448 lines
25 KiB
TeX
448 lines
25 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-21-tug-of-war}{%
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\section{Chapter 21: Tug-of-War}\label{chapter-21-tug-of-war}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Invading Callow is much like drunkenly playing dice: the odds
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are never as good as you believe, and you know you've reached bottom
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when snake eyes are involved.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Malevolent III, the Pithy
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\end{quote}
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I pricked my ears, gauging the enemy. Most of the Proceran delegation
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had either skipped a beat or seen their pulse quicken when the Pilgrim
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rose to his feet. That was telling. Since it was dubious anyone that
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high up in the Proceran pecking order was faint of heart, the
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implication was that this particular play had been kept close to the
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chest. There were only four who'd not had a physical reaction of fear or
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surprise: Prince Amadis, Princess Rozala, Prince Arnaud and the
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middle-aged diplomat who'd been the mouthpiece for the opposition so
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far. The first two were only to be expected, and the last a given, but
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the third? That was interesting. Arnaud of Cantal did not strike me as
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the kind of man the other two royals would keep deep in their
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confidence. Has he found out on his own? If he was spying on the leaders
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of the northern crusade, that was a possible angle for Thief to exploit.
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Turning him seemed unlikely, but if his spying apparatus could be
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infiltrated\ldots{} Something to discuss with her later. I made a note
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to have Vivienne dig deeper into the man, as there was apparently more
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to him than his reputation. The Grey Pilgrim's words were followed by
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heavy silence and I did not hurry to respond.
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This, I knew, was the beginning of the deeper game. The war behind the
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war, where Named would claw at each other like animals to get the
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morsels of narrative they needed for the final victory. The thing was,
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as it stood, I was winning that fight. I'd repeatedly made overtures for
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peace, brought up whenever I could that the enemy was invading my
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homeland for mostly petty reasons and avoided -- as much as feasible --
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falling into the kind of villainous stand that would get me winning in
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the short term and killed in the long one. As long as this remained a
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negotiation between mortals, for mortal motives, I came out ahead. Sure,
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they were a better hand at diplomacy and likely I'd end up unable to
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capitalize on several of my advantages. But that was fine, in the
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greater scheme of things, so long as I walked out of this pavilion with
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some gains and my narrative intact. There were earthly logistics to
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this, and Black had made an entire career out of proving those could win
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a war regardless of the subtler workings of Creation, but I was
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confident that as long as I held my ground story-wise I'd emerge in a
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position to begin the sequence of events that'd get me to my objective.
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Which meant that I had to avoid engaging the Pilgrim as much as I could.
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I had a knack for stories, twisting them and using them. It came
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naturally to me. But the opposition had actually \emph{lived} through
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hundreds of them. The experience gap between us was overwhelming, and
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that was without even taking into consideration whatever tricks the
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Heavens were sure to have bestowed upon him to make sure he'd keep
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coming out ahead. I could not confidently state I would win against the
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Grey Pilgrim, so my safest path was not to fight him at all. Ironically,
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my sharpest tool in ensuring that was something I generally had little
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patience for: etiquette. Instead of replying to the old Levantine, I
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leaned towards Aisha.
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``Correct me if I'm wrong,'' I said. ``But isn't it a severe breach of
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decorum for someone without a formal role in negotiations to directly
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address a queen?''
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The lovely Taghreb's lips quirked.
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``That is so,'' she said, pitching her voice so it would be heard by
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all. ``Under Tower law, such a transgression is punishable by flaying of
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the left hand and foot.''
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Several of the Procerans' hearts quivered.
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``It has been the stance of your delegation to advance the Queen in
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Callow as an entity separate from the Tower's rule,'' the Pilgrim said,
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face serene. ``Was this a misrepresentation?''
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I did one the things I hated most in the world: I kept my fucking mouth
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shut. The moment I got involved the narrative was back in play.
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\emph{Lose}, I told myself\emph{. Let him win the small things, so long
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as you get what you came for.}
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``Observations on the nature of Praesi law are no admission of anything
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else,'' Thief coldly noted. ``To pretend otherwise is disingenuous, and
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might be taken as an attempt to sink honest negotiations. Is that the
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intent of the Proceran delegation?''
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I sat straighter in my chair. Thief was one of the Woe, and the Woe were
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under me. Would anything coming out of her mouth contribute to the
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tapestry the Pilgrim was trying to weave? Not if I contradicted her, I
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suspected, but if I was remaining silent\ldots{} Best to stay on the
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safe side. Picking out a sliver of Winter, I formed a ring around her
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index on the hand beneath the table and squeezed it lightly. She
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inclined her head slightly to the left, acknowledging my warning as I
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allowed the construct to dissipate.
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``A curious thing, that seeking clarity would be taken as offence,'' the
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Pilgrim said. ``Regardless, there is precedent.''
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The Proceran mouthpiece bowed again.
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``As far as the year seventy-four, Chosen recognized as titled advisors
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have been allowed to address to the Highest Assembly directly,'' the man
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said. ``As far one hundred and eleven, the same have been granted right
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of involvement with negotiations held with foreign powers.''
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Seventy-four, huh. That was the year eight hundred ninety, by the
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Imperial calendar -- Procerans begun theirs after the founding of the
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Principate, which had only taken place a year after Triumphant's fall.
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Considering the current Imperial year was thirteen hundred and
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twenty-seven, that was not a young precedent. It shouldn't matter,
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though, and if I'd picked up on that, Aisha should have as well. Living
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up to my expectation, the Staff Tribune advanced where we remained
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silent.
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``Proceran custom is not universally binding,'' she pointed out. ``There
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is no such precedent for our delegation. Regardless, right of
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involvement would not equate right of \emph{interrogation}.''
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The middle-aged diplomat smothered a smile. A mistake had been made.
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``Queen Eleanor Fairfax granted privilege to voice thoughts and
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questions freely to the contemporary Wizard of the West, after her
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coronation,'' the man said. ``This is a matter of public record. That
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privilege has been maintained through every known Choosing since.''
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I kept my face rigid. Was that true? It might very well be. Records were
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sparse about the Old Kingdom, nowadays, save those that related to
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mundane matters -- where the Empire's rule tended to come out as a more
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prosperous, if also more tyrannical, alternative. My teacher had been
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thorough in taking the knife to anything that could feasibly become
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fodder for a hero's rise, and knowledge about past Wizards of the West
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would have been high on that list of proscriptions. \emph{Except he
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wouldn't have been able expunge Proceran records, not in depth anyway.}
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The man's heartbeat was steady, which could be an indication he was
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telling the truth -- or merely that he was a very good liar.
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``The Proceran delegation has not recognized ours as being
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representative of the Kingdom of Callow,'' Grandmaster Talbot said, cool
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voice cutting clearly through the hesitation. ``Only of the Queen in
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Callow, making such precedent irrelevant. Which it would be even if
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otherwise, unless by some labyrinthine exercise of reason an equivalence
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between the attempted murderer of Queen Catherine and the ancient
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servants of the now-extinct House Fairfax was established. Which it was
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not.''
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Brandon \emph{fucking} Talbot, I thought, smothering a grin. Riding in
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lance high at the last moment, proper knight that he was.
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``Lack of recognition for Proceran law endangers the entire process of
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treaty-making,'' the middle-aged diplomat warned.
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``Forceful imposition of foreign customs on the same process is not a
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standard this delegation is willing to establish,'' Aisha replied
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pleasantly. ``We do not recognize the attempt to establish precedent by
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the Proceran delegation, and move the first issue on the program should
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now be addressed.''
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``Is this to be who you truly are, Catherine Foundling?'' the Grey
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Pilgrim said, soft voice carrying across the pavilion. ``A villain
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hiding behind petty excuses, unwilling to even speak with those you deem
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foes?''
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My fingers clenched. The fucker. He had a lot of nerves saying that,
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after he'd tacitly allowed the Saint to try to kill me under a
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godsdamned truce banner. I leaned forward to -- \emph{let him win the
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small things, so long as you get what you came for}. My teeth came down
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and I bit off my tongue, knowing I would not be able to keep silent
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otherwise. If Masego's weakness was the need for utter precision, then
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mine was the inability to just keep my fucking mouth shut. Blood filled
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my mouth as Winter lazily coursed through my veins, repairing the
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self-inflicted damage. I swallowed as discretely as I could. The violent
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urge to respond was not gone, but the immediacy had ebbed. I kept my
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eyes on Prince Amadis, who was eyeing me with a mixture of disgust and
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fascination. I bared reddened teeth at him, watching his muscles clench
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to suppress a flinch.
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``Shall we proceed, Your Grace?'' I asked.
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He inclined his head by a fraction. Good. I'd weathered the first blow,
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but if I knew anything about patterns that was the first of three. I
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would have to remain wary. Aisha had thought it odd that the Procerans
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had not fought back harder on the terms of truce and retreat being the
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first subject addressed, but now we knew why. They'd intended on
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flipping the table before it even came to that. Now, though, they were
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stuck actually discussing it. Withdrawal from the Tenth Crusade for the
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royals had never been in the cards, much as it irked me. For them to put
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their seal to a treaty binding them to that would be high treason and
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sustained heresy under Proceran law. One of the ancient First Princes
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had passed that motion through the Highest Assembly, after a few
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Arlesite principalities dropped out of one of the crusades against the
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Kingdom of the Dead. Their agitations in the south while the rest of the
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Principate was busy dying up north had been so deeply despised by the
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surviving princes they'd been willing to limit their own prerogatives to
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see the deserters punished. No, our wiggle room was narrower than that.
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The first opening was that, technically speaking, the Tenth Crusade had
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been declared on Praes. It would be damaging to their reputation to make
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a deal with me, but not actually illegal.
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The second was that I wasn't asking for peace, only a truce. The terms
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we were after were eighteen months where none of the signatories or
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soldiers under their command could enter Callow, which was where we
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first got shafted by the premises agreed on. They managed to have it
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defined as `the lands under the rule of the Queen in Callow', which gave
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them some flexibility. The moment a part of the kingdom renounced my
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rule, it was fair game again and they could get involved without
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breaking the letter of the agreement. Or, and I was just guessing here,
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if a disavowed heroine like the Saint just happened cut my head off --
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well, it would be convenient coincidence that there were no longer any
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lands under the rule of the Queen in Callow, wouldn't it? I was going to
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have to watch my back very, very carefully in the coming months. Eve
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more so than usual. Aisha began bargaining forthree years of truce and
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slowly allowed herself to be whittled down to fourteen months, though at
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least she got a concession out of it. The fantassins across the field
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were in the employment of the princes and princesses attending, but that
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was a matter of contract. Those could be released, at which point the
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terms would no longer apply to them. Horse-trading for six months less
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of truce, Aisha managed to extract they'd sign the treaty as well. None
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of the companies would be able to just sign up with the Iron Prince's
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host instead.
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A goodwill clause forbidding the fantassins to simply disband their
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companies and reform under a different name was written in, because even
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\emph{I} had seen that loophole coming. It was when we moved to the
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second subject, supplies, that Thief's predictions came true and they
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began their attempt to fuck us in earnest. You'd think they'd at least
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provide dinner first. Bad form, Amadis. Going at it with only wine made
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it look like they thought we were easy.
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``As a sign of good faith, we would require that the Army of Callow
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continue to provide supplies while negotiations are ongoing, at the
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previously agreed cost,'' Prince Amadis requested, meeting my eyes
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directly.
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It wasn't the first time they'd tried that. Fairly early on they'd
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narrowed in on the fact that my diplomatic training was lacking compared
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to Aisha's or Talbot's, and since they'd tried to get me involved as
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much as possible. Best way for them to do that was to ditch the
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mouthpiece and let the Prince of Iserre do the talking: he had enough
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status that etiquette dictated I couldn't just foist the thing off to
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Aisha if he spoke to me directly. It was a play on their part, we both
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knew that. But it also left me with no real reason to call them out, and
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if these talks imploded because I'd walked out without a damned good
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reason? That was the story of a villain queen so arrogant she was
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willing to starve dozens of thousands for perceived insults. It did not
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bode well for me. This was going to be a pivot, I knew that and the
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Pilgrim most definitely did. It meant every word spoken today had
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\emph{weight}. I'd be eroding at my own gains if I pulled out now, and
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even if it likely wouldn't be enough to flip the entire story the
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opposition didn't \emph{need} that, strictly speaking. Just my position
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being weakened would make it much easier to kill me. Was this the second
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blow? No, the confrontation was too indirect. The Pilgrim had made
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himself the speaker for Above, it wasn't something that could be handed
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to Amadis like a plate of pastries.
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``While we are not willing to make that concession, we share your worry
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on the appearance of coercion,'' I blandly replied.
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Meaning it wouldn't look good if it appeared we were negotiating with a
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loaded crossbow pointed at their balls, though we were both aware there
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were plenty crossbows today to go around. The Jacks had confirmed
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Hasenbach had her own scrying-capable mages in play, called the Order of
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the Red Lion. We also knew, from Masego, that they were at least a
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decade behind Praesi spell formulas when it came to that, which meant
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they couldn't do relays and their range was limited: they could chain
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the reports manually, but that was tricky business. Hierophant's best
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guess for the crusaders getting news from the battle at the Red Flower
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Vales was a delay of two days. Knowing Black, he was very unlikely to
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gamble it all on the first day. He'd stretch it out through series of
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fortifications, made even more efficient by the narrow valleys and steep
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slopes of the Vales. That provided us with some room to manoeuver.
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``We are willing to immediately provide three days' worth of supplies,
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at the agreed on cost, to prevent that misunderstanding,'' I continued
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calmly.
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Prince Amadis' heartbeat quickened. Anger. \emph{Yeah, you princely
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shit. We saw that one coming.} There was still risk involved, should
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Papenheim somehow win an immediate and crushing victory -- or, more
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probably, if Black decided a strategic retreat out of the Vales was the
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correct decision -- but odds were the crusaders would have to make the
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deal without knowing the outcome. They \emph{really} wanted to avoid
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that, of course. But outright feeding them for three days yanked away
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their pretext to push for better terms. They could still delay until the
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days were past, but then we'd be the ones with grounds to protest bad
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faith. \emph{And we both know Kegan is coming. Your window of
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opportunity is narrow.} If they failed to make terms before the
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Deoraithe arrived, their bargaining position took a hit. Juniper had
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urged me to send Larat to fetch Kegan's host, and I'd already made up my
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mind to agree if we didn't walk out with a deal by the day's end. It was
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a naked threat, sure, and before the meeting began I'd worried about
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souring the process by resorting to it. But they were aready pushing
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back pretty hard, and if they were stretching things out on purpose
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threats were not a line I was unwilling to cross.
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``The gesture is appreciated,'' Amadis said evenly. ``However, I worry
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this could be misconstrued as impropriety. Rumours of bribery would
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damage the reputation of all involved.''
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My eyes narrowed. We were making the crusaders pay for the supplies, it
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was hardly a fucking bribe. Princes were touchy about their reputation,
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though, so while it wasn't a good reason it was a halfway plausible one.
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\emph{And it wasn't a reply we anticipated, though we should have.} I
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glanced at Aisha, but she could be no help. Fuck. There was probably a
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way out of this, but I couldn't think of one at the moment.
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``We can table the matter for the moment,'' I conceded grudgingly.
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``As you say,'' the Prince of Iserre replied, the hint of a smile on his
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lips as he inclined his head.
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Aisha bowed in her seat, then addressed the table.
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``We now address the third subject on the program,'' the Supply Tribune
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said, ``as requested by the Callowan delegation. Provenance and
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direction of promised coin.''
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In other words, who was going to foot the bill for the supplies they
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were getting. That was going to be one of the trickier bits, Vivienne
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had told me. The Procerans were going to try to pass it all to
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Hasenbach, but we might have a way around that. For `practical reasons'
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we were going to suggest they provide the coin themselves, though it
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would be framed as a loan on the part of the First Prince towards them.
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Our turn to screw them over the negotiation premises, for this one. As
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an expeditionary force of the First Prince, they had legal grounds to
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agree to that -- if they were Hasenbach's mandated minions, anything
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falling under war reparations was ultimately her responsibility to pay
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for. Aisha had noted some of them might consider it a worthwhile trade
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off to have the First Prince owe them money, since by leveraging that
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debt they might avoid political retaliation for a retreat. Thief had
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been more dubious, arguing that they'd balk since Cordelia might manage
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to get out of paying them anything back. It was going to come down to
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finesse.
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``The delegation recognizes the Chosen known as the Grey Pilgrim, formal
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advisor to the Prince of Iserre,'' the mouthpiece intoned.
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Well, shit. We were halfway through the list now, so in retrospective I
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should have seen it coming.
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``In matter of direction, I seek clarification,'' the Pilgrim said.
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``The Principate of Procer is currently at war with the Dread Empire of
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Praes. As it could be considered treason for any coin paid through this
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treaty to come to gild Imperial coffers through either commerce or
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tribute, a question must first be addressed. Does the Queen in Callow
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intend to pursue formal independence from the Tower?''
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I closed my eyes and thought. Why would he care about the gold? Coin
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didn't mean shit to heroes. No, he had a reason to ask this that shaped
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a story. \emph{Independence from the Tower}. Callow already was
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independent, effectively speaking, but there'd been no open break.
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Malicia and I knew it was just a matter of time, but the current fiction
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it wasn't was useful for us both. If it was discarded, what was the
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result? Most likely, Malicia had to declare I was in rebellion even if
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she did nothing immediate about it. That was the part that had me wary,
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though. She couldn't do anything about it right now, not with Ashur
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marauding the coasts and a city freshly sacked. So why would the old man
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be after that? \emph{Pilgrim might not know about Nok, though}, I mused.
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No, wrong way to think about this. If this was a political play it'd be
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the Procerans doing the talking. Since it was the Pilgrim, he was
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leaning on the pivot for some reason. Malicia declared me a rebel. What
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did that mean, in the greater scheme of things? Ah, shit. \emph{Evil
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turns on Evil}. That was his play. And it was a story old as the First
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Dawn, too, so if I caught even the hem of it in my fingers it was going
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to drag me through seventy fucking Hells. Stories repeated so often they
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were considered self-evident truths had a way of pushing themselves to
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the fore no matter what the people involved wanted.
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All right, then. What could I do to avoid the pitfall?
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Couldn't argue there was no need to have the talk, this time, since that
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could be taken as me trying to frame the Procerans for treason. It'd
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turn this from truce talks to `Evil queen lays a cunning trap', and that
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fucked everything up. I couldn't lie in front of the Pilgrim, he'd see
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through it and that got me back in the deep even if `the Heavens told me
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it was untrue' might not hold up too well as a negotiating position.
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Flatly admitting I was going to just led me to a different problem, so
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that was straight out. Could I maybe keep this contained, force an oath
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whatever was spoken on the subject wouldn't get out of this pavilion?
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\emph{No}, I decided. I didn't have enough of a leg to stand on, and it
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wasn't like the Procerans would jump for joy at the prospect of being
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oath-bound to someone holding a fae mantle\emph{. If you can't dodge,
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attack}, I thought. Instead of avoiding \emph{his} story, what story
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could \emph{I} make? Liberating rebel wouldn't hold, not while I was
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wearing a crown. I'd only ever managed to squeak into heroic Roles when
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the opposition was\ldots{} less than flexible, anyway. Treacherous
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lieutenant to Malicia? I could fit the boots, but it wouldn't get me
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anywhere I wanted to be. Praesi stories would just make it worse, as a
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rule, so it had to be either Callowan or old and worn enough it was up
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for grabs by anyone.
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Unless\ldots{} \emph{Akua}. She'd been on her own idea of good behaviour
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since Second Liesse, which had taken a while for me to puzzle out. She
|
|
should have been scheming to get out, and to be frank she probably was,
|
|
but she was also very much trying to be useful. To get out of the box
|
|
more often, in part, but there were deeper reasons. I had beaten her, or
|
|
at least she believed as much. According to the sack full of razor
|
|
blades that was Praesi philosophy, that meant she was my follower now.
|
|
That was an old story, and though the Wasteland had practically turned
|
|
it into a religion it wasn't \emph{just} a Wasteland favourite. Or
|
|
Evil's in general. Early crew of heroes runs into a seeming enemy they
|
|
fight out of misunderstanding, then fall together either facing a common
|
|
foe or when the misunderstanding is finally cleared. Everyone's friends,
|
|
some cackling villain gets stabbed in unison and the Heavens pat
|
|
everyone's ass approvingly. Hells, that was more or less how Archer had
|
|
ended up joining the Woe now that I thought about it. So I needed to be
|
|
metaphorical Archer, fighting the crusaders out of a silly
|
|
misunderstanding somehow involving three bloody days of battle and at
|
|
least thirty thousand dead.
|
|
|
|
\emph{I am a crusader}, I thought. What did I want? To fuck over the
|
|
Wasteland, a sentiment I wasn't exactly unsympathetic to. \emph{Kill
|
|
Catherine Foundling, since she's an abomination and also an asshole who
|
|
keeps killing our guys.} How did I cease being the asshole who kept
|
|
killing their guys? Well, maybe if they stopped trying to kill m- no,
|
|
not productive. Plenty of heroes were guy-killing assholes, I reminded
|
|
myself, in and of itself it wasn't a deal breaker. Larger perspective.
|
|
Looking down from Above, what was happening in Callow? \emph{Praes is
|
|
still in charge}, I thought. The borders, the separate laws and the
|
|
coinage wouldn't matter to something like the Hashmallim. A villain was
|
|
still on the throne, the former apprentice of the Black Knight. My army
|
|
was more than half Callowan, these days, but I still had a detachment of
|
|
mass-murdering Praesi household troops and the greenskins. Goblins had
|
|
an unfortunate propensity for stabbing, and orcs \emph{did} eat people.
|
|
Wasn't even that large a part of their diet, and it wasn't like they ate
|
|
people alive -- it was illegal, if nothing else -- but even occasional
|
|
corpse-eating did tend to disqualify people from standing on the shiny
|
|
side of the fence. As far as Above was concerned, I was a Dread Empress
|
|
wearing the Queen of Blades' clothes.
|
|
|
|
But I \emph{was} in charge in their eyes, wasn't I? The legalities we'd
|
|
been quibbling about all day didn't mean dust in the eyes of the Gods.
|
|
That was the whole reason to remove me, wasn't it? A villainous ruler
|
|
for Callow was bad for business, regardless of the earthly
|
|
practicalities involved. Which meant that if I made a choice, Above took
|
|
that as a choice for all of Callow. There was an opening there. If I
|
|
pulled the rug out from under the heroes, it worked for the entire
|
|
kingdom. My eyes narrowed. I didn't have to stop being a -- unfairly
|
|
characterized, I believed -- murderous asshole. I just had to be
|
|
\emph{their} murderous asshole. Metaphorically speaking. Probably. And
|
|
the way to achieve that\ldots{} what was the name of Cordelia's Friendly
|
|
League of Upstanding Nations again? Ah, right. I cleared my throat,
|
|
meeting the Grey Pilgrim's eyes with a grin that was all teeth.
|
|
|
|
``To answer your question,'' I said, ``I intend to seek signatory status
|
|
with the Grand Alliance within the year.''
|
|
|
|
Pandemonium erupted, the Pilgrim's face went blank and my grin only got
|
|
wider.
|