346 lines
20 KiB
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346 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-iron}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Iron}\label{interlude-iron}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-iron}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Iron}
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\epigraph{``There are only two sorts of freedom to be found in Praes: the
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tyrant's freedom, and the freedom to do as the tyrant said.''}{Extract from the memoirs of Hiram Banu, the Ninety-Year Chancellor}
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Her Most Serene Highness Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer,
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Princess of Salia, Prince of Rhenia and Warden of the West found that
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her patience ran thin, these days. Not for a freshly developed failure
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of character, she'd decided, but rather because there was simply so much
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to do and so little time to see it done. Petty temporizing from others
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had once been something to tolerate out of courtesy, to maintain the
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ties of etiquette binding all to civility and so providing a common
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tongue, yet now ever instance was measurable loss. And never a frivolous
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one, either, for all the decisions of middling import she could pass on
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to subordinates she already had weeks ago. Therefore, when the First
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Prince of Procer entered her solar at a brisk pace she was quietly irked
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by the absence of one of the three men she'd sent for. The Principate of
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Procer could be said to have three great assemblies of spies, when
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counting those attached to the sole office of the First Prince and not
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the particular of who sat on the throne. The first and foremost was the
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Circle of Thorns, whose webs of informants abroad had been the eyes and
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ears of the rulers of Procer for centuries now: its current highest
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patron, the skeletal and balding Louis of Sartrons, rose smoothly as she
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entered. A noticeable moment later the other man in the room, Balthazar
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Serigny, followed suit.
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That hirsute bear of a man, his face a bold battlefield between
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ferocious eyebrows and an uncompromising beard, was the head of the
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Silver Letters. A pack of thieves and assassins grown so successful some
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centuries past they were given official sanction and from then on used
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as the spies of the First Princes within the boundaries of the
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Principate itself. Balthazar the Bastard, as his subordinates called him
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without speaking of the circumstances of his birth, had opposed
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Cordelia's rise to power during the Great War and remained in place
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after her crowning largely because he was too difficult to swiftly
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replace and the successor she'd handpicked for him was not yet ready.
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There should have been a third on his feet there, Simon of Gorgeault,
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standing in the name of the Holy Society. That one was as much a
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diplomat as a spy, for the Holy Society and its assembly of highborn lay
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brothers and sisters was at times more an informal channel of
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communication with the House of Light than shadowy obtainers of secrets.
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Gorgeault's lateness grated on her more than it should have, Cordelia
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knew, for knowing the man it would not be without reason. Yet his close
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ties with the House and in particular the Holies -- that informal
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assembly of the influential within the House whose equally informal
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decisions ever became formal policy -- were doing him no favour in her
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eyes of late.
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``A good morn to you both,'' the First Prince of Procer calmly said.
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She paused long enough to allow the two spymasters to return the
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courtesy.
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``Be seated,'' Cordelia Hasenbach ordered. ``We will begin without
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Brother Simon.''
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The blonde Lycaonese pressed her skirts against her legs to more
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elegantly sit her chair, dismissing the attending servants with a polite
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shake of the head when inquiries were made by silent look. She had no
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intention of entertaining these men long enough for refreshments to be
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required, much less a meal. Besides, should she offer either etiquette
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would require small talk be made over them before serious matters were
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spoken of and she had absolutely no intention of wasting half an hour on
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inanities when Procer was rarely more than one calamitous day away from
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annihilation.
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``We will attend to the Iserran situation first,'' Cordelia stated.
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``Gentlemen, am I to understand that disaster was truly averted?''
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The men shared a silent glance, the rapacious-faced head of the Circle
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and the half-wild former fantassin who'd killed and blackmailed his way
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to supreme prominence in the Silver Letters. It was the latter that
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spoke first, first clearing his throat in a surprisingly dainty manner
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for a man of his looks and conduct.
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``We have confirmed that the foreign forces have all begun to evacuate
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the plains,'' Balthazar the Bastard said. ``It was made known to the
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rank and file of both the Army of Callow and the Legions of Terror that
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winter quarters will be raised in Arans before they went through the
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gate, so I believe it likely the Black Queen intends to keep her word.''
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Of that there had been little doubt in the First Prince's mind: she'd
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read a transcript of these Liesse Accords, passed along by hasty
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scrying. It was becoming increasingly evident they'd all severely
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underestimated Catherine Foundling, and that her game was a long one
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indeed. Cordelia's cold blue eyes moved to the other man sitting across
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from her, inviting elaboration.
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``The League of Free Cities has agreed to begin marching south, and to
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the offered sale of supplies as the costs you offered,'' Louis said.
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``The Hierarch himself is said to have granted full authority to his
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advisory council over the matter, though the Tyrant of Helike remains
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the dominant force among it.''
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Though not by so large a margin as he would have been before what her
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people had taken to calling the Princes' Graveyard. An ornate
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affectation, given only a single royal had died instead of abdicated,
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yet the Alamans fondness for grand appellations was not do be denied.
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The League's audacious -- foolish, some would call it -- march through
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the Waning Woods to take the Principate by surprise had meant it would
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need to live off the land after the supplies it brought began to run
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out, given the lack of supply train. The situation for them was not yet
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dire, yet the Circle of Thorns had learned that they had perhaps two
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months left before their grain ran out. Which was something of an issue
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for the invaders, given that the Carrion Lord had already stolen or
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torched every granary in the heartlands of the Principate: there was
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nothing left for them to steal in turn. Offering just enough supplies to
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fend off starvation in exchange for a retreat south had been a gamble,
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but a necessary one. She could not let more than a hundred thousand
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foreigners camp in Iserre while talks took place here in Salia. For one,
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it was much too close to the capital. More importantly, if the League's
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armies stayed in Iserre so much enough of a force to check it even if
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truce was currently being had.
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Oh, Kairos Theodosian would no doubt turn on her as soon as the
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conference came at an end and he'd secured whatever prize he now sought.
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Yet by that time the armies of the League would be much further south,
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perhaps as far as Tenerife, and the military situation would have
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changed. The Black Queen had, after all, admitted to making bargain with
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the Kingdom Under concerning sale of armaments and implied to Arnaud
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that arrangement could be had there between herself and the Principate.
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That meant delaying resumption of hostilities with the League a valid
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tactic, for by the time the blades came out again the massed levies
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Cordelia had ordered in all southern and western principalities would be
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furnished with fresh dwarven weaponry and be ready to hold the line
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against the League's treachery. It would have ruinous costs in both
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lives and gold, but it was either that or allowing the Tyrant of Helike
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to dictate the course of the war on Keter however he wished. The Prince
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of Rhenia had sent her own people to die and abandoned her kinsmen to
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the Dead -- she could and \emph{would} stomach Arlesite conscripts
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bleeding to defend their own lands. Louis of Satrons' pause was smoothly
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filled by the other spymaster a heartbeat later.
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``My people in Iserre had a look at the delegations when the Black Queen
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opened the fairy gate for them,'' Balthazar said. ``Getting too close
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was judged risky -- the Jacks are sharp-eyed and there's goblins
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skulking around everywhere -- but we believe the agreements were
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honoured when it comes to soldier strength.''
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Cordelia's brow did not rise, for she was better bred than that, yet she
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politely expressed surprise.
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``Even the Carrion Lord?'' she asked.
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The offer extended had been an escort of four thousand for every
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representative attending the conference, which Cordelia had intended to
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mean the Hierarch and the Queen of Callow. Now instead there was a
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certain `General Rumena' representing the interests of the Empire Ever
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Dark and requiring their own escort, which was unfortunate confirmation
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the drow were on the move once more. The suggestion the Carrion Lord
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would attend as representative for the Dread Empire of Praes had been
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like ash in Cordelia's mouth, given the man's cold-blooded scheme for
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the death of thousands and thousands of innocents. In all fairness,
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Foundling seemed to have understood the\ldots{} delicacy of that
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situation and offered a compromise: she'd be responsible for the man's
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actions while in Procer, and as her dependent he would be allowed only a
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thousand men in escort to be deducted from her own four thousand. The
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blonde Lycaonese suspected the hand of Vivienne Dartwick in those terms,
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whose diplomatic acumen had proven greater than one would expect of a
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former Chosen.
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``He seems to have brought only four hundred legionaries,'' Balthazar
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said. ``Though given how popular he remains with parts of the Army of
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Callow, he's hardly vulnerable.''
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Not that Cordelia was fool enough to entertain assassination at the
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moment. Not with his apprentice -- who, it seemed, still remained fond
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enough of him to seek his release regardless of reports of their
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quarrelling after the Doom of Liesse -- having become so crucial to the
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survival of the Principate and perhaps even the continent itself. The
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amount of forces coming close to Salia made her uneasy, in truth. Four
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thousand drow, possessed of strange eldritch powers at night by all
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reports, four thousand eastern legionaries and a mixed force of four
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thousand from the League whose finest were from Helike. The Dominion
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would bring four thousand of their own, though they'd proved unreliable
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allies in many ways, and the First Prince had provided four thousand of
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her own soldiery to stand for the Thalassocracy of Ashur under thin
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pretence. Salia was hardly undefended, of course, and Princess Rozala
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Malanza would be bringing ten thousand soldiers besides as a guarantee.
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Yet sixteen thousand foreign soldiers within a day's march of the
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capital was not something to take lightly in any circumstances, much
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less these. Countries grown weak often found their allies had grown
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hungry.
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``Then it seems we had survived the crucible,'' First Prince Cordelia
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calmly said, ``and must now begin preparing for the one waiting beyond
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the horizon.''
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``If I may, Your Most Serene Highness?'' Louis of Sartons asked, and she
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moved her had in concession. ``Our allies in Ashur are becoming
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increasingly desperate, and when word of the bargain struck for the
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retreat of the League that despair will turn to fury.''
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It would, Cordelia privately agreed, for every step that took the armies
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of the League further from Procer took them closer to the shores of the
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Thalassocracy. All the while the fleets of Nicae kept blockading the
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island-nation and sinking even fishing boats, very clearly aiming to
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starve Ashur into submission. The bargain would be seen as a betrayal,
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not entirely without reason, and Cordelia's assurances that this was
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maneuvering would ring hollow so long as they were not paired with some
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manner of relief for Ashur. Which she could not provide so long as the
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League's fleets had the run of the Samite Gulf, given that no Arlesite
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principality had a considerable military fleet to call on. Largely
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because of Ashuran bribes and threats, one might uncharitably add.
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``We will have to exert pressure on the League during the conference,''
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Cordelia agreed. ``Lest we lose Ashur entirely to spite or surrender. If
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a common front is put forward to at least allow for grain barges to be
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allowed through, there would be hope to offer.''
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``That would require Callow to back us against the Free Cities,''
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Balthazar grunted. ``They're trying to get a foot in the Grand Alliance
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so it's not impossible, but the Black Queen's no fool. She'll not let
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herself be brought into the fold before she squeezed us dry of every
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concession she can prior to alliance.''
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``I am not so certain,'' Louis disagreed, bony face gone pensive. ``No
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force under her command has ever resorted to looting or foraging while
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campaigning in our lands. Though I would agree she has distaste for the
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well-bred, I would venture she'd be rather sympathetic to the plight of
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starving Ashurans. It is not an uncommon trait, in tyrants who have
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popular support.''
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Cordelia was, in fact, inclined to agree with the leader of the Circle
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of Thorns. Catherine Foundling had a record of trying to spare commoners
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the worst of war even when it was inconvenient to her armies, and the
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Army of Callow's regulations were perhaps the strictest on the continent
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when it came to civilians. Unfortunately, the First Prince found it
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dubious that the Back Queen would antagonize the League of Free Cities
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on behalf of the Grand Alliance without some manner of concession. Which
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was not unreasonable, given that she would be taking on risks for
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nations that had warred on her own, but \emph{was} most definitely
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unfortunate. The fair-haired First Prince only had so many concessions
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she could make and was reluctant to begin doling them out too early in
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negotiations. She might have to regardless, Cordelia grimly conceded.
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Choices were the privilege of those mighty enough to afford choosing.
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``There will be a need to approach her in private after she arrives,''
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the First Prince finally said.
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That much had never been in doubt, truth be told, though the extent of
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matters in need of discussion sometimes felt like to Cordelia like it
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increased by the day. The First Prince found herself in the unpleasant
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diplomatic quagmire of having to negotiate with a need to preserve an
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empire's dignity without having an empire's might to ensure it. Whatever
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alliances she might have once been able to call on were now stretched
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thin, the Chosen so unreliable as to be worthless and to add one more
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complication the Silver Letters were adamant that the Black Queen had
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become somewhat \emph{popular} with Alliance armies that'd been on the
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field. The entire host had been plagued with dreams, allegedly the work
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of the Choir of Mercy, that had shown a span of the `heroics' that'd
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taken place in these Twilight Ways. The result had been flattering to
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the Queen of Callow's reputation, to say the least, though the
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transcripts of some of these dreams had been disturbing to read. The
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cunning that Foundling had shown that night was more dangerous than the
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power, in Cordelia's eyes, though the power was the stuff of nightmares
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as well.
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Now it was good as certain that the Callowans would follow their queen
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with fanatical devotion into any war she chose to wage -- Gods Above,
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even as some kind of priestess of darkness she'd received the tacit
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blessing of \emph{angels} -- which would be a great boon if these
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negotiations saw fruit but a cataclysm otherwise. More worrisome was the
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apparent oath by every great line of the Blood to support her bid for
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joining the Grand Alliance, as it'd received the approval of the Grey
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Pilgrim. To Levantines, that might carry as much weight as that of the
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Choir he was said to be servant of. When Rozala Malanza's soldiers came
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to Salia, and the Levantines with them, they would find a city that
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still spoke of the Black Queen as the Arch-heretic of the East and a
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perfidious enemy. The survivors of the campaign in Iserre would not take
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well to being called liars, much less the potentially disastrous epithet
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of heretic. It could all turn into an ugly circumstance with frightening
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ease if Cordelia was not very, very careful. Merciful Heavens, what had
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the world come to when she could expect the Black Queen to be a calming
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influence on the proceedings?
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The First Prince would not be blinded by relief at a withheld blade or a
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sudden surge of sentiment, yet she could not deny that Catherine
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Foundling seemed to be trying to claw back the continent from the brink
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of they abyss. She was a horribly inconvenient person, it was true, but
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she'd also proved she was capable of restraint and a degree of foresight
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-- which Cordelia could not truthfully say of all those who had a seat
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in the Highest Assembly. That Calernia might end up bound by a set of
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treaties even more far-reaching than those of the Grand Alliance had
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rankled, at first, but looking upon the content of the Liesse Accords
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the First Prince had been forced to concede they might be of genuine
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help in stabilizing the continent. That the rules of behaviour they
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proposed were elemental meant they were likely to be functional in
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practice even when binding such fractious individuals, and that most
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Chosen and Damned would be inclined towards enforcing them: a flying
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fortress rarely benefited anyone but the one flying it, and so even
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another villain might delight in seeing it brought down along with a
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rival. And as for the Chosen, Cordelia was far past needing convincing
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they too were in need of similar \emph{restraints}. That the same plague
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that'd wiped out a detachment of Praesi legionaries had also wiped out
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an entire town on the shore of Lake Artoise without a single breakout
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elsewhere before or since was a damning hint of who was responsible for
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it.
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There would be consequences to that, one day.
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The dawning truth of the last few days had been that the Black Queen
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intended to bring forth an order to Calernia, and that this order was
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not too inimical to the order that Cordelia Hasenbach had been trying to
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bring forth since she was but a girl. It was not the resounding victory
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for Good that the First Prince had wanted, yet it was compromise she was
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willing to live with. She fully intended on securing as many gains as
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she could for Procer and the Grand Alliance, yet she would do so with
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the preservation of the Accords in mind. In truth, there were some
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aspects she'd found thrilling. This posited city in the Red Flower
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Vales? It was, she hoped, an end to wars between Callow and Procer. With
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this Cardinal forbidding the march of armies and the only other
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land-route between the two realms the Stairway up north, war would
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become highly impractical to wage. Three kittens and a ribbon could
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defend the narrow pass of the Stairway against a princely army, if they
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had the nerve, and having a great city at the crossroads between the
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east and the west of Calernia would allow for trade between adjoining
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realms to flourish and make hostility even more costly a prospect. And
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there was much to gain, in having such a neutral ground where diplomacy
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would be had even on the darkest days. No, Cardinal would have much
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greater reach than even the Black Queen seemed to realize.
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A sharp rap against the closed door had Cordelia raising her voice to
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grant entrance to the servant. A man in livery hurried in at her
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invitation and after courtly bows came to whisper in her ear. The First
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Prince of Procer's lips slightly thinned and she nodded a dismissal.
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``Brother Simon's absence should be excused, it seems,'' Cordelia
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Hasenbach crisply said. ``For he has been detained by order of the House
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of Light. The Holies are calling the Highest Assembly to session.''
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Two of the most skilled spymasters alive looked at her with faces
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betraying utter surprise.
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``That's madness,'' Balthazar said.
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``It's treason,'' Louis said, tone cold. ``In time of war, no less. Your
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Most Serene Highness, this cannot be allowed to pass.''
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``Nor will it,'' Cordelia Hasenbach said, voice like iron. ``It appears
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I have at last found an \emph{end to my patience}.''
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