332 lines
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332 lines
18 KiB
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\hypertarget{court-iii}{%
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\section{Court III}\label{court-iii}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Power is a blanket that never covers quite as much as you need
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it to.''}
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-- Queen Matilda the Elder of Callow
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\end{quote}
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Vivienne had learned to enjoy prowling the nights of Laure, though
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Callow's capital city would never be as dear to her as Southpool. Back
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home, in the serpentine alleys of fat brick houses where she'd first
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learned her trade, she could orient herself without a thought. It had
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come naturally, an instinct birthed out of thrill and theft. Navigating
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Laure's cluster of disparate districts, in comparison, had been an
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acquired taste. Much like ale, and as the drink she'd once thought
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little more than bitter brew it had artlessly become a part of her life
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she no longer bothered to question. She liked the Lakeside District most
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of all, even though years of stifling rule under Governor Mazus were
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only now beginning to be recovered from. The docks there different from
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the quiet piers of Southpool that became barred every night: here
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activity thrummed even after dark. The taverns were part of it, for
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every drink peddler unable or unwilling to afford guild membership had
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opened some grimy temple there for sailors and the destitute to
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frequent. But it was more than that: Laure never truly slept, least of
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all here. The royal palace might be the heart of the city, but as far as
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Vivienne was concerned it was Lakeside that held the soul.
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Even in the dark barges came to rest against the long rickety docks of
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the Regalian, officially a customs house said to be built from what part
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of the remains of a Praesi flying fortress had not been claimed by House
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Alban. Less officially, it was the spring well of everything in Laure
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that shied away from the eyes of the law. The place was beautiful, in
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its own way. Youths from Denier or Southpool coming to trying their luck
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in the capital disembarked with nothing but the clothes on their backs,
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smugglers paid their dues to the Guild of Smugglers to avoid having
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their cargo inspected -- unaware that a cut of the coin ended up in
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Ratface's treasury regardless -- and even fishermen out late to try part
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of the lake without competition from the guild of their trade and its
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ancient rights. It was alive in a way that the cleaner parts of the
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district weren't. The Colonnade and its worn statues of the seven first
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Alban rulers had been kept clean and quiet by men with cudgels since the
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aftermath of the Conquest, when the stone anchorage had been the closed
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demesne of the Praesi and their favourite Callowan cronies.
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The Whitestone District reminded her of that stilted place, Vivienne
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decided as she moved from rooftop to rooftop in silence. Oh, it was easy
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on the eyes. Wide sprawling avenues holding noble manors and beautiful
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guildhalls. Gardens every few intersections, paid for by the
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contributions of those that owned property in the district. The locals
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did enjoy being separate from the rest of Laure. They'd had their own
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watch as well, once upon a time, though Catherine had disbanded it after
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her coronation with a look in her eyes that was all savage glee.
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Sometimes Vivienne forgot the Queen of Callow had been a nobody orphan
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but a few years ago, and one used to being stepped on by foreign and
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homebred lords alike. She had not forgotten a single slight from those
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days, the Black Queen. As was their people's way. Thief slid down a
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tiled roof onto a warding wall, then leapt across onto a rain gutter and
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rode it down to someone's darkened garden.
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She did not \emph{need} to travel this way, not truly. A single flash of
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the queen's seal and there was not a gate in the city that would be
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barred to her, nor a watchman that would dare disobey her orders. But
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there was a part of Vivienne that would never be comfortable with the
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power that came from her status. The Woe, she knew, were highborn in a
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way that highborn themselves could only dream of being. Close companions
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to the queen, and Named. No land or riches came from holding one of
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those, but they brought authority in a way that neither could. It was a
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gilded cage. Though, praise where it was due, none of the Woe had been
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taken in by it. Hierophant rarely left the still half-built Observatory
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if he had to, Archer spent more time Lakeside than in the palace and
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Adjutant spent his hours putting out fires across the kingdom. As for
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Catherine, well, she had no love for the crown. The frank admission by
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the Queen of Callow that she'd abdicate in a heartbeat if it didn't
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carry the risk of collapsing the country had been a great reassurance to
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Vivienne. Second Liesse had\ldots{} changed Catherine in many ways. Made
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her more cautious, more prone to avoiding confrontation. The weight of a
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hundred thousand souls lost was still bearing down on her shoulders.
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Caution, though, did not mean lethargy. They had been watching. Waiting.
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Measuring. And now that Lady Valerie Hadley had tipped her hand, Thief
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had been freed to act. The Valewoman's mansion was not truly her own,
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Vivienne had learned. The Hadleys had not been wealthy enough to rank a
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house in the single most expensive district in the Kingdom of Callow,
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and even within the Marquisate of Vale had not been considered among the
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influential houses. Landed knights, kept afloat by the rent of their few
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fields to farmers. Some connections to the -- once-disbanded by the
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Black Knight but now reinstated by his very pupil -- Guild of Smiths had
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been rumoured, but nothing definite. Lady Hadley had been gifted the low
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wall Vivienne was currently climbing and the house beyond it by Baron
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Richard of Holden, two years before the Liesse Rebellion and the
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subsequent crucifixion of the man when it failed. \emph{For services
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rendered}, the deed had said. The Eyes of the Empire had two scrolls on
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the matter, and she'd been in their sights as a possible rebel element
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ever since -- even though she'd spent the Liesse Rebellion in Laure,
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never taking arms with the rebels.
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Vivienne had wondered, ever since the name came across her desk, whether
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she was an agent for a foreign power. It would have been an explanation
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for the quantity of coin she'd begun moving around last month. Yet there
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was no evidence of collusion with the Principate or the Tower. It had
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been venturing down the rabbit hole Brandon Talbot had emerged from that
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shed some light on the mystery. Valerie Hadley had discretely hidden a
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handful of the knights that came out of the woodworks to found the
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Broken Bells for half a decade, at her own expense. That the Baron of
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Holden had seen fit to reward her for it had interesting implications --
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he must have been part of the conspiracy that kept Callowan chivalry
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alive under the occupation -- though given the death of the man and the
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end of his line's rule they were now largely irrelevant. It'd been
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telling, though. Hadley had kept knights hidden and funded at a time
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where such a thing would have landed her on a table with Praesi mages
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dissecting her memories before summary execution if she were caught. She
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was either patriotic or hard to frighten. Perhaps both, Vivienne had
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eventually decided. It would explain how this night had come to be.
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Midnight Bell had already passed, but there were still lamps lit in the
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gallery that overlooked the small pond and garden below. Thief was
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amused by her glimpse of the tall open windows that made up most of the
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wall. She was fairly certain Governor Mazus has once taxed properties
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according to the height and length of windows, and given the multitude
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of those in the mansion perhaps there was an explanation to be found
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about why Baron Richard had been so willing to cede the deed of his
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beautiful mansion to a stranger. Thief crept across the grass silently
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and melded into the shadows at the base of the wall as a household guard
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passed through the garden. She could have used her aspect to avoid the
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need entirely, but relying on the arcane was a good way to get sloppy.
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\emph{And sloppy thieves die young, here and everywhere.} The climb was
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easy. Decorative bas-reliefs made for easy footholds and there were
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plenty vines and shadows to hide in when the next guard passed. Thief's
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silhouette stood wreathed in moonlight for a heartbeat when she crouched
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on the windowsill, but when a breeze set the curtains to moving and
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Hadley glanced to the side she was already gone.
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Lady Valerie, she saw, was alone at the high table with ledgers and
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household papers. A mostly full carafe of wine sat to the side,
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alongside a cup. That simplified matters a great deal. \textbf{Hide},
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Vivienne thought. Steps barely even a whisper, she stood behind the
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woman and fished out a little parchment satchel. The pale powder within
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sunk into the cup of wine without a sound, leaving no trace. Praesi had
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a way with alchemies of all kinds, it had to be said. Thief poured
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double the dose, as Hadley did not strike her like a heavy drinker. It
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was only after the Valewoman drank from the cup that Vivienne pulled out
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the seat to her left, allowing her aspect to ebb. Valerie Hadley cursed
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and reached for the knife at her hip, fumbling with the sheath, and
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Thief dropped into the sinfully comfortable chair with a sigh of
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pleasure.
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``Good evening, Lady Valerie,'' she said.
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The words stilled the woman, though her eyes were still touched by fear.
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``Lady Thief,'' she replied, voice thick with that slow Valean drawl.
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``The queen's own Left Hand. I suppose I should feel flattered.''
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Vivienne smiled. She was, at least, not one of that particularly
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despicable breed of plotters that flinched and mewled when their schemes
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were brought to light.
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``Feel free, if that is your preference,'' she shrugged. ``We were
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overdue a conversation, don't you think?''
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``And they said the queen would be no tyrant,'' Hadley said darkly.
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``That she might have been taught by a monster, but that in the end
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blood would win out. So much for \emph{that}. Am I to disappear into a
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dark cell now, Vivienne Dartwick?''
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``No.~No, there will be none of that,'' Thief softly said. ``I am here
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because I wanted to hear you speak. Look you in the eyes myself. It is a
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weakness, I suppose, but to be Named is to have your flaws swell along
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the rest of you.''
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``I have done nothing wrong,'' Lady Hadley said. ``You know this as well
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as I.''
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``If you'd taken Proceran coin, I would hold you in contempt,'' Vivienne
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admitted. ``I would outright despise you, if it had been the Tower's
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instead. But your little conspiracy was Callowan, from beginning to end,
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wasn't it? A handful of lords and ladies gave you coin, but most came
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from common folk. No conspirators they, only men and women afraid of
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what this land has become.''
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``A kingdom is more than crown and court,'' the woman replied. ``How
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many despise the Black Queen's rule, I wonder? Mere hundreds were enough
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to pay the price and some, but I suspect could have found thousand
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more.''
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``It's not Catherine you bought the death of,'' Thief said. ``It was
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Hakram. Clever of you, given how deeply he is needed. Even cleverer to
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avoid the Guild of Assassins and reach out for Praesi killers. The Jacks
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are near blind in the Wasteland.''
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``You found out anyway,'' Hadley smiled bitterly.
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``The coin is what caught our attention, but that was inevitable,''
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Vivienne noted. ``It would not have been enough to warrant action, as
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you no doubt believed. Hanging you on such thin grounds would have
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tarred Catherine's reputation. But your hired killers paid the Guild of
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Smugglers to cross the border, the fools, and that allowed us to unravel
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the whole thread.''
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``I did not choose him for being an orc,'' Lady Valerie said. ``Let that
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be known. It is a disgrace for one of his kind to hold high office in
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Callow, but hardly warrants murder. No, I soiled my hands because
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without him the Black Queen would finally need to rely on \emph{us}. Her
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own people. How foul a truth, that it would take so large an absence
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before she even pondered that.''
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``I've thought the same, on occasion,'' Vivienne admitted. ``The Kingdom
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of Callow is born anew, and yet the highest offices are nearly all held
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by foreigners. Loyal to Catherine first and foremost, without any
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genuine love for the land they rule in her name.''
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``Then you understand why this is necessary,'' the woman said, leaning
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forward. ``This is a farce, Thief. Kendall stacks the court and the
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officers with merchants and eldermen that will never gainsay her, cowed
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by her high birth and favour with the queen. The very Queen's Council
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has a \emph{single Callowan} sitting on it and half the south will be
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parcelled away to legionaries? It is madness. It cannot go on. Better we
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suffer retaliation for the Deadhand's death than do nothing. Sacrifices
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had to be made.''
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``It won't happen,'' Vivienne said quietly.
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``The Adjutant's death?'' Hadley chuckled without humour. ``Obviously.''
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``No,'' Thief replied. ``Liesse being partitioned. It was never going to
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happen, you see. I leaked a false document to someone I knew the Regals
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had cultivated.''
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Blood drained from the other woman's face.
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``I would have done without even that,'' Vivienne noted. ``I wanted to
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falsify the entire accusation and finish it all months ago, but I
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suppose Catherine needed to be \emph{sure}. That they really would go
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that far in their disregard.''
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``This is murder,'' Lady Valerie said coldly. ``Cold-blooded, calculated
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murder.''
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``Is it?'' Thief mused. ``It relied on the actors involved being willing
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to cross the line on their own. At no point was coercion involved. That
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was, to my understanding, the entire point of it. As for you, Hadley,
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you tried to wield a knife. The moment the hand touches the handle, one
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must we willing to suffer the consequences.''
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``How eager you are to excuse tyranny,'' the other woman snarled. ``You
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are the willing servant of this kingdom's woe. I hope you drown with the
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rest of us, when all accounts are finally settled.''
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``The funny thing is that I'm trying to achieve exactly what you want,''
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Vivienne said. ``Putting Callowans in high office. Kendall is\ldots{}
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unreliable, in my eyes. Willing to rebel yes, but also willing to bend
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with the wind. The Regals are much less prone to that flaw. But you had
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all these \emph{others} flaws, you see. They had to be fixed before an
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argument in your favour could be made.''
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``You try to tame us like a pet,'' Hadley mocked. ``How many will you
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slaughter, before we bow deep enough for your tastes?''
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``Your radicals were already dead,'' Thief shrugged. ``They were too
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large a vulnerability. We couldn't risk the Tower or the First Prince
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agitating through them when the armies are at the borders. Hakram argued
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for acquiring leverage instead of a thinning, but there was only so much
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of that to be found. Better to be sure.''
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``Weeping Heavens,'' Lady Valerie hoarsely whispered. ``You own
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Julienne. You've had her gather every true patriot behind Farron so they
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can be slain in a single stroke.''
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``For months now,'' Vivienne agreed quietly. ``Of course, we won't be
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the ones throwing accusations. There'd be too much doubt. But before the
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night is over, Grandmaster Brandon Talbot will come across evidence of
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the conspiracy. There was some argument about whether leaking a matter
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under seal was enough, but I won that round. The entire faction will be
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implicated in your assassination plot. We expect Talbot will bring the
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evidence of it to the palace within the hour. He'll request a purge
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himself, and who would doubt the very founder of the Regals if he says
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there's rot in the flesh?''
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The Valewoman spat to the side.
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``You use a good man for ugly purpose,'' she hissed.
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``We use all sorts, Hadley,'' Thief said. ``One might argue that is our
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tell-tale mark. Lady Julienne will sadly be jailed for a time, but
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eventually manage to squeak away from the fallout with a mere fine due
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to lack of evidence. And after the remaining Regals gain in prominence,
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securing the withdrawal of the Liesse proposal, she will stand a
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lightning rod for any emerging rebellious elements. We learned from the
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Empire, you see. Best to lead your own opposition if you can.''
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``How well you have learned the ways of the Enemy,'' Lady Valerie
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sneered. ``You masquerade as its better while using the same means
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towards the same ends.''
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``I'm starting to understand it, just a little bit,'' Vivienne murmured.
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``Why she got so \emph{angry} when we talked. Because there's a reason
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I'm on this side, Hadley, and it's not because I somehow enjoy killing
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my own people -- no matter how misguided they might be. But the Woe?
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We're small fish in a very large pond. And if you can't even handle us,
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how could you possibly handle the the Empress and the First Prince? All
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the while you get all righteous about what we do, but if we actually
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\emph{gave you the rein} you'd drop this entire kingdom in the fucking
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deep end within the month. Sure, we're the godsdamned Enemy. You get to
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have that. That doesn't mean you're somehow fit to rule.''
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Hadley laughed harshly.
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``And who are you trying to convince, villain?'' she said. ``All this
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talking, yet beneath all I see is blood spilled out of fear. You know
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you forge your own doom with every action.''
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``Doom is our business, Lady Valerie,'' Vivienne said. ``We know it more
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intimately than you ever could. And as for blood, well\ldots{}''
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Thief smiled coldly.
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``I was told, you see, that sacrifices had to be made. So they have
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been.''
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A heartbeat later, Lady Valerie Hadley slumped down onto the table. It
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was impressive, that willpower had allowed her to last that long. She
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wasn't dead, of course. No, killing one of the foremost Regals in her
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own home would endanger all of this. But she would sleep like the dead,
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unable to wake up for at least a day. By which time she would be in a
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cell, unable to escape and awaiting her trial. Thief snatched the carafe
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and drank deep. She wiped her mouth, after, knowing her fingers came
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away stained as if by blood.
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``Long live Callow,'' Vivienne Dartwick murmured. ``And Gods forgive us
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all.''
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