's nature and how they followed it
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even at their own expense. The Praesi tale was not a warning but a
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lesson: the scorpion swam to the shore, after stinging the frog.
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\emph{Never assume weakness, never trust anyone with your back.} Like
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most Praesi stories it idolized cleverness and treachery without
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addressing the inherent stupidity of killing someone willing to help
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you.
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``We've all had mentors,'' Hakram said. ``Smart doesn't come into it.''
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``Let us hope Procer ties up that loose end, then,'' the Taghreb said.
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``We cannot afford to be stung twice.''
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The orc drank from the cup, savouring the muted burn down his throat,
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and rolled his shoulders.
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``All right, spit it out,'' Adjutant said. ``What are you after, Lord
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Treasurer?''
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The olive-skinned man cast a dubious glance at the sheaths of parchment
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and opened scrolls that covered nearly every surface of Hakram's solar.
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``If I asked you for a report, would you even be able to find it?'' he
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snorted.
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``Finding's a specialty of mine,'' the orc replied with a fanged grin.
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``Now spare me the dancing around.''
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The Taghreb sighed.
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``This cannot be put to ink,'' he said.
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Hakram's hairless brows rose. The Jacks were being forced to keep much
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off parchment out of fear of Imperial infiltration -- particularly
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Vivienne's people since there was a decent choice the Eyes \emph{didn't}
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know who those were, unlike most their other spies -- but Ratface did
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not often bring anything off the record.
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``Your guildsmen or the friends in low places?'' Adjutant asked.
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Ratface shook his head.
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``I had drinks with Pickler, a few nights ago,'' he said.
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The orc's chin lowered, a hint of fangs revealed. With the Fifteenth
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being folded into the Army of Callow he hadn't seen much of the old crew
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lately, since the Hellhound was running them ragged. Pickler had it
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worst than most, trying to form a halfway decent expanded sapper corps
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out of Marchford goblins who'd never set foot at the College. That had
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seen her journeying back and forth to the settlement the Snake Eater
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Tribe had founded in Marchford, out of the tunnels the giant devil snake
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Catherine killed had dug. The rent the tribe offered had been badly
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needed income and goblin manpower was a balm now that the Empress had
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ended their recruiting rights in Praes -- and therefore both the Steppes
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and the Eyries. They were a complication as well, though. Even on their
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best behaviour goblins tended to piss off humans, which was the last
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thing Callow needed at the moment, but there had also been\ldots{}
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larger implications. The tribe currently had no proper Matron. It was
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ruled by a pack of matron-attendants until that could be settled, but if
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there was anyone out there who made Praesi looking like amateur dabblers
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at backstabbing it was female goblins. There was a reason for the lack
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of Matron, as he understood it.
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Pickler's mother, the Matron of the High Ridge Tribe, intended for her
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daughter to retire from the Legions and lead the only goblin tribe
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living outside of the Grey Eyries.
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Hakram suspected the amount of murder and backroom dealing that must
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have gone on for other Matrons to accept that was horrifying. Pickler
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had an edge over any candidate, admittedly, because of her close working
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relationship to the highest reaches of Callow. No other goblin would get
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half as much sufferance from Catherine. On the other hand, the Senior
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Sapper had run away to the War College exactly to be spared this kind of
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position. What Adjutant knew of goblin politics was sparse, mostly
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cobbled together form bitter comments Robber made when in his cups, but
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he'd gathered that Pickler was essentially the goblin equivalent of a
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High Lady's daughter. If she'd stayed with High Ridge she'd be a
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matron-attendant by now, murdering her fellows in preparation for
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succeeding her mother. Apparently Matron Wither had decided to secure a
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tribe for her eldest daughter no matter how far she ran away. You could
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run from honours, but you couldn't run from blood. All orcs knew that,
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true as they knew their own breath.
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``If they try to force her retirement just before a crusade there's
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going to be blood,'' Hakram grimly said.
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``If that were the angle, I'd be less worried,'' Ratface murmured. ``She
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was dragged into a meeting with the matron-attendants, where she was
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interrogated about Cat's intentions for the Empire if she ends up on top
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when the dust settles.''
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Hakram's breath caught. Did they know about the Accords? They'd just
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begun drafting them, it shouldn't be possible. If the Matrons knew then
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the Dread Empress might, and if Malicia learned about those\ldots{}
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``Some people might consider that treason,'' the orc said.
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The Taghreb met his eyes squarely.
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``I know her too, Hakram,'' he said. ``She doesn't forgive things like
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Liesse. The Empress didn't make that doomsday weapon, but it doesn't
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take a High Lord to figure out she made a grab for it. There's a reason
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the Black Knight hasn't set foot in Praes since the battle.''
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There was much more to that than his old friend knew, but that was not
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knowledge to idly spread around.
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``They're smelling weakness,'' the orc gravelled. ``With the Carrion
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Lord estranged and Callow garrisoning borders, they think the Empress is
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on the way out.''
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``No deal was offered,'' Ratface cautioned. ``People who underestimate
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Her Dread Majesty tend to turn up dead and the Matrons didn't last this
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long by being reckless. They're opportunists at heart.''
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``She hates them, Ratface,'' Hakram bluntly said. ``She's fine with
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goblins, but the Matrons everything she despises about highborn
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incarnate. And I agree with her, frankly. They're snakes, and they'll
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bite us just as surely as they will the Empress if it gets them what
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they want.''
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``I am Taghreb,'' Ratface smiled coldly. ``Bastard, but still Taghreb.
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We know the Matrons better than any of you, the dangers of getting into
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bed with them. But we don't \emph{have} to get into bed with them. We
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just have to promise to stay out of it.''
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The orc grit his teeth.
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``There's already too many moving parts in the Tenth Crusade,'' he
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finally said. ``A goblin rebellion on top of it is tossing a sharper
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into the fire.''
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``Think on it,'' Ratface said. ``Talk to her. But we can't dally for too
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long, if we're making overtures.''
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The Taghreb rose to his feet.
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``A sharper's only ever trouble if you're the one it's tossed at,'' the
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Lord Treasurer said quietly.
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Hakram grimaced. Ratface had never taken sapper courses, so he might not
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know that one sharper in twenty blew before ever making it into Imperial
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supply stores.
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Adjutant did, and he thought the metaphor more apt for it.
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