436 lines
20 KiB
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436 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-23-readjustment}{%
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\chapter{Readjustment}\label{chapter-23-readjustment}}
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\epigraph{``The price of dominion is the halving of one's grasp, for a ruler
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may hold a crown or hand but never both.''}{Julienne Merovins, tenth First Princess of Procer}
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I'd dismounted, eventually, mainly because my leg was starting to twinge
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again. A chair would be easier on it, though it was a great deal harder
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for me to glare down at people without a horse under me. My anger had
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cooled some after the initial remonstration, but it was far from gone --
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part of me was seething, and though I knew only part of the blame lay
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with the two women seated across from me they were not exempt from being
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called to account. Not when, to my knowledge, there was not a single
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part of this ill-considered western campaign that wasn't a spectacular
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disaster in some way.
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``For my defeats I offer no excuse,'' Marshal Juniper said, tone rough.
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This was the most cowed I'd ever seen her act, and with damned good
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reason. I trusted the supreme commander of my armies, even now. I did
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trust her \emph{judgement} less than I would have a year ago, however.
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The thing was, what she had done -- what Hakram and Vivienne had done
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with her -- it couldn't simply be settled with a calm word and a
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reminder to be careful. Not when my delaying my return from the Everdark
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for as little as a month might have seen the Army of Callow either
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slaughtered or ended as a fighting force. The Third lost, as it likely
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would have been without my intervention, meant the Fourth was alone and
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blind to the east. Add onto this that they'd been getting hammered by
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the mere vanguard of the Grand Alliance host before I arrived today? The
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decisions taken by my foremost commander had nearly led to the end of
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the armies she was commanding. For the political aspects of this howling
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mess I would not hold her to account, but the military ones? They were
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very much her purview.
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``I'm not interested in your falling on your sword, Marshal,'' I flatly
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said. ``I've already spoken with Adjutant, so I have an understanding of
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the deployments made and the reasons for them. Splitting the columns was
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risky, but tactically sound. Before that, gating in between the Dominion
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forces was an equally sound manoeuvre. If, once more, \emph{risky}.''
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My voice hardened at the last word, and though she did not flinch she
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did stiffen. In all our years together, I'd never once before chewed out
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the Hellhound like this. We'd had disagreements, the most animated of
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them over Bonfire and later the conduct of the campaign in northern
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Callow, but they'd been only that. Disagreements. For the most part I'd
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allowed her the run of the Fifteenth and later the Army of Callow,
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usually only intervening for reasons that weren't strictly military in
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nature. For all the oaths and the fact that I wore the crown, our
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relationship had been as close to one of equals as circumstances
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allowed. Right now, though? This was not Catherine talking to Juniper.
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This was the Black Queen speaking to the Marshal of Callow, and I
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reasons to be furious.
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``A defeat, or several, is not something that needs excusing,'' I said.
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``To expect a flawless record would be absurd, especially given the
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calibre of our opposition. But I am currently looking at a series of
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tactically solid steps that led towards the greatest strategic disaster
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of our tenure together, and that needs an explanation.''
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I tapped my fingers against the table.
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``Why is the Army of Callow fighting in Iserre, Marshal?'' I asked.
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``Your Majesty-''
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Vivienne's interruption once again had my temper flaring. I glanced at
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her, still finding the sight of her milkmaid's braid surprising, and
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arched an eyebrow. The visible disconnect between the woman I'd left
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behind and the one I was looking at made it easier to rein in my
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irritation, though only by so much.
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``Do you speak for Marshal Juniper now, Vivienne?'' I calmly asked.
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Her lips thinned.
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``This campaign was not decided by her alone,'' she said. ``I also bear
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a responsibility.''
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``You are not Marshal of Callow,'' I said, calling on my thinning
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reserves of patience. ``A graduate of the War College, a trained
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strategist or indeed a military officer at all. For the diplomatic
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aspects of this debacle, the main responsibility lies with you and
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Hakram. I am well aware of that. This is not the diplomatic aspect.''
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My eyes flicked back to Juniper.
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``Well?'' I said. ``\emph{Should} Vivienne be a part of this
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conversation, Marshal?''
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``No, Warlord,'' Juniper replied, chin rising. ``She should not.''
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I dipped my head in approval. At the very least she was owning the
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fuckup instead of trying to spread around the responsibility, though
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whether that was out of persisting dislike for Vivienne or a personal
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sense of honour I couldn't be sure. My silence was taken as the
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invitation to speak that it was.
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``It was necessary to evacuate the Legions of Terror,'' Juniper said.
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I nodded in acknowledgement.
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``They fought at the Vales,'' I said. ``A debt was owed. How did this
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translate to your finding sense in deploying forty thousand legionaries
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through magical means of ingress and egress in the single most
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Name-infested region of this continent?''
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``I did not believe any force below twenty thousand would prove a
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sufficient deterrent,'' the orc said. ``I can't speak to the politics
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involved, but the size of the force was meant to ensure no battle would
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actually take place even if heroes spurred armies to move in time.''
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``Then why forty and not twenty?'' I said, frowning.
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``Because there was no telling when you would return,'' Juniper
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admitted. ``And that meant if the northern Principate broke, we might
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have to occupy the Principality of Arans to prevent the Dead King from
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holding one side of the northern passage into Callow.''
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The Stairway, I thought. Which should currently be defended by the army
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of Duchess Kegan, but only from the Callowan end of the pass.
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Considering the Principality of Hainaut was all that stood between the
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armies of the dead and Arans, her worry wasn't unfounded.
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``Adjutant didn't mention this,'' I said.
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``The situation was still theoretical,'' the Hellhound said. ``We'd have
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a gap of at least two months between leaving Callow by Arcadia and
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arriving in Iserre, possibly more, which effectively killed our capacity
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to occupy Arans in time if the front in Hainaut broke. Committing twenty
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thousand soldiers -- two divisions -- and the Wild Hunt was splitting
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the forces in a manner that made it impossible to exert our strength
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correctly.''
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I breathed out, forced myself to consider the logic in what she was
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saying.
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``Even if you sent the two remaining divisions north before leaving,
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they'd arrive late and be dependent on Duchess Kegan's army to manage
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occupation of Arans,'' I finally said. ``Which, without me at the helm,
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she might not be inclined to give. On the other hand, having the full
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four divisions with the Hunt meant if the strike proved necessary you
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could march in force immediately and entrust the Deoraithe with the
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supply line from the other side.''
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``That was my reasoning,'' Juniper agreed.
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``And Adjutant was not informed of your theory because?''
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``Because he had nothing to contribute to the planning,'' the Hellhound
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bluntly said. ``And I wanted the plans ready for implementation if
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things went to shit after he and the Lady-Regent tried to make a truce
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with Procer.''
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I let a few heartbeats pass to see if she had anything to add, but she
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did not.
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``General Hune,'' I said without turning. ``Anything to add?''
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``Two months before our departure for Iserre, the general staffs for all
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four divisions were assigned a tactical exercise called Citadel,'' the
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ogre evenly said. ``While no direct mention of Procer or Arans was made,
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it involved rapidly occupying a foreign territory with limited forces.
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Priority was placed on fortifying it against an outside assault even
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while occupation took place.''
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Essentially confirming Juniper hadn't woven this entire Arans thing out
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of thin air, though I'd not been all that inclined to believe that in
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the first place.
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``Noted,'' I said.
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I drummed my fingers against the tabletop, resisting the urge to hum.
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This was still a massive fuckup, I thought, but at least Juniper had
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actual reasons for having brought the Army of Callow this far out. Were
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they sufficient, in my eyes? I wasn't sure, to be honest, and I
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shouldn't be passing judgement on that until I had all the information
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at my disposal instead of a simple debrief. The Hellhound's actions as
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still almost ended the Kingdom of Callow as a military power for at
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least a decade, and she'd proved to be imprudent repeatedly. On the
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other hand, every risk she'd taken was at least calculated and overall
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dictated by what could only be called a desperate fucking times.
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``Marshal Juniper, in your own opinion where exactly was the blunder
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made?'' I finally asked.
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``When I ordered the army to gate in between the two Dominion forces,''
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she replied without missing a beat. ``To be sound, that manoeuvre
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depended on \emph{certain} access to gates when leaving. It was a
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blunder to assume that would be the case.''
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She wasn't changing her stance as to the necessity of fielding the four
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divisions of the army, I noted, which meant the Hellhound still believed
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it'd been the right call given what she'd known at the time. On the
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other hand, she wasn't trying to excuse herself by saying it would have
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been impossible to anticipate the gates would start going wild when they
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did, or that scrying would be made impossible by something still
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unknown.
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``And do you believe Adjutant the Lady-Regent interfered with how you
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would have planned this campaign otherwise?'' I asked.
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She mulled over that, for a moment.
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``No more than you would have, Warlord,'' Juniper said.
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\emph{Fair enough,} I thought.
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``You're not stripped from command,'' I finally sighed. ``As of now,
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General Hune is confirmed as the senior among the generals in the Army
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of Callow.''
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A warning, essentially, that if she blundered this badly again then the
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ogre would be handed the marshal's baton.
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``When the situation in Iserre is resolved,'' I continued, ``a tribunal
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of senior officers will be convened to assess whether or not the
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decisions you took in this campaign warrant charges of incompetence or
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reckless use of authority. Their verdict will decide whether or not you
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are demoted back to general.''
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``Understood,'' the Marshal of Callow rasped.
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``Good,'' I said. ``I'll be perfectly clear: I have no intention of
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being involved with this tribunal beyond ordering it convened. This is
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not \emph{personal}, Juniper. This isn't happening because I am angry
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with an old friend, or appalled by what your decisions almost led to.
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But if the Army of Callow is ever to be more than just my personal
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warband, then its members need to be accountable for what they do.''
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She nodded, but her face was unreadable. I did not know whether or not
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she believed me.
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``None of this can hold until it's been confirmed you're actually
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Catherine Foundling,'' Vivienne said, face resolutely set.
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She hadn't reached for a knife, and idly I wondered if she still carried
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any. Probably. Losing her Name did not mean she'd lost her skills,
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simply that there wasn't quite as much weight behind them.
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``Yes,'' I said, smile turning hard. ``Let's talk about that.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``What the \emph{Hells} were the two of you thinking?'' I hissed out.
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``A pair of lines, fifteen mages? All of this led by General Hune, who
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is well-known to be aloof from me? Did you even pause to consider what
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it looked like?''
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I glanced at the ogre in question, inclining my head to convey no
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offence was meant. She replied with the same, visibly unaffected. It
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was, after all, nothing but the truth.
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``Precautions had to be taken,'' Vivienne said, though she winced.
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``You've agreed on those in the past, Your Majesty.''
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``If I'd actually been a puppet what would have happened?'' I harshly
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asked her. ``I would have splattered them across the ground, accused the
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two of you a fomenting a coup and I'd have your head on pikes within the
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hour. What could \emph{fifteen legion mages} have done, Vivienne? Unless
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you've recruited practitioners capable of High Arcana in the last year,
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little more than scream before they died.''
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``They were chosen for their capacity to check on your identity,''
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Juniper said. ``A ritual-''
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``Could have been done in private, away from the eyes of the troops,'' I
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spoke through gritted teeth. ``If I was willing to cooperate -- and I
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will be, once this fucking conversation is over -- then there was no
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need to play out what looked like an arrest. If I wasn't, if I was an
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impostor or a puppet, exactly what difference would \emph{forty
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soldiers} have made?''
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There was a long moment of silence in the tent.
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``I was aware you had no head or liking for politics when I named you
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Marshal, Juniper,'' I said. ``This, though? You should have grasped this
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without need for explanation. What would have happened, even if I'd been
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taken away without fighting and not reappeared? How many legionaries
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would have believed I was an impostor, after seeing me turn away the
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Proceran horse?''
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I paused, forcing myself to breathe out and calm.
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``We're not eighteen anymore,'' I said. ``There's no one to clean up our
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mistakes for us. You're the highest ranked military officer in the
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kingdom, when you don't consider the ramifications of your orders there
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are \emph{consequence}s.''
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I turned to the other reckless gambler, almost at a loss for words.
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``As for you, Vivienne, do I even need to say anything?'' I tiredly
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said.
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She looked away. That was answer enough.
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``Marshal Juniper, General Hune,'' I sighed. ``You may resume your
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duties. Within the hour the hills to the west will be occupied by the
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Third Army, while the Fourth and fifty thousand drow auxiliaries move to
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the northwest to pressure the Grand Alliance's army.''
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Assuming Hakram had understood me correctly, whoever held command of the
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enemy army was going to have a hard choice to make. Either they'd allow
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an enemy force with numerical superiority and two entrenched positions
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-- this camp and the hills General Abigail was marching on -- to begin
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encircling them before the battle continued, or they'd have to withdraw
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further north and surrender any advantage they'd gained today. My bet
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was on the enemy retreating, given that they had reinforcements
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following behind us, but if Princess Rozala and the Dominion commander
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wanted to get into a slugging match even after my warning then the Army
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of Callow and the Legions needed to be readied for the fight. Juniper
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nodded, and rose to offer a salute. Hune settled for a nod, which given
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the respective sizes of herself and the pavilion was probably for the
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best.
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``Marshal?'' I called out as she began heading out.
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``Ma'am?'' Juniper gravelled.
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``Have the appropriate mages prepare the ritual,'' I said. ``Discretely.
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Leave an officer outside this tent to guide me there when I've
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finished.''
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``Understood,'' the Marshal of Callow said, and left without another
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word.
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I wondered, with a pang, if what had been said here today had just ended
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one of the last few friendships I had. If a relationship it'd taken
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years to build had just been put to the torch and we would be returning
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to the distant formality of the first months of the Fifteenth. Perhaps
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not, I thought. Orcs tended to handle reprimands like these better than
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humans, and she'd not named me her warlord lightly. But something would
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change, I knew, and it might not ever entirely return to the way it used
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to be. And Juniper, of the two I had chewed out, was likely to take this
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the best. Akua's words about the conflict between the needs of the queen
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and the woman lingered at the edge of my thoughts, but they were too
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bitter for me to be willing to acknowledge them.
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``I suppose now is to be my turn,'' Vivienne Dartwick said. ``Was it a
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kindness or a bad omen, that you dismissed the others first?''
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I finally allowed myself a good look at her. What had once been short
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dark hair was now elaborately put together in a milkmaid braid that
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circle twice atop her bangs, reminiscent of a summer fair crown. The
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blue-grey eyes had not changed, I thought, but something about the cast
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of her face had. She seemed\ldots{} older. Like she had grown in the
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year I'd seen her. The old leathers had been traded in for a
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long-sleeved pale blouse, conservative in cut but still baring most of
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her shoulders. It led into high-waist wine red skirts, though beneath
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I'd earlier glimpsed more practical leggings and boots. An engraved
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silver ring on her hand was the only visible adornment she'd bothered
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with, save for the royal seal of Callow I'd earlier ordered her to set
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down. Vivienne hadn't grown any more beautiful, since we'd last seen
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each other -- she was still barely taller than I, and of rather similar
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frame. But there was something subtly matured about the way she carried
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herself. My eyes flicked to the seal still on the table, and for a
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moment I regretted ordering her to put her down. Her regency had come to
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an end the moment I'd returned, truth be told, but the manner of making
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that clear need not be so humiliating. \emph{On the other hand,
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Vivienne}, I thought, \emph{what choice did you give me?}
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``I didn't want it to be like this,'' I said. ``But here we are. I have
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questions.''
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``Duchess Kegan is now Governess-General,'' she said. ``And was granted
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broad if temporary authority in my absence, though I kept the regency
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title proper until today.''
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``Adjutant already told me,'' I said. ``Kegan was the best of the
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choices you had. Baroness Ainsley being Keeper of the Seals stacks the
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council towards nobles too much for my tastes, but I'll concede there
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wasn't anyone else with both the pull and the competence.''
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``The recognition of the Confederation of the Grey Eyries-''
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``Was within your authority as Lady-Regent, and something I can
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stomach,'' I calmly said. ``The Matrons are vicious monsters, but also a
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thorn in Malicia's side and willing to sell us goods we badly need. The
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scheme to make a king of Grem One-Eye was overly ambitious, to my eye,
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but not offensively so. Arranging for him to hold the Blessed Isle with
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Black's own legions was inspired, and I wholeheartedly approve.''
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``This is not,'' Vivienne murmured, ``the way I expected this
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conversation to go.''
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``I'm not going to ignore the significant achievements to your name
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because you angered me,'' I mildly replied. ``You did very well with the
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regency. Until, at least, you decided to allow this atrocious blunder of
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a campaign. Then you deepened the mistake by accompanying the army
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personally. So I suppose my questions is this -- what, exactly, did you
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think this mess was going to accomplish?''
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She smiled, at tad bitterly.
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``And my answer determines whether I remain one of the Woe,'' she said.
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``Don't give me that,'' I sharply said. ``Whimpering in self-pity is
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beneath the both of us. You were given power and authority, Vivienne.
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I'm asking you to explain your how you used them, not throwing a
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tantrum. Given the messes I've had to clean up, this is an exceedingly
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measured response.''
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``You didn't deny it,'' she said.
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``You think fucking up means you're not one of us?'' I said.
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``Doesn't it?'' Vivienne replied, eyes unreadable.
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``The lot of you didn't cut my throat after the Doom of Liesse,'' I
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said. ``Why would you think this is any different? We can lose,
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Vivienne. But we have to learn. We have to own it. And we have to face
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the fucking consequences, because otherwise we'll \emph{just} \emph{keep
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doing it}. And it's more important than my feelings, or yours, but it
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doesn't mean they aren't there.''
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In the lucid, terrifying moment that followed those words I realized
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this might be how it'd started for Black. Looking at a mess and knowing
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that loving those responsible was one thing but exempting them from
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consequence another\emph{. Is that how you learned? To put it in a box
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and only let it out when the necessary callousness was over with.}
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``So tell me,'' I said, repeating myself with the sudden taste of ash in
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my mouth. ``What did you think this was going to accomplish?''
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She talked, I listened, and with careful patient cruelty I hardened her
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to avoid making the same mistakes twice. We walked to the ritual
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together, afterwards, and some part of me was almost disgusted at the
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glints of gratitude and respect I caught in her gaze when she looked at
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me. Like I'd not, as lovingly as callously, burned her with shame and
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bound her with affection so that Vivienne Dartwick would be one step
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closer to the woman I needed her to be.
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I was, in the end, my father's daughter.
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