406 lines
20 KiB
TeX
406 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-24-theft}{%
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\chapter{Theft}\label{chapter-24-theft}}
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\epigraph{``Wisdom is a tower built of failure and rue.''}{Ashuran saying}
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It wasn't even an hour before the Third Army's banners hung above the
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hills that were now to my east instead of west.
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``Like kicking an anthill,'' Vivienne said, eyes gazing far ahead.
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She wasn't wrong. We were looking at the same thing, I thought, but my
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sight was better than hers. A sliver of Night had seen to that. General
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Abigail had grasped my meaning deeper than Id thought, it seemed. I'd
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told her to fly the Fourth Army's banner as well as her own for a
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reason, namely to imply much greater numbers in the hills than there
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actually were. The Summerholm girl had gone a step further than what I'd
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instructed and thinned her lines to an almost reckless extent: from the
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perspective of the Alliance soldiers in the plains below, it must look
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like there were at least twenty thousand fresh soldiers anchoring our
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left flank. Actually fighting with lines so thin would be disastrous,
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but it was a calculated risk. Even if the enemy suddenly marched on her
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she should have just enough time to redeploy before the fight began.
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``Hakram's force will be revealed soon enough,'' I said. ``That ought to
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pressure them into a full withdrawal.''
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``Wouldn't it have been quicker to send the entire host into the
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hills?'' Vivienne asked.
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Her tone was curious, not critical, and the expectation in her voice
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that she would be answered was almost as irritating as it was pleasing.
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Barely a quarter bell had passed since I'd chewed her out, and already
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she was back on old footing. I was glad of the confidence, I really was,
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and well aware it was petty of me to be irked that my displeasure hadn't
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left deeper marks. But Vivienne had once called me petty when speaking
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to Akua, unaware I was listening in, and like a lot of what she'd said
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that night there'd been more than a grain of truth to it.
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``It would have,'' I agreed. ``On the other hand, it also risked a
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standoff. They'd have been left to mass their entire army largely in
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peace, and we to establish a common line facing them. Two large
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coalition armies looking at each other over a fence, hands on swords. A
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lit sharper if I ever saw one. No, I want them to retreat. To give us
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space.''
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And the flanking manoeuvre by General Rumena and General Bagram, under
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the steady hand of Adjutant, should do the trick. When I'd been up in
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the sky riding Zombie, I'd had a decent look at the enemy forces on the
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march as well as those already fighting. The western army -- the mixed
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Dominion and Procer force that Princess Rozala was part of -- had been
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marching on Juniper form the north, which had logistical implications.
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Iserre had been stripped bare of anything edible, which meant Malanza
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and her allies were running on what supplies they could either carry
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with them or get flowing from further north. Given the size of the
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western army, which at a glance I'd put at more than sixty thousand
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strong, without a steady flow of foodstuffs they'd start burning through
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their stocks at a prodigious rate. The amount of men might have been
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manageable, but the horses? I very much doubted they could afford to
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keep that many war horses for long without fresh supplies coming in.
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Besides, the northern campaign had taught me much of how Procer handled
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it supply trains. In a word, badly. It came from the way their armies
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were put together, in my opinion, more than any inferiority of intellect
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compared to the architects of the Reforms in Praes.
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Instead of a unified army directly under the Tower -- or, these days, me
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-- Proceran forces were raised from the personal troops of rulers, hired
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fantassins and mass levies. The personal troops were trained, equipped
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and fed by the prince who fielded them, which was a costly thing even in
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peace time. That meant, as a rule, that princes and princesses of Procer
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had kept personal armies around the same size as those of the Old
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Kingdom's nobles while being both significantly richer and ruling lands
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both larger and more heavily populated. Proceran logistics, as they
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currently stood, were well-versed in keeping forces that size fed and
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well-equipped. The rub came when the armies grew larger, which meant
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bringing in fantassins or levies. The mercenary companies were usually
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only hired for as long as they were needed then cut loose, meaning
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there'd never been a \emph{need} to develop a system to feed larger
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forces for long. As for the levies, well, like everywhere else in the
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world they were handed the bare minimum in food and arms before being
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sent into the grinder. Those larger armies were usually fighting on
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enemy territory, too, where `foraging' -- a pretty word for armed
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robbery -- could be used to fill up the stocks.
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In this particular case though, the western army was stuck in a
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principality already picked clean and a whole chunk of foreign Levantine
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troops whose personal supplies had to be running dangerously low after
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chasing Grem and Juniper for so long. When Hakram appeared further north
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with a large force, threatening to cut off their supply lines, they'd be
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forced to either prepare for battle or withdraw. Considering we'd have
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them both half-encircled and severely outnumbered, battle would not be
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an attractive choice. Unless heroes were involved, I thought. Which they
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very well might be. For all the earthly considerations pointing at why
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fighting us here would be a terrible idea, there was a reason I'd
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ordered Juniper to prepare for a fight.
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``Diplomacy, then,'' Vivienne said, breaking my long silence.
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``In a manner of speaking,'' I grunted. ``Princess Rozala made it clear
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her side wants the heads of the Legions on spikes. That's not happening,
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so I'll be removing the issue from the table: come nightfall, if they've
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withdrawn then our entire coalition is gating out of here.''
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``Tactical offence, to allow for a strategic defence,'' she mused.
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She half-turned to me, the azure blue cloak she'd donned when leaving
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the pavilion tight around her shoulders.
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``And you're not afraid without the blade at their throat they won't
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consider bargaining?'' Vivienne asked. ``The truce offer I extended to
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Hasenbach was refused even when it looked like we had the advantage in
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Iserre.''
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``I think with us reappearing somewhere in Arans, with supplied coming
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in through the northern passage and a comfortably defensible position,
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the First Prince will have to consider how far she can afford to push
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us,'' I frankly said. ``More importantly, with us gone and the two Grand
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Alliance armies in Iserre within a week's march of each other the League
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is either going to retreat or take a beating.''
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``Both would be dangerous to Procer,'' Vivienne noted. ``A retreat means
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they have to keep armies south to pursue. A victory on the field might
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prove more costly than the war to the north can afford.''
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``If Kairos intended to collapse Procer, he would have already done
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it,'' I said. ``He wouldn't have come through the Waning Woods, either.
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The League armies would have battered through Hasenbach's border army in
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Tenerife and begun occupying southern principalities. Feasibly they
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could have occupied Tenerife and Salamans without getting much more of a
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fight, then dug in for the long term. After that\ldots{}''
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``All it'd take was raids into the bordering principalities for those
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royals to try withdrawing their troops from the north and march back to
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defend their lands,'' Vivienne softly agreed. ``If Hasenbach tried to go
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after them through the Highest Assembly, it might lead to civil war. If
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she did nothing, the Dead King would likely eat the north.''
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``Instead he surprised us all and marched out of the Waning Woods to cut
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into this dance,'' I said. ``No, he's after something from the mess in
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Iserre and it's not hammering nails in the Principate's coffin.''
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``It would not be territorial concessions, or anything monetary,''
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Vivienne frowned. ``There would have been better, easier ways to force
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those.''
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``He's a villain of the old breed,'' I said. ``Ink on parchment isn't
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what he's after. I met with him, in Rochelant, and he hinted Hasenbach
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has been dredging something dangerous out of Lake Artoise.''
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``He is a liar, as you reminded me rather sharply,'' she said.
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I'd not been pleased to hear she'd been trading information with Kairos,
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to say the last. It was one thing to do what I had, haggle an alliance
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of convenience against the Wandering Bard after trading secrets. It was
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another entirely to pass him detailed assessments of the Dominion's
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armies, even if the payment was useful word out of Salia and the north.
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While I'd understood that the Jacks were still too young an organization
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to have penetrated deep into Procer, and certainly to have a way to pass
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along regular reports given the mess the Principate was in right now,
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relying on the Tyrant for anything meant you were getting played. If I
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had to guess, he'd making little deals like that with everyone he could:
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offering piece for piece, and ensuring he alone had a bird's eye view of
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what was taking place in Iserre. I was finding it worrisome Kairos had
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been interested in details about the Dominion armies, too. It could be
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another layer of deception, sure, but it might also mean he believed he
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would be fighting them in the future. Or that he was selling that
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information to the Dead King, I acknowledged with a grimace. There
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weren't a lot of things I'd put past Kairos Theodosian.
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``Oh, there's \emph{something} happening there,'' I said. ``That much I
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don't doubt. But I don't necessarily think it's whatever trouble she's
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brewing that interests him. Or even her in particular, to be honest --
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this campaign, the First Prince herself, I think they're means to an
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end.''
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``That end being?'' Vivienne asked.
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``I don't know yet,'' I admitted. ``But if he's willing to launch an
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entire invasion in the middle of war against Keter just to get leverage
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on Cordelia Hasenbach, it's not going to be a trifle.''
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``The man needs to die,'' Vivienne said. ``The Hierarch as well. They're
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too unpredictable, Catherine. If they start swinging at the wrong
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moment, the consequences could be\ldots{} wide-reaching, to say the
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least.''
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``I'm sure Cordelia thinks the same thing,'' I said. ``And that's why
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he's made himself so very costly to remove from the board.''
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Strategic offence, I thought with rueful amusement, paired with tactical
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defence. Mad or not, I had to concede that the villain king of Helike
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was viciously cunning. The more the western and eastern coalitions
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fought without him being involved, the more reluctant they grew to
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engage his fresher forces. The only way out of that downwards spiral, as
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far as I could see, was to withdraw my forces from Iserre and let him
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face the storm he'd stirred without my standing shield for him. In the
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distance I could see Malanza's vanguard fully withdrawing from the
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battlefield. Even the Levantine horse that'd baited the Order of Broken
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Bells into chasing them all the way to irrelevance had pulled away, and
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now Grandmaster Talbot's knights were sheepishly riding back to camp.
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I'd let Juniper handle the reprimand for that, I decided. It had been
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her battle, even if she'd been losing it. It'd also make it clear to the
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high officers that she still held command even after my taking her to
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task.
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``You haven't asked,'' Vivienne suddenly said.
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``Asked what?'' I replied.
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``If I still have a Name,'' she said.
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I glanced at her.
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``I know you don't,'' I said. ``Yours had a subtle weight, but even that
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is gone.''
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``Then you haven't asked why,'' she said, then blue-grey eyes narrowed.
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``Unless Adjutant told you.''
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``He didn't,'' I told her. ``Or even explain why someone's going to end
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up calling him Hakram Handless, for that matter.''
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``And you're not worried in the slightest?'' Vivienne asked, tone
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inscrutable. ``Gods, even just curious?''
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``It's a strange horse to ride, a Name,'' I said. ``Black said it was
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willpower that got you on the saddle, and I don't entirely disagree with
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him, but I think that's only part of it.''
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I looked into the distance, at the Alliance host retreating into the
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second part of the trap I'd laid. It was a kindness that was due, not to
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look at her while speaking this.
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``It's a recognition that you're trying to \emph{do} something,'' I
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said. ``William wanted to kill his way out of Praesi rule. Akua wanted
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to bind everyone else. Indrani wants to pass through life unhindered.
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Whatever it is you're after the Name makes you better at doing it, I
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won't argue that. But you don't get a Name unless you're already good at
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it, Vivienne.''
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I cleared my throat.
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``So I'll answer the question you didn't ask: no, you're not getting
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tossed out on your ass because you can't steal the sun anymore. That's a
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trick. The important parts came before you were the Thief, and that
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hasn't gone anywhere.''
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Vivienne let out a shuddering breath.
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``How is it,'' she quietly said, ``that you always know exactly the
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right thing to say?''
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The urge was there to pull away with levity, draw attention to my
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admittedly chequered diplomatic record, but I didn't follow it. It would
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have been cheapening the sincerity of the moment, and wouldn't that
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defeat the point of having it in the first place? So instead I said
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nothing, for lack of anything to say, and let silence stretch.
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``The Empire killed my mother,'' she murmured. ``Did you know that?''
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My fingers clenched.
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``Not for sure,'' I said. ``But I suspected.''
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The moment I'd learned her last name was Dartwick, looking into her past
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had become a great deal easier. Out of courtesy I'd not dug too deep,
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but I'd had a look anyway. Her father had been a baron before the
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Conquest, vassal to the Count of Southpool but her family had remained
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rather obscure in the years that followed. There'd been a bit of
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interest in her father after he was widowed, before the man made it
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clear he would not remarry, but it'd died down quick after he did.
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That'd gotten me curious enough to look into the mother, and my brow had
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risen when I found out she'd died in a hunting accident not long after
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the Conquest. It could have been an actual accident, I knew. But in the
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early days of Praesi occupation, more than a few Imperial governors had
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arranged `hunting accidents' when they were inclined to discretely put
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down rebellious elements.
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``I say the Empire, Catherine, because it makes no difference who gave
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the order,'' Vivienne admitted. ``The decision came from Governor Chuma,
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though he's long dead. Some might say it was in truth her fault, for
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joining a rebel cabal. That she knew the risks. Others might argue that
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whatever hired hand did it was the killer in every sense. But it's never
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quite that simple, is it?''
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I stayed silent. The question had not been meant for me to answer.
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``I think I understood that even as a child,'' Vivienne pensively said.
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``That is was larger than just my mother and the governor. That it was
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about Praes, what it was doing to us. The \emph{way} it was doing it to
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us. Chuma, you see, he was one of the light-handed governors. Didn't
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hang whole families, only the rebels themselves. The rest got off with a
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\emph{fine}.''
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Different Imperial governors, I thought, had taught us different
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lessons. Vivienne had been taught that we were cattle, to be sheared
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when laden and beaten when unruly. Less than human, in the Empire's
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eyes, but not to be hurt without reason. Mazus, though, Mazus had not
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been interested in such a civilized arrangement. He'd been a looter in
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silk clothes, a noble in nothing but the ugliest ways that word could be
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meant. From him I'd learned that no one in power would ever be fair
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unless you \emph{made} them. Vivienne had tried to claw back some pride
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with her thefts. I'd tried to murder my way into authority with a sword.
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``I started stealing to even the scales, though I knew coin would never
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be the right measure for that,'' she said. ``I kept stealing because
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they deserved it. Because every time I took from them they got a taste
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of loss. Of what they were doing to all of us.''
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``And then they warned you off,'' I said.
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``Assassin,'' she acknowledged. ``A small cut on my father's throat, and
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I stayed my hand. But he'd passed when William raised the banner and the
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anger was still in my stomach.''
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``And it isn't anymore?'' I quietly asked.
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``You killed him,'' Vivienne said, evading the question. ``But what did
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that change? They'd been killing us for years before I was ever born.
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Truth be told I think it was Laure that did it.''
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``When we spoke,'' I said. ``In the palace.''
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``It wasn't the words, Catherine,'' she said. ``You can have a silver
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tongue, now and then, but I did not trust you an inch back then. It was
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how \emph{tired} you were. I'd seen you go from victory to victory, but
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that night you didn't act like you were winning.''
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``I wasn't,'' I frankly said. ``And there were greater disasters on the
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horizon.''
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``You were fighting for Callow,'' Vivienne acknowledged. ``But that was
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the detail that took me so long time to understand even after joining.
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We weren't talking about the same thing when using that word. Because
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for you it also meant the Fifteenth. It mean the goblin tribe in
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Marchford. It meant everyone willing to live under the laws, to pay
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their taxes and stand on the wall when the horn sounds.''
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``They \emph{are} Callowans, Vivienne,'' I said. ``I won't ignore what
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was the best of us, in the old days, but we can't just-''
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She raised her hand to interrupt me.
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``I know,'' she said. ``I know, Catherine. And that's what killed it.
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Because I would look at Hakram, at Masego and Ratface and especially the
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goblins and I would wait for them to be the enemy. Because they'd always
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been, because that was what the Conquest meant. But then they kept
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faith, Cat. They died, and they died for you but not just that. Also
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because they were serving something they believed in. And that scared
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me, because if they weren't the enemy then what had I been fighting all
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these years?''
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\emph{The Tower}, I wanted to say. \emph{The High Lords}. \emph{What
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made all of us this way, heroes and villains and the ever-spreading
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graveyard between.} But this wasn't my moment, it was hers, and so I
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kept to silence once more.
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``My Name was already thinning by then,'' Vivienne said. ``Sometimes it
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wouldn't work as it used to. Sometimes I couldn't feel it at all. And
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when my hair began to grow again, I was terrified. Because if I wasn't
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even the Thief anymore, then what use was I?''
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I saw her fingers clench.
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``I nearly did some very foolish things,'' she said. ``But Hakram cut
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off his hand, and if nothing else that stayed mine. And it forced me to
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see, Catherine, because in the months following that night I did the
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most good for my homeland I ever have and not a single speck of it
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involved theft.''
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She let out a breathless laugh, though it was more mockery of herself
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than mirth.
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``I wasn't angry anymore, Cat,'' she said. ``Or at least, not at the
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same people or for the same reasons. Mostly I was afraid. And the more I
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tried to pretend I was still fifteen and collecting my mother's dues
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from something that no longer existed, the more I missed the point: that
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I was a child, when I became the Thief, and it was a child's anger I was
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still heeding.''
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I watched her and found regret painted on her face, though a soft and
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thoughtful manner of it.
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``But you weren't a child anymore,'' I said.
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``And so I was no longer the Thief,'' Vivienne softly agreed. ``Because
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I've learned that just taking from the enemy won't change anything. That
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we'll need more than that, to change the world, and that's what I want
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to do most of all.''
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And so the Name had died, I thought, along with the indignation that'd
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birthed it. It might be that something else would come of that, but she
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would never again be the Thief. The girl who had become her no longer
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existed: she'd been outgrown by the woman standing at my side. Vivienne
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Dartwick's eyes were clear, I saw, and her back straight. In the
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afternoon's light, cloaked in blue and hair braided like a fair crown,
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she seemed almost regal. I hoped, truly, that no Name came of this. The
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Liesse Accords, as written, would bar any and all Named from being
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rulers. And it was early days yet, I knew that, and it was not a
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decision to be made in haste.
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But Vivienne Dartwick had just talked herself into being the foremost
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heiress-candidate to the throne of Callow.
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