430 lines
22 KiB
TeX
430 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-72-rumours}{%
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\chapter{Rumours}\label{chapter-72-rumours}}
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\epigraph{``Reputation is as a wild horse; gone at a gallop and returned at
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a trot.''}{Arlesite saying}
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``Tell me what you've learned,'' I ordered.
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The small town they envoys of the First Prince had led us to was called
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Roque-Faillie, and though it was not particularly pretty or luxurious it
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\emph{did} have the benefit of being mostly empty. Apparently during
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winter most of the countryside around Salia went empty with the seasonal
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labourers or farms and fields the locals called \emph{manants} migrating
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into the capital with whatever coin they'd saved up. The Callowan in me
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balked at the notion that good honest farmers could be effectively
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forced by poverty to take refuge in a large city, but Hakram had noted
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it was a little more complicated than that. Unlike my own people, who
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tended to leave the family home and strike out on their own unless they
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were in line to inherit property or trade, Alamans apparently tended to
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form in closely-knit clans of kin that bought property belonging to the
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family itself and not individuals. The young and fit worked fields
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during the warm seasons, the returned to the family's house or houses in
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Salia with that wealth once winter rolled in. It was all very communal,
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and rather strange to my own sensibilities. Still, practically speaking
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it meant that there'd been a large string of mostly empty towns and
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villages within a day's march of the capital where all the many envoys
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and armies could be settled.
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According to my scouting lines -- and Robber, who I'd let loose to skulk
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with for sole instruction not to start a diplomatic incident that wasn't
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fairly deniable -- and the chatter amongst us diplomats, settling my men
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in Roque-Faillie meant I was between the League's town and the
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Dominion's. Amusingly enough they'd put General Rumena and its drow past
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the Dominion, possibly in an attempt to separate them from the rest of
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my delegation. Considering most of the Firstborn were prompt to violence
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and spoke not a whit of Chantant, I suspected anyone trying to negotiate
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with them on the sly would have ended up having a rough time even if I'd
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not been the First Under the Night. Still, Heavens take pity on whatever
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poor fucker Hasenbach would send to probe the intentions of the drow
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before it came to negotiation. Princess Rozala had garrisoned her larger
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army in between us and the capital, though she'd had to split them into
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three smaller forces in different towns. Not that her soldiers would
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complain much, I imagined. Much like mine, after so many months of
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campaigning they'd find sleeping in an actual bed surrounded by actual
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walls to be the height of luxury. Worryingly, though, Malanza had
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promptly vanished into the city. So had the Grey Pilgrim, my watchers
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told me.
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At a guess, it might relate to the fact that someone had set the damned
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capital on fire since we'd last spoken with the First Prince. The smoke
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was lingering over a large chunk of Salia, visible even from miles away,
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and if the capital of Procer was anything like Laure an uncomfortably
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large amount of it must have been made of wood. Probably even more, I
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grimly guessed. Salia was said to be the largest city on Calernia, large
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than even Ater which boasted around five hundred thousand souls. You
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couldn't house that many people in stone: no empire in Creation was so
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extravagantly rich. Whatever it was that'd happened, though, I needed to
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know of it. If I was about to be blamed for yet another fucking fire I'd
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not started, best I know of it before I ended up accused before Gods and
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men. Thankfully, we'd had Jacks in the city and Vivienne had been very
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far from idle these last few weeks. There was a reason I'd seen so
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little of her.
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``There was an attempted coup,'' Vivienne Dartwick bluntly said.
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For all that these days she was Lady Dartwick in more than an honorary
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sense, as my heiress-designate to the throne of Callow, she was still
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the head of the Jacks. I was genuinely unsure if the Fairfaxes had kept
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spies of their own before the Conquest, though I assumed they must have.
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If there'd been such a web of informants Black had long destroyed or
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suborned it, which meant we'd had to start very much from scratch. As a
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result, though the quality of the reports of the Jacks was fairly solid
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the eclectic nature of the organisations they'd been put together from
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meant there were some glaring blind spots in our tradecraft and that our
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people were usually very much outmatched by the spies of other nations.
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Not least, I'd admit, for what was likely the same reason the Fairfaxes
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had not had a reputation for being particularly well-informed: spies
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were \emph{expensive}. Even without getting into bribes and hirelings,
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just keeping the Jacks fed and clothes and paid was painfully costly. If
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trade with Praes and Procer didn't pick up after the wars came to an
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end, we might have to disband parts of the Jacks simply because we
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couldn't afford to keep such a sprawling array of agents.
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For now, though, dwarven gold would prop us up. It'd certainly opened
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more than a few doors in Salia that would otherwise have been closed to
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us, not to mention loosened a few tongues. East or west, everyone liked
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to make a little coin on the side.
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``Fuck,'' I eloquently said.
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This was an informal council, without even the full roster of the Woe --
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Masego had gone to speak with the Rogue Sorcerer and Archer had
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mentioned she was, Sisters bless, `just going for a walk' -- though in
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truth all those with an interest or proper role in the proceedings were
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there. Vivienne as my heiress and the head of the Jacks, Hakram as my
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right hand and Akua as, well, Akua Sahelian\emph{.} Whether that was a
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good or terrible thing had wildly carried depending on the time and
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situation since I'd first met her, but at the very least she'd never
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been slow on the uptake.
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``Pretty much,'' Vivienne agreed, brushing back a strand that'd slipped
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below her milkmaid braid. ``City's boiling over with rumours and we
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don't have anyone anywhere close to the First Prince's inner circle, but
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we've gathered at least a little more than your average man in the
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street. For one, the House of Light and the Silver Letters were
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\emph{heavily} involved.''
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The Silver Letters were one of the Principate's several informant
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networks -- Merciless Gods, how much must it cost to run a solid network
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across even just the span of Procer, much less \emph{three}? -- and said
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to be in particular the one concerned with the affairs of Procer itself.
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The Circle of Thorns, the second, were charged with gathering secrets
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abroad. We'd caught a few of their people trying to get into my court
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and even the Regals before they'd been gelded, and most likely missed a
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few more. The Eyes of the Empire had continued to out them to me even
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after relations between Malicia and myself had cooled all the way to
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ice, though there was no telling of those had been the Tower's people or
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Scribe's. It was the third and last that was surprising me, though,
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because if the House had been part of the coup then they should have
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been as well.
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``Not the Holy Society?'' I asked. ``I though their whole mandate was
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keeping an eye on the House.''
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``Their nominal head, a certain Brother Simon de Gorgeault, was sought
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by parts of the city guard on charges of murder and heresy for some time
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before the First Prince crushed the coup,'' Vivienne replied. ``It seems
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he was fooled but not complicit.''
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``As I recall the head of the Silver Letters was an interesting little
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man by the name of Balthazar Serigny,'' Akua said. ``Unless that
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changed?''
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She glanced at Vivienne, who had not hidden her dislike in the slightest
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but remained professional. My spymistress shook her head.
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``Interesting how?'' Hakram asked.
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``As in `the Eyes have been working on him for more than a decade'. I
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know not to what purpose, however,'' Akua said. ``None of my mother's
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spies ever rose high enough in the ranks to be brought into the scheme,
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though the Lady Scribe would know.''
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\emph{Fuck}, I thought, this time at least refraining from speaking it
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out loud. We couldn't be blamed for the bloody House of Light deciding
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now was the time to start a fourth Liturgical War, but if the Silver
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Letters were the fault of the Scribe then that put us in the deeps as
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well. Black was viciously loyal to those he considered his own, at once
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both one of his best and worst traits. He likely wouldn't have agreed to
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throw her to the hounds even if she deserved it a few years ago, much
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less now that the Calamities had begun dropping like flies.
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``That makes for spies and priests,'' Adjutant noted in his gravelling
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voice. ``Which princes were involved? They would have needed a candidate
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to replace Hasenbach.''
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``It's not common knowledge yet, not in the streets, but apparently this
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was all in the name of Princess Rozala,'' Vivienne said.
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Akua's fine eyebrow arched, as if to remind me she had predicted the
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possibility of strife between the First Prince and the first
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halfway-decent princess I'd ever met. It didn't fit, though, not to me.
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We'd discussed how the two rulers might skirmish through the Highest
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Assembly and debate over the Accords, but neither Akua nor Hakram had
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ever brought up a coup as a possibility\emph{. Neither knew Cordelia had
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effectively stacked the Assembly in her favour, back then}, I then
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reminded myself. Even still, I had a hard time reconciling the same
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princess who'd been the first to toss her crown, the princess who'd
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plunged her sword in the earth and sworn oaths of gratitude, with
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someone who'd risk the madness that a coup in the narrow window where we
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had a truce with Keter might bring on us all. She would have to know
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that the Lycaonese would take is a betrayal beyond forgiveness if the
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first First Prince of their people was deposed not even halfway through
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a war with the Hidden Horror.
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``She left the for the capital not long after settling her soldiers,'' I
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said. ``I don't suppose you know on what terms?''
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``We have someone in Louis Rohanon's serving staff,'' Vivienne smiled.
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``She went livid, when it was intimated this was from her hand, and
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threatened something called the `liar's leash' on anyone who'd repeat
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such slander. She left with hardly an escort, too.''
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``Don't suppose you know what this leash is?'' I frowned.
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My heiress shook her head.
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``From context, it is likely to be unpleasant,'' the former thief said.
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``It is an ancient Arlesite punishment for one who speaks calumny of a
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\emph{real},'' Akua conversationally provided. ``A hook tied to a long
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line of twine is put through the tongue of the liar and tied to the tail
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of a horse, which the \emph{real} then rides for a mile. If the liar
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survives the mile without the hook ripping through their tongue, the
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Gods Above have judged their lie to have been accidental. Otherwise,
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what is left of their tongue is to be carved out and buried beneath the
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gate of the \emph{real}'s fortress.''
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Vivienne looked split between sharp irritation at being shown up on even
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such a slight detail and disgust as the old Arlesite ways of justice.
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Mind you Akua had said \emph{real} and not prince, which was a telling
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detail: it meant it predated the founding of the Principate. Which for
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all its many, \emph{many} flaws, was significantly less prone to
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elaborate executions than its predecessor-states. Mind you, I could cast
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no stones there without being a hypocrite. My people had indulged in
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some excruciatingly brutal ways of killing prove traitors, especially
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those who struck bargains with Praes. It'd been delightfully horrible to
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read about public drawing and quarterings, or even the rarer \emph{red
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hangings} as a kid -- I'd taken me year to realize the unlikeliness of
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books about the worst excesses of Callowan `justice' being so easy to
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get your hands on, Black you prick -- but as I aged I'd been left to
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wonder at the monstrosity of hurting even a traitor so carefully they
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could be hanged by their entrails. Even the Deoraithe had dabbled in
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impalement whenever the Clans made a run at the Wall, though their worst
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they'd always kept for whenever they got their hands on a Dread Emperor.
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I supposed I shouldn't be surprised Akua knew about this, given that the
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Praesi had quite literally written the definitive books on this, but why
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would she have cared about some Arlesite\ldots{} oh.
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``You looked into bits like that for all over, didn't you?'' I said,
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reluctantly amused. ``When you still believed you were going to conquer
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the whole continent.''
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Akua looked only mildly embarrassed.
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``Attention to ironic detail is the difference between a Triumphant and
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a Nihilis,'' she defended.
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Gods, I could not wait to pass that on to Indrani and see the utter
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mockery that would follow. That ought to be weeks' worth of
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entertainment right there, maybe even a full month if Robber was dragged
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into it. Adjutant cleared his throat, which I allowed without resistance
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to drag me back to the matters at hand. As amusing as that had been, we
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did have more pressing matters on our hands: like the fact that someone
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had torched part of Salia and that someone I must by extension answer
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for might have been involved. Hells, assuming I wasn't just blamed on
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general principle. Although, the commander of the legionaries I'd
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brought was General Abigail so who knew? Maybe this time she'd get the
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blame, regardless of involvement or general infeasibility. Fucking
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William, I couldn't believe people still thought I was responsible for
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Marchford. \emph{Both times}, \emph{too, thank you very much Chider.}
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``Cordelia Hasenbach remains First Prince, however,'' Hakram half-asked.
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Like me, he'd assumed that if she wasn't that news would have been the
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first thing spoken.
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``She is,'' Vivienne confirmed. ``She also came out of the mess smelling
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like roses with the Highest Assembly and highly popular in Salia itself.
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Rumour has it she prevented the summary execution of the conspirators so
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they could stand proper trial instead right after they tried to
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assassinate her. Which brings me to another important part.''
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She drew breath.
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``Both the White Knight and the Witch of the Woods are in the city,''
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she said, blue-grey eyes narrowing. ``The White Knight was the one
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attempting to pass judgement on the conspirators, before Hasenbach
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interrupted him.''
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I leaned forward in my seat, feeling a mixture of surprise and respect
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ripple through the other two as well.
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``She told the hatchet man of the Choir of Judgement to step out?'' I
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said, and a heartbeat later my stomach sunk. ``Shit. \emph{Shit}.''
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``Catherine?'' Vivienne asked, sounding surprise. ``I thought you'd be
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pleased. It shows great adherence to principles in accord with, well,
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the Accords.''
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Hakram had been with me longest and was most familiar with my way of
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thinking. He got it first.
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``It shows will and fearlessness, as well as strong belief,'' Adjutant
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said. ``And it is a powerful story: we know what brew these are the
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ingredient for.''
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``Better than even odds she got a Name out of that,'' I cursed. ``Can
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you really see the White Knight backing down otherwise?''
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And that was an issue, because if Cordelia had come into a Name then the
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Wandering Bard could now reach her at will. Fresh off her transition
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she'd be flush with power and confidence, if hers was anything like
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mine, which would make her harder to influence in some ways and
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significantly easier in others. Especially if the Augur vouched for the
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Bard, which unfortunately seemed quite possible. Hasenbach wouldn't have
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years of history with the Intercessor, though, no ironclad trust. I
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could work with that if I moved quick enough, which it seemed I'd have
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to.
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``That is the end of the notion of Named being excluded from ruling, I'd
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say,'' Akua calmly mused. ``That clause is dead in the water, if First
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Prince is now more than a mere title.''
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Wouldn't be First Prince, I thought. Too weak a story, too many strings
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attached. A Name that could be made illegitimate by a vote of the
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Highest Assembly, that had to be sanctioned by such a vote in the first
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place? No, it'd never form properly unless. It'd be something along one
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of the few lines the disparate peoples of Procer had in common belief.
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If not for the House of Light apparently being part of the conspiracy I
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would have bet on it being from holy scripture, but as things stood it'd
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probably drawn on a narrower stripe of commonality. The Fair Prince,
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maybe? Procer didn't really have any strong unifying stories, which made
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it difficult to predict. No point in guessing when I knew so little.
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``We'll see,'' I grunted. ``There's rule and then there's rule.''
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Wizards of the West had been the royal wizards of Callow for centuries
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and wielded both wealth and influence as well as their magic, but they'd
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not owned land and only rarely commanded armies. I might have to
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compromise on the degree of power Named were allowed in rulership, but
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simply flying a white flag over the matter wasn't in the cards.
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``Rumours are split as to who is responsible for all this,'' Vivienne
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said. ``You are prominent among them, Catherine, but both the Black
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Knight and the Dead King are preferred culprits. My people believe that
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the First Prince is actively encouraging the perception this was the
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work of the Hidden Horror, for both political and diplomatic reasons.''
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``She's discrediting the priests,'' Adjutant said, huffing out soft
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laughter. ``They can't be holy men, if they were the pawns of the Dead
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King.''
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``Preparing for a purge, you think?'' I asked. ``She hangs the Holies
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and the House of Light in Procer is essentially leaderless. Given the
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times, the House might look to a hero or the Assembly for leadership
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until they've managed to name a fresh batch of replacements.''
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I cocked my head to the side. There weren't a lot of prominent priestly
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Named, at the moment. The Grey Pilgrim, arguably, but he was effectively
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Levantine royalty so it was doubtful Procerans would fall behind him.
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Roland was Alamans, but also a wizard, and what Proceran heroes were
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there aside from him? There'd been some knightly man at the Battle of
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the Camps, if he was still alive, and I vaguely remembered the Forsworn
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Healer working with Proceran priests on the shield trick that'd fucked
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us on the first day, but I knew next to nothing about that hero save for
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the obvious.
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``The diplomatic benefits are obvious,'' Akua said. ``If these Holies --
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ah, claiming for the silent Heavens, now there's a lovely swindle --
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were the pawns of Keter, then everything they have done in the last few
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years is suspect. Including naming you as Arch-heretic of the East.''
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``You sound a little sad,'' I accused.
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``Oh, it'll be useful for negotiations,'' the shade said. ``But such an
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epithet is quite prestigious in certain parts, you know.''
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``The benefits of a retraction with Calernia at large outweigh the
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prestige it gained her in Praes,'' Hakram said.
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``I would not dare imply otherwise, Adjutant,'' Akua said, gracefully
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dipping her head.
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``It'll cost them, though,'' Vivienne suddenly said. ``It was a greater
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conclave that declared you Arch-heretic, not just the Procerans: the
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Speakers from Ashur and the Lanterns from the Dominion were also
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involved.''
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``If I'm reading the Pilgrim right, the Lanterns might actually be
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grateful for the excuse,'' I said. ``They're having a hard time
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reconciling it with Mercy not smiting me to ash. Their only way out is
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saying I tricked the Ophanim, which no one wants to roll the dice one
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while they're here to disagree.''
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``She's still effectively saying that her priesthood alone, of all the
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western ones, was compromised by the Dead King before making it shoulder
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the whole blame for the nomination,'' Vivienne said. ``It's a massive
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loss of face for the Proceran House, Cat.''
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``You believe the First Prince wants to revisit the balance of power set
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by the Liturgical Wars,'' Akua said, sounding surprised but also a tad
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intrigued. ``Arguably, Cordelia Hasenbach has been scrupulously
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observant of the authority of the House of Light until now. Even when it
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was at her detriment.''
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``That was before they took a swing at her,'' I said. ``And they've been
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at odds with her policies for some time, too. I'm not necessarily
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agreeing with what Vivienne is saying but measures she would have balked
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at a few months ago might be on the table now.''
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``It would go some way in explaining her insistence on strict lawfulness
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in dealing with the conspiracy,'' Hakram said. ``It allows her to drag
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the Holies through trials before the Highest Assembly, bringing out the
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ugly details of how they tried to meddle with the secular powers. She'll
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get support from powers that might usually be on the fence, even the
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royals close to the House won't want to let it stay in a position to try
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this again.''
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``Public trials of priests while we're at war with the Dead King?'' I
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said. ``That could get messy. Not sure she'd risk that. Traitors or not,
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they're House. People won't be comfortable with priests in front of a
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tribunal when the Dead are the gate.''
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``I'd expect her to go for property over privileges, if she does act,''
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Akua noted. ``All those monasteries and abbeys with attendant lands. The
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tax emptions as well. The war efforts would justify the measures and
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leave the appearance of the old order intact while severely curtailing
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the influence of the House in truth.''
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``Ultimately, so long as it does not affect her ability to negotiate
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with us it is only somewhat relevant to our affairs,'' Hakram finally
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said.
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``Our stance going forward hasn't changed,'' I agreed. ``An additional
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degree of caution, maybe, but if Hasenbach is able to keep the White
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Knight under control it's not a major concern.''
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``I'd prefer if he wasn't there at all,'' Vivienne sighed. ``Now the
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Tyrant gets his trial. We could have put him off for months if the
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Knight had stayed away.''
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``Not sure I'd want to find out what Kairos might do to get him to hurry
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up, considering he began a war with Procer just to get him there,'' I
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said. ``Obviously we'll need to keep a close eye on him, Vivs, which is
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why your Jacks-''
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It was a pleasant surprise to have a door to be knocked on, after the
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Everdark and the fields of Iserre. Adjutant bade our sentry to enter,
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and the young orc in legionary armour passed a message. The Carrion Lord
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requested audience and had mentioned he was bringing an old friend.
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\emph{Well now}, I thought. The Jacks had done admirably well, all
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things considered, but it wouldn't beat hearing of this madness straight
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from the horse's mouth.
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Time to see what the Scribe had to say for herself.
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