523 lines
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523 lines
25 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-37-offing}{%
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\section{Chapter 37: Offing}\label{chapter-37-offing}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Callowans as a people can be summed up by the fact that, before
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the Uncivil Wars had even come to a close, it'd become a common boast
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among the populace that the Black Queen had not even spent a sennight in
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Keter before having several counts of arson and murder to her name.''}--
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Extract from the personal memoirs of Lady Aisha Bishara
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Follow the food. So went Thief's advice.
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\end{quote}
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That Malicia or a flesh puppet were in the city was a given: Neshamah
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wouldn't bother to seriously negotiate with a High Lord. It would have
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been like a man having to keep a serious face while making a pact with
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mutton chop, in his eyes. I'd personally been of the opinion that it was
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a near certainty that the puppet would be the one in Keter, since the
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Empress leaving the Tower unattended for more than a few weeks was a
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recipe for usurpation. Akua, however, had made it clear that with the
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right precautions it was possible for Malicia to be here in person while
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a puppet held the Tower for her. She was not the kind of Empress that
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had a strong presence outside Ater: apparently even by imperial
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standards she didn't leave her seat of power often. It made sense, in a
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way. Malicia wasn't a fighter, and for decades she'd had Black to send
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after messes sword in hand. Her almost cripplingly-focused talents were
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in rule and intrigue, and they were most effectively wielded from the
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Imperial court. Diabolist noted that the court at the Tower wasn't
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necessarily the centre of power in a Tyrant's reign -- Terribilis II had
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barely held one and distributed most its traditional authority to Ater's
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bureaucracy. Malicia, however, had inherited a festering snake pit of a
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court from her predecessor Nefarious and then promptly encouraged the
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most murderous leanings of the highborn by rewarding the victorious in
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those struggles with riches and influence.
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That, however, had been decades ago. Before the Conquest or my birth.
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Now that Malicia had spent years removing the aristocrats from the
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bureaucracy and Black had unceremoniously drummed them out of the
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Legions, her hold on Ater and the Tower was extremely hard to shake. She
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could afford to let the High Lords break their teeth on her power base
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while she placed most her attention on the negotiations in Keter. Akua
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even speculated that she might be baiting out would-be usurpers in order
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to have them out in the open when she returned home with a Keteran
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alliance. That turnaround was likely to see their own families turn on
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those ambitious few, neatly decapitating any nascent opposition without
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her having to lift a finger. It certainly sounded like Malicia, I had to
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admit. A plan with several ancillary benefits unfolding quietly while
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her enemies swung at mist. Regardless, it'd been a priority to find out
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whether we were dealing with the actual Empress or a puppet. From a
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narrow perspective, it didn't matter which it was if we managed to
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slaughter them all anyway: the result would still be us with the only
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bidder at the Dead King's auction. Looking at it more broadly, though,
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the difference was major. For one, if I killed Malicia in the flesh I'd
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be gaining a `legitimate' claim to the Tower.
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Kill the Empress, be the Empress: that was the law of the Wasteland. If
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you managed to scatter all the other carrion birds pecking at the
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corpse, anyway. Getting involved in the flaming tar pit that was your
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average Praesi succession was the least of what I needed right now, and
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pretty high on my list of `things I would prefer never to have to deal
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with'. Malicia would have to go if the Liesse Accords were going to be
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implemented properly and I couldn't deny that the longer she had to
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scheme the more dangerous she became, but as long as the Empress lived
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there was a lid on the Wasteland jar of crazy. Much like Cordelia
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Hasenbach, she wasn't someone I liked facing but she remained very much
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preferable to whoever would step up if she was removed from power. I
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wouldn't put it beyond a High Lord trying to climb the Tower to take a
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swing at me as their foremost `rival' even while the Empire was being
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attacked by Ashur. Particularly if their lands were far enough from the
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sea. There were dozens of examples in the histories to be found of
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Praesi cheerfully emptying a whole quiver into their foot just like
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that. On the other hand, taking Malicia prisoner just wasn't feasible.
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Not in \emph{Keter}. And for all that Praesi ambition could end up
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biting me, there was also a decent chance that instead the Empire would
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collapse into civil war as every prominent highborn tried to claim the
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Tower. I couldn't even dismiss the possibility that the legions in the
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Wasteland would try to proclaim Black as Dread Emperor and fill mass
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graves with whoever objected to that.
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I didn't relish the loss of life it would involve, but if Praes was
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clawing at itself it wasn't looking at Callow. It might be a risk worth
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taking.
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``So I've got a report for you,'' Archer announced, strolling through
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the wards.
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She had a bottle in hand, I noted. That was definitely not what I had
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sent her out for.
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``If you blew off reconnaissance to get drunk, there will be
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consequences,'' I mildly said.
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``I would never,'' Indrani assured me. ``I just happened to find a
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cellar while on my very serious fact-finding mission, and it would have
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been criminally negligent of me not to investigate.''
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``Was it locked?'' I sighed.
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``Is it really a lock if it breaks?'' Archer mused. ``That's a question
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for the philosophers, Catherine. We're straying off topic.''
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So I'd need to offer Athal an apology, then. Hakram's suggestion that we
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just make a scroll template with blank spaces to fill in with the latest
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thing she'd done was becoming increasingly tempting.
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``This is what we call Atalantian baptismal, Cat,'' Indrani seriously
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told me, putting the bottle on the table. ``I've heard that if an entire
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glass is drunk in a single sitting, it will outright kill a man.''
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``I'm considering killing as well, at the moment,'' I informed her.
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``That would be a grave miscarriage of justice,'' Indrani told me.
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``Since I found it inside the only other palace that has servants in
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it.''
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My eyes narrowed. I'd asked the Dead King for further time to debate his
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offer before our next conversation and sent both Archer and Thief out
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find the tracks of any Imperial presence in the city. Follow the food,
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Vivienne had said. Malicia's delegation would need to eat, would be
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offered all the trapping of hospitality as the honoured guests that they
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were. That left traces, in a city where the overwhelming majority of the
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inhabitants were walking corpses. I set aside the pile of scrolls that
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held our now-irrelevant bargaining position and dragged out the rough
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sketch of the palaces surrounding the Hall of the Dead I'd asked Masego
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to make. There were five in whole, forming a circle interrupted by the
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same number of avenues going into the city-fortress. The Silent Palace,
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our own, was slightly to the left of the gates into the Hall.
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``Which one?'' I asked.
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Indrani jabbed her finger onto the parchment. Slightly to the right, on
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the opposite side of the black stone spire.
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``The Threefold Reflection,'' I said.
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Athal had helpfully provided the names of every existing palace when I'd
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casually asked as much, feigning idle curiosity. The dark-haired man had
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also revealed there were old sorceries protecting each of them, though
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he hadn't gone into detail. Not all that surprising. This whole city was
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a fortress, not even the guesthouses would be toothless.
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``The place is\ldots{} unsettling,'' Archer said, grabbing the seat
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across from me. ``The layout is wrong. Hallways lead where they
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shouldn't: I went through the same threshold twice and ended up in
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different places both times. I'd call it a maze, but you can map out a
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maze. There's wizardly bullshit at play here I think might rule that
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out.''
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``Did you find out how many people are in the delegation?'' I asked.
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``I kept out of sight,'' she said, shaking her head. ``Got a look at one
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of them, though. Tall man in steel plate, silent. Black iron mask over
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his face.''
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I nodded.
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``I've seen those before,'' I said. ``They're called Sentinels. The
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personal guard of whoever holds the Tower, though there's enough they
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count more as a personal army. Supposedly spells and potions keep them
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unconditionally loyal.''
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``Might be we have ourselves the real Empress, then,'' Indrani said.
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``They're exactly the kind of guards a puppet would bring as well,'' I
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said. ``Won't talk, can't betray and they probably have triggers inside
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their body that'll kill them if someone tries to grab and extract.''
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``Would they obey a puppet, though?'' Archer asked.
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``I have no idea,'' I admitted after a moment. ``But I know who we can
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ask.''
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I exerted my will and tugged at Akua's leash, gently. There was
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resistance. I tugged a second time, and when I did not feel her moving
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towards me I rolled my eyes and simply dragged her here. The shade
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poured out of the wall about thirty heartbeats later and only then did I
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loosen my grip. Diabolist was grimacing.
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``That,'' she said, ``was exceedingly unpleasant. And I barely had time
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to bid my farewells.''
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``Do it again,'' Indrani grinned.
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I ignored her.
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``Would Sentinels obey a flesh simulacrum the Empress occasionally takes
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over?'' I asked.
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Akua's brow rose.
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``If instructed to, certainly,'' she said. ``Authority over them can be
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even granted by certain court titles, it is not held sorely by the
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Tyrant.''
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``Not a tie breaker, then,'' I told Indrani.
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``Was that the sum total of your inquiry?'' Diabolist asked, sounding a
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little miffed. ``I \emph{was} having a conversation of some import.''
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``Tell me about it,'' I invited, repressing a grin.
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Occasionally yanking Akua's chain had lost none of the satisfaction even
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after the novelty faded.
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``We will be expected to meet with the Dead King two days from now, at
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twilight,'' Akua said. ``Excuses can be stretched no further.''
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I drummed my fingers against the table as Archer cracked open the bottle
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from -- Atalante, was it? Strange, I remembered reading somewhere they
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were the religious ones in the League. The House of Light tended to
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frown on drinking to excess. The Callowan one, anyway, for all I knew it
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was different down there.
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``So that's our window,'' I said. ``Two days. Hopefully Thief has more
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to add, because we're low on information at the moment and I don't
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relish the thought of attempting an assassination half blind in
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\emph{Keter} of all places.''
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Whether or not Vivienne had anything to say remained a mystery for
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several hours after that. Hakram returned before too long, having
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exhausted the few points I'd sent him to seek clarification on with the
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Hosts to keep up the pretence of ongoing debate on our part. I went for
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a walk after that, in part to clear my mind but mostly so I get away
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from those fucking wards. I knew why we'd had Masego put it up, but it
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didn't make staying under them any more pleasant. I decided to get
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something useful done while I was out and about, so I moved towards the
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highest circles of the Silent Palace to get a look at the terrain
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between us and this Threefold Reflection the Empress allegedly resided
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in. The layout of this place was all interlocked circles so getting
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oriented was easy, but I'd failed to grasp the varying heights. The
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circle furthest out was one of the lowest, the rooftop almost a terrace.
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From the flat black marble I could get a good look at the broad open
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space that separated the palaces from the Hall of the Dead, but little
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else. There were, I noted, patrols now. There'd been a few of those
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before that I remembered, but nowhere as large or frequent. Was Neshamah
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tightening his watch? \emph{You told me Malicia was here and that she
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was at odds with me}, I thought. \emph{Considering that little talk we
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had the day before about how betrayal is a passing thing, that was as
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good as an invitation to kill her.}
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Evidently, that didn't mean he would make it easy for me. This was a
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test of sorts, I decided. I doubted that breaching the laws of
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hospitality would rank in even the worst hundred of the sins to the Dead
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King's name, but he'd keep the pretence. He might not actively obstruct
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me, but unless I remained discreet there would be consequences. That
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didn't bode well. The Woe had many talents, but discretion was not
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usually counted among them -- though that was in large part my own
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fault, it had to be said. I could barely make out the edge of the
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Threefold Reflection from the side of the Hall of the Dead, but I'd
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meant to get a good look and this told me less than nothing. Casting a
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look at the grounds below, freshly-scrubbed paving stones, I shrugged
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and leapt. I'd gone without armour for the day, so my knees barely bent
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when I landed. Cloak fluttering around me, I nodded at the approaching
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patrol as they turned to me. Archer had told me of the breeds of dead
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there were to be found in the city, but there were no differences to my
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senses. They all felt like little balls of will working a corpse, and
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though some might feel stronger it was not a certain thing. For one, the
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officers were supposed to be the Binds -- those with souls and real
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intelligence -- but the presence for some of the officer-armoured dead
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were almost entirely faded.
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I'd have to rely on sight to tell them apart, and sight could be
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tricked.
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``Just going for a walk,'' I told them.
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A corpse in a lovely sculpted iron breastplate and conical helmet
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nodded.
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``If you require escort, Great Majesty, it can be provided,'' he
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offered.
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``Won't be necessary,'' I said. ``Though I thank you for the courtesy.''
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They resumed their patrol without a word, offering polite nods when they
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passed me by. How long had that one been dead, I wondered? I could be
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centuries. I'd glimpsed flesh beneath the helm, but that meant nothing.
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Necromancy could preserve that near indefinitely. Strolling as casually
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as a girl could with a sword at her hip and a cloak embroidered with the
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banners of her defeated foes could -- not all that casually, I felt safe
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in assuming -- I passed by the palace separating mine from the Threefold
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Reflection. It was the largest of those I'd seen, and the Silent Palace
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dwarfed the one in Laure. The Garden of Crowns, Athal had called it.
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Wasn't seeing a lot of those, but the garden part seemed accurate.
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Instead of a single massive construction, this one was a display of
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smaller pavilions lost in a beautiful sprawl of stone and greenery. The
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beauty was somewhat spoiled by the fact that the trees and grass seemed
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to sprout directly from granite, but that might just have been me. It
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was empty, or so I thought. Then I caught sight of a silhouette seated
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under a shaded living oak arbour, looking down at a crystal-clear pond.
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Man, not a woman. Creation had not seen fit to have me run into Malicia,
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then. Torn between moving on towards the Threefold Reflection and having
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a closer look at this oddity, I eventually went for the oddity. The
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palace wasn't going anywhere.
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I tread softly on the pebble paths that winded through the greenery,
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keeping an eye on the stranger. Too pale to be Soninke or Taghreb.
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Either an outside acquisition by the Empress, or entirely unrelated to
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her. I confirmed the second thought when I came close enough my
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otherworldly senses picked up on what lied within the man: power. Not a
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Name, no. That kind of power had a peculiar taste to it, life and weight
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and something like inevitability. What I felt from him was cousin to
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that, or perhaps just the remains of it. Like words engraved in stone
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left unreadable by time and tide you could still barely make out some
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letters from. \emph{Revenant}, I thought. Indrani had told me they kept
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a shade of what they'd once been after their raising. The dead man did
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not react even when I'd come well within earshot for a mortal, staring
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silently into the pond. I could make out shapes in the water, fish and
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water lilies. The way light caught on them allowed me to realize they
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were not living things but sculpted and painted stone. I put aside the
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mild discomfort I felt at the sight and studied the man closer. Late
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forties, or so he'd been before his death. A crown of white hair came in
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sparse tufts, and the beginnings of beard could be seen on his jaw. His
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clothes were rich drapery, though the colour had faded with the
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centuries, and there was a sword on his lap. None of this mattered half
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as much as the brooch on his chest: a tasteful little twist of silver
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with two golden ornaments on it.
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Bells.
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``There is no need to stand there, child,'' the Revenant said. ``It is
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not my pond, nor my ruinous light that shines down upon it.''
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I swallowed.
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``You're a Fairfax,'' I blurted out, and immediately cringed.
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Catherine Silvertongue struck again. The Revenant turned to study me,
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pale brown eyes surprised.
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``King Edward of Callow,'' he said. ``And you are Deoraithe. A daughter
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of House Iarsmai?''
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It had to be an Edward, didn't it? Callow had those like the Principate
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had its never-ending gaggle of First Prince Louis -- too many to know by
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rote save for the numbers at the end. Suddenly I was glad I hadn't worn
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a crown. It would have felt tasteless in front of a Fairfax of the old
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blood. When he'd spoken that title it had been with that muted ripple of
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power, the one that said it hadn't merely been a title for him.
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``Just a foundling,'' I replied, shaking my head.
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``Named, then,'' he sagely said, and with a courtly gesture invited me
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to sit.
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I settled into the stone seat by his own, tongue-tied.
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``Would that be Edward the Fifth?'' I said, desperately trying to
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remember which of those had gotten themselves killed while crusading.
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``The Seventh,'' the king chided. ``You will know my daughter Mary, at
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least. She was but three when I was claimed, she must be the
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longest-reigning monarch Callow has ever seen.''
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Oh \emph{shit}. He was talking about Mary the Songbird. That entire
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reign had been a mess: the Marquess of Vale had fought a short but
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bloody civil war to seize the regency and refused to give it up even
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after she came of age. He'd kept her imprisoned in the Songbird's Cage
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until one of her cousins rebelled and overthrew him. She didn't survive
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the assault on Laure, smothered with a pillow by her captor before the
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palace could be breached. There were at least half a dozen songs and
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plays about the tragedy. Her cousin took the crown, after, and all House
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Lerness of Vale hung save for the children.
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``I have heard of her,'' I diplomatically said. ``I'm sorry to tell you
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that House Fairfax is gone. As far as I know, the last member of it died
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during a Praesi invasion over twenty years ago.''
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The man chuckled.
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``It was dead long before that, girl,'' he said. ``I share not a drop of
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blood with the famous Eleonor. My forbear merely kept the name to
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justify her rule after her husband had the poor taste of dying before
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getting her with child.''
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I blinked. Yolanda the Wicked, that. Scholars centuries later still
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debated or not whether she'd been a villain or just \emph{extremely}
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unpopular. Some argued she'd been demonized because of her Proceran
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origins and that she'd had lawful claim to rule, even though her
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children did not. The other side tended to point out she'd had the rest
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of House Fairfax murdered to ensure said children did in fact succeed
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her. This felt like a history lesson, until I remembered I was sitting
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next to breathing history. Well, moving anyway.
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``Catherine Foundling,'' I introduced myself, since \emph{girl} and
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\emph{child} were starting to get on my nerves.
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``I would welcome you to these grounds, Catherine Foundling, but there
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is no welcome to be had in this earthly pit of devils,'' King Edward
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said.
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I nodded my thanks, for lack of a better answer.
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``If I may ask, Your Majesty,'' I said. ``You seem\ldots{}''
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``Lucid?'' the dead man smile. ``The Abomination's little jest. Most of
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my fellows are of more taciturn bent. You see, when he came for me I
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told him that even in the face of eternity I would spit on him and all
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his works.''
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My fingers clenched. Evidently, Neshamah had decided to test the truth
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of that.
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``Do not look so appalled,'' the king gently said. ``I will yet have the
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last laugh over that dark creature, even if I must wait until the Last
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Dusk for it. Though I am bound to serve in this place it is only a
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passing thing.''
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``So you're the guardian of this,'' I probed, hand moving to vaguely
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encompass our surroundings.
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``In a manner of speaking,'' King Edward said. ``This is the Garden of
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Crowns, young Foundling. None serve here who were not royalty while they
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drew breath. The power once bestowed on me by Above has merely earned
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the role of the sword guarding this palace.''
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My eyes narrowed.
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``So there's a former Named guarding all five palaces,'' I said.
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``Indeed,'' he agreed. ``Though the Abomination changes the watchers at
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a whim. The Bloody Sword once kept vigil over the that unpleasant
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pyramid beyond the Garden, but has since been replaced. Other than I,
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the only one who has remained for more than a century is the Thief of
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Stars.''
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``Oh?'' I said, blood running cold. ``And where does he guard?''
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``She,'' he corrected. ``The Silent Palace. It amused the Abomination to
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bind her there, as she attempted to rob it whilst living.''
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So we'd had a heroine with a talent for discretion breathing down our
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neck the entire time without a single one of us noticing. Lovely. This
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assassination plot was already getting off to a great start.
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``You display great curiosity as to the nature of this pit,'' King
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Edward said calmly. ``I will not inquire as to your purpose, as I would
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be bound to then speak it. But you are born of Callow, are you not?''
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``I am,'' I warily agreed.
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``It has been a very long time,'' he said quietly, ``since I have spoken
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to one of my people. And I have worried, over the years. We warred with
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the Principate mere decades before they came, \emph{beggars at my door},
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asking for our swords to march north for their sake. Yet I know the
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gratitude of princes is an ephemeral thing. And to the east, the Enemy
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ever lurks. You spoke of an invasion?''
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The snarl in his voice when he spoke of Procer had a warm feeling in my
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belly, I wouldn't deny it. I'd run out of patience with them as well, it
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was reassuring to know I was in good company there. Unfortunately, I had
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few good tales to tell him.
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``We call it the Conquest,'' I said. ``They won at the Fields of Streges
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and swept over the Callow. Until recently we were under occupation.''
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``That patch of grass has been watered by more armies than rainstorms,''
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King Edward ruefully said. ``It does not matter. The beast swells fat
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with the meat of us but it ever chokes on our bones. There will be
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another Eleonor, sooner or later.''
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I didn't know how to tell him that none had come. That if she'd ever
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been born, the closest thing I had to a father had cut her throat before
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her name could be known. That I might the closest thing to her we had,
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|
and wasn't that a horrifying thought?
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``We're under siege,'' I said. ``The Tenth Crusade marches right through
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us and attempts at peace have failed. The princes of Procer wants to
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carve us up and I am unsure how far up that desire runs.''
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``Procerans are always hungry,'' King Edwards said darkly. ``And when
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that hunger leads them to the brink, they weep for others to pay the
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dues in their stead. Hold the Vales, young Foundling. And watch the
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Blessed Isle for a Wasteland knife.''
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I bleakly laughed. How could I tell him that the ruling Dread Empress
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was out for my blood, trying to crush me underfoot, and that she was
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\emph{still} the closest thing I had to an ally at the moment? The dead
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man idly brushed his fingers against his brooch, then spoke up
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hesitatingly.
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``It is unseemly to ask, I know,'' he said. ``Yet, my daughter\ldots{}''
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I thought of pale green eyes, and the kindest lie I'd ever been told.
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That it wouldn't get easier.
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``She is still,'' I said with a smile, ``spoken of in song.''
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The naked relief on his face only made it worse.
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``She would have loved that,'' he said with a quirk of the lips. ``She
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had a lovely singing voice, my Mary. And she was good, even as a child.
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\emph{Kind}. That is a rare thing in a ruler. There is a place for
|
|
harshness, but kindness is the mother of prosperity.''
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I nodded slowly. I couldn't stand to stay here any longer, next to the
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man I'd lied to and his long-dead memories, so slowly I rose to my feet.
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``It was a pleasure to meet you, Your Majesty,'' I said, bowing.
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``Don't,'' he said. ``I am not a fool, young Catherine.''
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|
He smiled, like we shared a secret.
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|
``The first Albans were seneschals of Laure long before they were
|
|
kings,'' he told me. ``And Eleonor, for all her virtues, was born a mere
|
|
knightess. There is no shame in one's birth. We are what we bring into
|
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this world, not what brought us into it.''
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|
He rose as well, and touched my wrist.
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|
``Stand tall, Queen Catherine,'' King Edward the Seventh told me.
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|
``Stand proud. We have been broken before, humbled and rent asunder. We
|
|
have crawled through the blood of our kin and suffered the yoke of
|
|
tyrants. It does not matter. We do not yield, we do not \emph{bend} even
|
|
when the sky comes tumbling down on our heads. Keep your grudges close,
|
|
child, and never forget them. We are Callowans, and for every slight
|
|
there is a price.''
|
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|
\emph{Ours will be long}, the song went, \emph{and paid twice}.
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|
Woe on us all, but if the Gods demanded my home be ashes then the Gods
|
|
would burn.
|