442 lines
22 KiB
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442 lines
22 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-dreadful}{%
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\section{Interlude: Dreadful}\label{interlude-dreadful}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``And so Sinistra said: `What we cannot grow we will take by
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dread, and damnation on all who deny this.'\,''}
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-- Extract from the Scroll of Misfortunes, thirteenth of the Secret
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Histories of Praes
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\end{quote}
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The Windless Salon was an indulgence.
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Not hers, originally, but that of Dread Emperor Sorcerous. The infamous
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warlock-emperor had been fond of ambitious experiments demonstrating the
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superiority of Praesi sorcery over all others. His in particular, and
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he'd never been shy about denting the treasury for his latest fancy. The
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Salon was one of his earlier projects: an entire floor of the Tower,
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well above the clouds, made into a single room. The stones of the walls
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and ceiling were enchanted to make it seem as if it were entirely
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outdoors, revealing a staggeringly beautiful view in every direction.
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Nefarious had despised it, for he'd spent the better part of a decade
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trying to puzzle out its secrets with only failures to show for it. In
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truth, few save for Sorcerous himself had ever used the Windless Salon.
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Alaya and her predecessors misliked allowing the lords and ladies of
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Praes access this far up the Tower, and there was no lack of other
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wonders within the walls to strike a particular tone when receiving
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guests. The Empress had, instead, turned Sorcerous' costly vanity into
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an office of sorts.
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The seats and sofas had been removed, saved for her own luxurious
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cushioned armchair, and the ornate banquet tables had been replaced by
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two bureaus and a writing desk. Access here was restricted to those
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she'd given token to, and with good reason. The transparent walls of the
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Windless Salon had been adorned with a maze of secrets and faces.
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Painted mosaics representing every Praesi noble of import hung over
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apparent air, tiles written over in chalk noting their latest schemes
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and objectives and alliances. Lines had been drawn to connect
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conspirators and foes, weaving a tapestry of treacheries and interests
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that spanned the whole of her empire. It was not all exact, of course.
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Believing this to be untouchable sanctum merely because she had the
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minds of everyone with access searched at random intervals would have
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been arrogance. The tiles were incomplete, sometimes incorrect
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information added to fool a would-be spy. The only complete and truthful
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version was in Alaya's own mind.
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Years of practice meant she had only to close her eyes to see the whole
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of it, but there was something oddly soothing about seeing the
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Wasteland's plotting laid bare against the backdrop of Ater's sky. In
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the last few years, a fresh section had been birthed. A small cluster of
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names under a chalk-drawn crown. Such a small representation for a
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handful of people who'd shaken the foundations of Calernia. A half-full
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cup of wine in hand, Dread Empress Malicia allowed her gaze to linger on
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the foremost individuals of the Kingdom of Callow. Some names were
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followed by only sparse writing. Hakram of the Howling Wolves, the
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Adjutant, remained opaque in intent and motivation despite her best
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efforts. It was tempting to study the Woe through the lens of what she
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knew the Calamities to be, but it would be an overly simplistic view.
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Oh, most of them had ties to the old guard: Masego was Wekesa's own son,
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the Archer had been the favourite pupil of that rabid dog in Refuge and
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Catherine had been the only apprentice Amadeus ever took. The Adjutant
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himself was often dismissed as Captain's legacy in green, which had
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always amused Malicia greatly.
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The boy had more in common with Scribe than he'd ever had with
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still-mourned Sabah, and even that was overly simplified. His Name, as
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far as she could tell, had been shaped since inception to serve as
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shield and empowerment to Catherine Foundling's own role. The Woe were
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not their predecessors, and that was a shame: Alaya had spent decades
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learning how best to work with and around the Calamities. Dealing with a
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younger and cruder version of them would have been mercifully easy. No,
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instead she'd been forced to learn to navigate an entirely different
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river of desires and drives. Changeable things, these, especially in
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individuals so young. The girl who was now called the Black Queen had
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little in common with the child who'd chased Black's shadow as his
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Squire. Still, she'd begun to understand the lay of them. Where pressure
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could be applied for the correct effect. Vivienne Dartwick was the
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weakest link. Archer had been the obvious guess, but much like Hye the
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girl was simply too apathetic to be influenced. It was hard to leverage
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someone who cared about nothing save a few earthly pleasures that
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essentially any major city on the surface of Calernia could provide.
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Thief, however? She was a Callowan nationalist, the kind that kingdom
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bred by the thousands. That was an old foe to Praesi, one made almost
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predictable -- though no less dangerous for it. People like Vivienne
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Dartwick had broken Wasteland invasions for a millennium and a half with
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only two major failures to show for their toil. Patriotism was a set of
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blinders, Malicia would not speak otherwise, but however narrow the
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perspective it had proven exceedingly skilled at frustrating Praesi
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efforts. Fortunately, central tenets of it ran contrary to the kind of
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nation Catherine was trying to build. The Black Queen had failed to
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realize, she often thought, how deeply she'd taken after Praesi culture.
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Callowans tended to think of their own ethnic group and their nation at
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the same thing, unlike Praesi. The Dread Empire had, since the
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Declaration, been made up of disparate and often opposed forces. Guiding
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the refugees from the sack of Nok into Callowan territory had been
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killing two birds with one stone, in that light.
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It eased the pressure of Malicia's own granaries by displacing
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individuals who would have turned to banditry or rioting if left unfed
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while simultaneously forcing onto Callow a problem that could not be
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solved with a sword. Well, she conceded, that was untrue. If Thief and
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Adjutant had sent in soldiers to slaughter every refugee crossing into
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the kingdom's territory the flow would have abruptly stopped and there
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was precious little the Empress could have done about it without
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loosening her leash on the High Lords -- which would be ill-advised, at
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this juncture. On the other hand, if the Woe were truly that ruthless
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this would be an entirely different situation. As things stood, Vivienne
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Dartwick must be chewing on the fundamental conflict between doing
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something good, namely not slaughtering desperate peasants, and seeing
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the immediate costs that good action imposed on her countrymen. It would
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fester, Alaya thought. In her and in the farmers displaced at
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Catherine's orders. The Black Queen might think of her land as more than
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the territory of tribes-made-kingdom, but few in even her closest circle
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shared that view.
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The seed had been sown and conflict would grow from it. Enough, Alaya
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had judged, that it would weaken the fabric of the kingdom without
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collapsing it. At some point a compromise would be forged that pleased
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no one, slowly dragging back Catherine Foundling to the position Malicia
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preferred her in: that of an unpopular but unopposed necessary evil. If
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that strife could be carried to the heart of the Woe, so much the
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better. That band of children had already proved they could unmake the
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designs of empires, if allowed to run rampant. It was a private delight
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of the Empress that the results of her offensive must have Cordelia
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Hasenbach a throbbing ulcer.
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``And yet,'' Dread Empress Malicia said, eyeing the walls that were not
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there.
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She sipped at her wine. Beneath Catherine Foundling's own face, a blank
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space had been made. It was not that the girl's designs were unknown:
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Malicia was thoroughly well-informed of what was unfolding in the
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kingdom, despite Amadeus' best efforts. But there was a question, she
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thought, that must weigh heavy on the mind of every ruler on this
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continent.
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Where the Hells was the Black Queen?
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Callow might be somewhat stable, but it was one bad winter away from
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effective collapse. If Alaya ordered most royal granaries torched,
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starvation would afflict half the realm after the snows came. And yet,
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fresh off her failure in Keter, Catherine had disappeared into thin air.
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The Adjutant and the Thief had been sent back to Laure to settle
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affairs, but neither had the legitimacy to truly keep things under
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control. Was it mere negligence? Alaya was self-aware enough to
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acknowledge she disliked the girl on a personal level, and so was
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inclined to match perceived mistakes with personality flaws. Yet the
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Black Queen had proved surprisingly adept at the diplomatic game.
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Blackmailing the northern crusaders into leaving under treaty instead of
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risking extermination had been inspired, as had been the request to join
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the Grand Alliance. Had the First Prince's grasp on Procer been stronger
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when the offer was made, Hasenbach might actually have gone for it. Not
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without losing a few feathers in the process, but the First Prince had
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already proved capable of cold pragmatism when the situation demanded
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it.
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It wouldn't have mattered, in the end. The Dead King would have upended
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the board regardless. Yet the skill was there, however raw, and it meant
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the girl had \emph{learned}. If she was capable of shaping a military
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campaign so it would lead to the kind of peace she desired, she should
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be able to recognize Callow without her was a house of cards. Something
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had forced her to seek another path, and the only true contender for
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that was what had taken place in Keter. The Black Queen was, at heart,
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still a soldier. In times of trouble, she would reach out for military
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force. It was the solution she was best versed in. Her options, however,
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would be few. The League would refuse out of hand, as the Hierarch was
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the mad puppet of the Tyrant of Helike -- who'd sent her a lovely letter
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professing eternal friendship but was a man made from a mould rather
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familiar to Praesi. The Everdark was a mess of primitive warring tribes,
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effectively impossible to mobilize quickly and highly unpalatable allies
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regardless, which left only two real options: the Kingdom Under and the
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fae. Malicia had been made aware that the dwarves were in yet another
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expansion phase, meaning they would refuse to get involved with surface
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affairs.
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That left the sole remaining Court of Arcadia, to which the Black Queen
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already had ties.
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There was a very real chance, Alaya admitted to herself, that within the
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next six months a horde of fae would come pouring out of gates after
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Catherine struck bargain with them. It was madness, of course. Giving
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their kind stronger foothold on Creation was a blunder all living souls
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would pay for. But fighting fire with fire was Catherine's signature,
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and the Dead King's entrance in the melee might very well have been
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enough to quiet her doubts. Of all the nations currently involved in the
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Tenth Crusade it was the Empire that would find it easiest to defend
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against such an incursion, given its heavily warded cities and high
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number of skilled mages, but Praes was already under assault by the
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Ashurans. Deep raids into the Wasteland that left the forces of the High
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Lords untouched could become a catastrophe, and there was no doubt the
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Black Queen's advisors were learned enough of Praesi affairs to know
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this even if she herself might not be fully aware. Thalassina, then, had
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become the crucible on which her reign would be decided. If Ashur could
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be removed from the equation, an attack on the Empire became a very
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different affair. Wekesa and his son's preparations were of the highest
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import.
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It might be necessary to arrange a failure to protect Hierophant from
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vengeful nobles after it took place, even if the consequences would be
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dire. She'd mull on it. She was fond of the young man, personally, and
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had found him a breath of fresh air on the few occasions they'd met. He
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was also, unfortunately, one of the most dangerous war assets of the
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Kingdom of Callow. A compromise might be possible through Warlock, she
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thought, who'd certainly prefer his only son be imprisoned for a few
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years rather than involved in a brutal knife-fight between the Woe and
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the Empire where death was a real possibility. Wekesa had made it clear
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he was willing to break a few pots if it meant return to normality would
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follow. Like her, he knew that disposing of contentious elements would
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lead to recriminations in the short-term and reconciliation after the
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storm had passed. It would be the ugliest disagreement they'd had, and
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one that would taint their relationship for decades, but Alaya was
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nothing if not patient.
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There was no knock on the door. Anyone requiring such announcement would
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have died to the wards in the hallway. The sound of the steps, though,
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could allow Malicia to discern the identity of her visitor. The four
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servants allowed access here had different strides, as did the sole
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other person with a token.
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``Ime,'' the Empress said, greeting her guest without turning. ``An
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unexpected pleasure.''
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He spymistress observed the niceties, coming before her to kneel before
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rising. Not quite as fluidly as she used to, Alaya noticed with grief
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that half-surprised her. Ime had grown old, though her body's appearance
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did not betray it. Yet rituals could only accomplish so much, and
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eventually a cloth stretched too far would snap. It might be twenty
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years yet before that happened, but it was as inevitable as the sun
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rising.
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``My Empress,'' Ime said.
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She remained standing. There was no other seat here, entirely by design.
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None save her should be encouraged to linger.
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``I take it there has been a fresh report from the Eyes,'' Malicia said,
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brow quirking.
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Her little retreats into the Windless Salon were, while not exactly
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forbidden from interruption, not to be lightly trespassed on.
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``Our agents in the Principate managed to get urgent news through the
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scrying relays,'' the spymistress said, then hesitated. ``Lord Black's
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legions are in full retreat through lands they've already pillaged. The
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Dominion's armies are in pursuit.''
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Alaya hid her surprise. She'd believed she'd grasped Maddie's intent
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when she'd seen what principalities he was targeting -- namely, the
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loudest opposition to Hasenbach in the Highest Assembly. But he should
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have been heading south or across the lakes, not doubling back. It was
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the hesitation that gave it away.
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``Ime,'' Alaya said quietly. ``Tell me.''
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``We're not sure what happened,'' the spymistress admitted. ``But
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there's a town full of corpses where he allegedly stole the Proceran
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fleet and there's been orders out of Salia to reclaim the barges.''
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Her mouth, she found, had gone dry.
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``He won't have stolen a fleet alone,'' Alaya said. ``The legionaries
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with him?''
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``The orders from Salia did not mention opposition,'' Ime grimaced.
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Her stomach clenched.
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``I don't believe he's dead, Malicia,'' her spymistress softly said. ``I
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know it's not much, but Hasenbach has sent people to speak with the
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shopkeepers on the central avenue of Salia.''
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Alaya's lips tightened. Her teeth clenched to tightly it felt like they
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would shatter.
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``A parade for the heroes,'' she forced out. ``Celebrating his death.''
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``A triumph,'' Ime countered. ``As the Miezans once held. Displaying a
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foe taken prisoner. He would make for a \emph{very} useful hostage. He
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has influence with every single force on their eastern front.''
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``Do not,'' Malicia quietly said, ``coddle me.''
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``This is my professional opinion,'' her spymistress assured her. ``They
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have to know that outright killing him would get the Ranger to come out
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swinging.''
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She grit her teeth. Unpleasant as it was to her, it was not untrue. The
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question was if they'd \emph{care}, given the number of heroes on the
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field. Hye was dangerous but she was not invincible and her draw with
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the Queen of Summer had caused her heavy wounds she'd yet to recuperate
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from.
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``Mobilize the Eyes in strength,'' Alaya said. ``I want answers.''
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Ime's lips thinned.
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``My Empress, moving so openly would-''
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``I don't care if we have to out every agent in that misbegotten fucking
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hole they call a country,'' Alaya hissed. ``\emph{Find out if he's
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alive.}''
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Ime nodded slowly and the Empress forced her hands into her lap, where
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her fingers could not be seen to tremble.
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``And pass this along to Wekesa,'' she added tiredly.
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Ime hesitated once more. Alaya's fury spiked, though she mastered it.
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``He might leave Thalassina,'' she said.
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``If Maddie's\ldots{}'' she began, then faltered. ``Warlock would know.
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They have arrangements. And he'd know I kept it from him. Besides,
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whether it is revenge or rescue he will not act until Scribe contacts
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him. Keep an eye on that, she may know something we don't.''
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``I will,'' Ime said.
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A heartbeat passed.
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``And yet here you stand,'' Malicia said.
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``We must prepare,'' Ime said, ``for all eventualities. If he is truly
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dead, the balance with Callow has shifted. If he has been captured,
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perhaps some matters should be considered with a fresh eye.''
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\emph{Calm}, she thought. \emph{A pond without a single ripple, so they
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only ever see their own reflection.}
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``The Callowan situation has changed already, simply with what you've
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told me,'' Malicia said. ``Get in touch with our envoy in Laure. The
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full terms of my pact with Keter are to be revealed.''
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``The initial plan,'' her spymistress carefully said, ``was to wait
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until the Black Queen's return.''
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``It also relied on him being a restraining influence against the notion
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of war on the Empire,'' Malicia said. ``That can no longer be counted
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on. We need a new guarantee that she won't gate in and burn a few miles
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of farmland to the ground every time she's provoked.''
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Ime nodded.
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``I know you might be reluctant to explore the full spread of options,
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if he has been captured,'' she said. ``But it is my duty to speak.''
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``Then do so,'' Malicia flatly said.
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``If he's jailed in Salia, it might be best to simply leave him there,''
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Ime said. ``Temporarily, at least. It would be an opportunity to bring
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his legions back into the fold, and he can be freed after the situation
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in the Wasteland is made less volatile.''
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Malicia forced herself to consider it with cold eyes. While the legions
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who'd followed Amadeus to the borders and turned back the invasion at
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the Vales were not exactly in rebellion, it was undeniable they'd acted
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against her intent. She'd long known that if there ever came a day when
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call was made on the loyalties of the old guard, it would not be her
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most of them chose. The urge had always been there to dismiss the issue
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as a mere theoretical, but a Dread Empress of Praes could not afford
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that kind of hopeful thinking. She'd had measures in place for decades,
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telling herself it would no matter if she never used them. She still had
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not, and would not unless she had no other choice. Yet much could be
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accomplished by the more mundane leverage was speaking of -- presented
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with a \emph{fait accompli} after his release, Black would likely be
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forced to abandoned his most recent designs. Dangerous as he could be,
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without an army he was just a man.
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``No,'' Alaya said.
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``My Empress-''
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``I will not repeat myself,'' she said. ``The risks are too high he'll
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be executed if he's allowed to remain in their grasp for long. He is to
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be freed at first opportunity.''
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``You are not thinking about this clearly, Malicia,'' Ime softly said.
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``I know you feel like you owe him. I do as well. But there comes a time
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when debts have to be weighed. A life spared -- or saved -- is not a
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life owed.''
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The laughter that ripped out of her throat was not kind.
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``Is that what you think this is?'' Alaya mockingly said. ``He spared
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your life after you helped butcher his kin with the Heir's, and because
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he withheld the blade you \emph{understand} us.''
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The spymistress grew stiff in her stance, but did not disagree.
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``I wish this were about something as petty as debt,'' Alaya murmured,
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knowing it a lie. ``How easy that would be.''
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How could she tell this familiar stranger that they had been one for so
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long some days she could hardly tell where she began and he ended? Maybe
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debt could have been the sum of them, if after the civil war he had
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treated her a figurehead -- as was well within his power. If he'd proved
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himself yet another cage, this one gentler than the last but no less a
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prison for it. But he'd understood, that it was not comfort or a furious
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avenger she craved. Kindness, consolation, all the sweets words their
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tongue could offer. Those things she could have measured and paid back
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in full. But instead she'd been offered something priceless: a world of
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endless paths, and someone to walk them with her. \emph{Debt}? She might
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as well try to weigh the worth the breath in her lungs, the blood in her
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veins. She was not Catherine Foundling, to carve out pieces of her own
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soul at a whim.
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``I have you orders, Lady Ime,'' Malicia spoke into the silence that
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followed. ``See to them.''
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Her spymistress was not so gauche as to show even the slightest hint of
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disapproval after being dismissed, though there was no doubt it was
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there. It did not matter. She had been taught better than to overreach.
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``Your Most Dreadful Majesty,'' Ime said, bowing low.
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Her steps whispered out of the room, leaving the Dread Empress of Praes
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alone with her thoughts. Her carefully woven surroundings seemed mockery
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now, a reminder that no matter how orderly she made her world chaos
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would always crawl in through the cracks.
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``I warned you,'' Alaya spoke into the empty salon. ``Gods, I
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\emph{warned} you. That it was not sustainable, that one day you would
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make a mistake and that'd be all it took.''
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And yet she had not acted on it. Because he'd been so sure, because it
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would have killed the heart of him to be made to sit at her feet. Caged.
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And he'd won, hadn't he? Again and again and again. As so she'd not
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spoken the words. She should have. Better to wound him than to sit on
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the other side of the continent, wondering if his corpse was floating
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face down in some foreign lake. \emph{Mistake}, she thought. It was too
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bitter a word to be called rueful.
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``We will survive,'' said Dread Empress Malicia, First of Her Name.
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``You and me and the others. This empire we raised. We will survive
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this, as we have all other dooms.''
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But if Cordelia Hasenbach and her pack of pale-clad killers had done it?
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Oh, she was not seventeen anymore. She was not bleeding from the mouth,
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incapable of rising as the Sentinels nailed her father to the floor.
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If they'd killed him, Alaya would give him an empire for a pyre.
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