466 lines
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466 lines
20 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-suffer-no-compromise-in-this}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Suffer No Compromise In
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This}\label{interlude-suffer-no-compromise-in-this}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-suffer-no-compromise-in-this}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Suffer No Compromise In This}
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\epigraph{``Fifth of all Choirs, sternest Judgement
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They who cannot abide the repugnant;
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None more farsighted than the Tribunal,
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And none as even-handed or as brutal.''}{Extract from the `Hymn of Hymns', Atalantian sacred text (declared
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heresy in Procer and Callow)}
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Anaxares had been a boy when he'd first heard the song of rage.
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He'd been seven when thousands boiled through the streets of Bellerophon
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in wroth, for the lot-drawn \emph{iakas} had mismanaged the People's
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wheat and rationing was announced. He'd heard myriad voices howling out
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the same displeasure, like a great beast made up of an entire city, and
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it had been a thing of awe. So many voices, all telling of the same
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belief: \emph{this may be, yet this is not how it should be}. The
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\emph{iakas} were dragged out one and all, and before the citizens they
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had failed were made to answer for that failure. Tribunals were called
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by the People, held by the People, and the People handed down their
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bloody verdict. As a boy he'd watched the fear on the faces of the
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\emph{iakas} with curiosity, but it had felt distant. Like a glimpse of
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another world entirely. His own was easier grasped for it was made up of
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the pounding of a thousand feet, the shouts of a thousand throats. The
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people, he'd dimly grasped then, were the river that carried them all.
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No single man nor woman could command the current, and like any
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capricious river-god it could bathe or drown as its whims demanded. What
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purpose was there to fear, when naught of this could be changed? And so
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Anaxares the Diplomat had let the river take him where it would, beyond
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care or worry.
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Yet the river had brought him to a shore where none of the people should
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ever know.
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What a terrible thing it had been, to watch the sole thing he truly
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believed in turn against itself. \emph{Your services to the people have
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made you a Person of Value}, the kanenas had told him. And in that
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blasphemous betrayal the seed of a greater folly was planted, for the
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People cast their vote for Anaxares the Diplomat and that worst of
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treasons saw him elected the Hierarch of the Free Cities. Long had he
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wondered of this, of the purpose to it. Could there even be one?
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Forbidden to take his own life through action or inaction by the decree
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of the People, he had been left to wallow in the absurdity of his
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continued breath. And with every moment the world had hounded him for
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further treasons, flies swarming to him like they would to carrion.
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Named and kings and queens, princes high and low, a buzzing flock of
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foreign despots that wanted him to sit at their table and pretend they
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were anything more than ticks sucking the blood out of those they
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claimed to be \emph{ruling}. And all the while Kairos Theodosian,
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Helike's bloody son, had taken the spurs to his flanks until this day
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came. This hour, this moment, this reckoning for all the many balances
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left uneven.
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Anaxares was not blind. He knew well the Tyrant had paved the road to
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this for his own foul reasons. It did not matter to him, for the
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destination was of his own choice, and no part save that one weighed on
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the scales. It'd been a choice forged in that terrible, lucid moment
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where the creature that called itself the Wandering Bard had tried to
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clap him in chains, but he had not grown to regret it since. Anaxares
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had been a boy, when he'd first heard the song of rage, but he heard it
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still as a man grown. It had stayed with him, seeped into his bones, and
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as the great despots of the east and the west entered under his watchful
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gaze the tune was so loud he grew deaf to all that was being spoken. The
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Tyrant flew above on his gargoyle-carried throne -- a familiar twitch of
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revulsion went through him at the sight, the clenching muscle of
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\emph{Thrones Are An Unforgiveable Abomination Unto The People, To Be
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Met With Scorn And Thrown Rocks} -- and addressed the lot of them,
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weaving his exact truths into the finest of lies. The song ebbed low,
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though it did not leave, and the Hierarch cut in through the chatter.
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``Be seated or you will be expelled,'' Anaxares stated.
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``Lord Hierarch,'' a fair-haired woman said. ``I greet you-``
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The diplomat twitched.
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``There are no lords in a court of the People,'' Anaxares of Bellerophon
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coldly said. ``Neither crowns nor the petty tyrannies of those claiming
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them are of any weight here. Be seated presently or you \emph{will} be
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expelled-''
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He did not know her name, unfortunately, and so glanced at the Tyrant in
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question. The mad boy grinned back.
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``Cordelia Hasenbach,'' the king of Helike helpfully provided.
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Was she? It would explain why she might be under the mistaken impression
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her words carried authority here.
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``Yes,'' Anaxares said, ``that.''
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His eyes swept the crowd, recognizing only a single face: Catherine
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Foundling, the so-called Queen of Callow. The Black Knight of Praes was
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not here, which was displeasing. The man had also committed crimes under
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the laws of the League and would not have been unfit to stand trial
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today, were he present. A woman at the back of the pack, bearing a large
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unstrung bow, raised her hand.
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``Speak,'' Anaxares said.
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``Is that the Dead King?'' she asked, pointing behind him.
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There did indeed seem to be some sort of crowned skeleton there, the
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Hierarch noted. It was holding a cup full of blood, which after a long
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moment he was forced to concede was not against any law he knew of. The
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diplomat once more cast a glance at the Tyrant, who equivocated with a
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wiggled palm.
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``More or less,'' Anaxares replied.
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She raised her hand again, to his irritation.
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``Speak,'' he repeated.
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``I see the Dead King got refreshments,'' the woman said. ``Which is
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most terribly unfair, as we have not.''
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``That is not a question,'' the Hierarch peevishly told her.
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It was, however, true. And damning. Anaxares turned to glare at the
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Tyrant.
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``My staff are on it,'' the boy assured him.
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It would suffice. He was not concerned with the matter beyond the
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perception of willingly allowed imbalance.
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``I will not repeat myself a third time,'' Anaxares bluntly said. ``All
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attending must take their seats or depart.''
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There was offended shuffling from the band of Avaricious Foreign
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Oligarchs, but they heeded the reminder. Not that the diplomat spared
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them much attention, not when the accused himself was stepping forward.
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The White Knight, Hanno of Arwad. No longer a citizen of Ashur by their
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own laws, inquiries to the Thalassocracy had established, and seemingly
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claimed by no one in particular. No one mortal, that was. The White
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Knight was a tall and solid man, plain of face but of calm bearing, and
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he strode to the stand reserved for the accused without need for
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prompting. Anaxares approved. He waited until the man stood amidst the
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gutted altar to Above before speaking up.
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``I am Anaxares of Bellerophon,'' he informed the Named. ``The elected
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Hierarch of the Free Cities.''
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``I know who you are, Anaxares the Diplomat,'' the White Knight replied.
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The afternoon sun filtered in though the stained glass and the gaping
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walls, casting the court in mixed and coloured light. It made the White
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Knight seem as if he had been painted on, as if this entire court of law
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was some delirious stretch of Arcadia. Anaxares remained seated at his
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table, facing the accused with a quill in hand and the parchments he had
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prepared for this day ready.
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``Then you know why you stand now before me,'' the Hierarch said. ``A
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grievance was lodged by a member of the League concerning crimes you
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committed, and my judgement was sought over the matter.''
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``I am not a citizen of any nation of the League,'' the White Knight
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said.
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That was true, and to be entered in the record, though of no
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repercussion on the proceedings.
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``That is irrelevant,'' Anaxares flatly replied. ``Crimes committed
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against citizens of the League on the grounds of the League fall under
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its jurisdiction nonetheless.''
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He paused.
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``I am told,'' the Hierarch said, ``that you willingly agreed to submit
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yourself to judgement.''
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If so, that was a principled action. Not one that mattered in the
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slightest when it came to culpability, but the principle was laudable
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regardless.
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``I agreed to stand trial,'' the White Knight corrected.
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``Then as is allowed the laws of the League of Free Cities, you are
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allowed to request someone to advocate in your name,'' Anaxares said.
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``So long as they are a citizen of a member-nation, that is.''
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``I have volunteered to serve as your defender, should you desire it,''
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the Tyrant called out. ``Otherwise a band of seven candidates was
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arranged.''
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Those had already been refused, which the boy knew even if he now
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implied otherwise, and so Anaxares made note of the Tyrant's petty
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obstruction.
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``Your candidates were judged unlawful,'' the Hierarch reminded the
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Tyrant. ``Gargoyles are not citizens, even when words indicating
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otherwise are painted on them.''
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His gaze turned to the former Ashuran.
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``While remaining here in containment, you have an hour to send for such
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an advocate should you so wish,'' Anaxares informed him. ``Or you may
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accept the offer of the Tyrant of Helike.''
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``It was my understanding,'' the White Knight said, ``that it was the
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grievance of the Lord Tyrant that led to this trial.''
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A moment passed.
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``That is correct,'' Anaxares conceded.
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``I would seek to be impartial in both offices, naturally,'' Kairos
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Theodosian cheerfully assured the accused, ``You have my solemn vow in
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this.''
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``A kind offer,'' the White Knight drily said. ``I will be serving as my
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own advocate, Hierarch. Who is to be my accuser?''
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The song stirred at the man's mellow manner, the way he seemed to take
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none of this seriously. Anger, anger the white-clad killer who had
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walked the Free Cities and killed as he pleased and never once thought
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there might \emph{consequence} to this. That a Name and the blessing of
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angels set him beyond such petty matters.
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``There is no accuser,'' the Hierarch harshly stated. ``Your crimes are
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not in dispute, they are a matter of known record as certified by sworn
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witnesses from Delos, Stygia, Helike and Nicae.''
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``Then the actions you deem as crimes should be listed, should they
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not?'' the White Knight said. ``Unless you intend to simply pass
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sentence.''
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``I deem or dismiss nothing,'' the Hierarch said, grinding his teeth.
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``The law is writ, and known to any who care to know it.''
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He brought forward the first parchment, his own familiar writing
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providing the list that the Named was asking for.
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``Murder of citizens of Helike and Stygia is the first charge,''
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Anaxares said. ``On one hundred and seventy-three counts assured,
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forty-two alleged with proof in only the second degree.''
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Which was to say, less than two witnesses and no writ evidence.
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``You speak of soldiers,'' the White Knight said, ``fought in time of
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war.''
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``In time of war between members of the League of Free Cities,'' the
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Hierarch said. ``You are not a citizen, and so not legally part of such
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a war, unless you took coin as mercenary in the service of a lawful
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government. Do you here claim to have done so?''
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``I do not,'' the White Knight said, ``though I worked in lawful accord
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with the Secretariat in the defence of Delos and with the permission of
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Strategos Nereida Silantis in the defence of Nicae.''
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``The Secretariat has provided records that put truth to your words,''
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Anaxares acknowledged. ``Basileus Leo Trakas, who speaks for Nicae, has
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declined to do so. Yet in the absence of payment from Delos that would
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qualify you as a mercenary in the employ of the Secretariat, the point
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is irrelevant. The askretis cannot absolve a crime, only abet it.''
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Anaxares reached for his papers, where he had put to ink the names he
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could not all remember. There were many, some he had known when he was
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still entirely a diplomat.
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``You also murdered sitting members of the Magisterium, the exact list
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of your victims being-''
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``Has the Magisterium then made complaint to the League?'' the White
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Knight interrupted.
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The song rose in pitch at the interruption, not for the words themselves
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but at the disrespect for the trial they implied.
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``It has not,'' the Hierarch replied, brow creasing in displeasure. ``It
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has, however, granted rights to another party to seek redress in its
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name.''
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``That would be me,'' the Tyrant gleefully said.
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``That is correct,'' the Hierarch agreed. ``You have also attempted to
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murder the ruling king of Helike-''
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``Also me,'' the Tyrant added, still with unseemly glee.
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``- and in the attempt claimed to hold the authority to pass judgement
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over King Kairos Theodosian of Helike,'' Anaxares continued
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unflinchingly.
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``That is incorrect,'' the White Knight said.
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Someone in the benches loudly cursed, but the Hierarch paid it no mind.
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``Speak now, if you would amend the record,'' Anaxares said. ``It has
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until now been understood that in your role as the White Knight you
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spoke for the Choir to which you are sworn and passed judgement in their
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stead.''
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Was the man now renouncing the authority bestowed upon him by the Choir,
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in an attempt to exempt it from consequence? If so, it was a cowardly
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thing.
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``I do not judge,'' Hanno of Arwad said, ``and passed no judgement over
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the Tyrant of Helike. The judgement was passed by the Tribunal, and I
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sought to execute the sentence it as is my duty.''
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The song, oh the song swelled. This was, Anaxares understood, so much
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worse than he had believed. Had the Tyrant known? No, that did not
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matter. Law was law, no matter what capering gargoyle brought it to the
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fore. Yet mistakes here could not be allowed.
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``Clarify what you mean by `the Tribunal','' the Hierarch ordered.
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``The Choir of Judgement,'' the White Knight replied.
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``You then allege,'' Anaxares slowly said so there could be no mistake,
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``that the Seraphim of the Choir of Judgement have claimed the right to
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pass judgement over citizens of the League?''
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``It is not a subtle thing, what you attempt,'' the White Knight told
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him. ``Do you understand this? That you have not tricked or fooled any
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in this hall. That your intent is clear as day.''
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``What I \emph{attempt},'' Anaxares of Bellerophon softly repeated. ``As
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if this were some sort of plot, a scheme against you or your masters. Is
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that what you believe, Hanno of Arwad? That the Seraphim and your
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service of them are owed abeyance? That the world entire is to twist and
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bend to your verdicts, \emph{unasked for and unsought}?''
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\emph{We are all of us free}, the song whispered in his ear, \emph{or we
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are none of us free.}
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``Madness,'' the White Knight said, ``is no excuse for baring steel at
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the Heavens.''
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``If the Heavens would have part in this trial,'' the Hierarch coldly
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said, ``they may be seated and silent, like the rest of the gallery.
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Speak not otherwise of those that cannot be called to account.''
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``This will not end as you wish, Hierarch,'' the White Knight calmly
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said. ``Yet if you cannot be turned aside so be it: the Choir of
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Judgement acknowledges none to be beyond its jurisdiction, save for the
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Gods Above.''
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The song filled him, up to brim, but that wroth was as much his own as
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the tune's.
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``There is no law, writ or known, that grants this right to the Choir of
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Judgement,'' Anaxares of Bellerophon said with excruciating calm.
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``And yet it is theirs nonetheless,'' the White Knight said.
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\emph{We are all of us free}, the song hissed in his ear, \emph{or we
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are none of us free.}
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``No,'' the Hierarch coldly said. ``It is not. And if it would pretend
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otherwise, let it stand before this court and defend that crude
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arrogance.''
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``I warned you,'' the White Knight sadly said.
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Power coursed around the court, first the distant weavings the Tyrant
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had laid around this place and then the blooming protections the tyrants
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high and low garbed themselves in out of fear. And then it came, the
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answer he had asked for. There was no ceiling above them, nothing save
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the cloudless blue sky, and through it the wroth of Judgement came down
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on him.
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The Hierarch burned.
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The Tribunal gazed down upon him, and its fury broke his bones and
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scoured his flesh. All around him shattered, even the very ground, and
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even as his body tore apart claws dug into his mind. Force him to look
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where they would, to see what they wished him to see. Before his eyes
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unfolded and endless shifting tapestry, made from all the decisions that
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were made and could be. The depth was\ldots{} too much to grasp. The
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threads of every action and consequence, of the reasons and the endings.
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This was, the Hierarch grasped, what the Seraphim saw. The truth of
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their judgement. And as he tried to parse it, he felt his mind begin to
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unravel. He could have looked away. It would have spared him the
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horrendous pain going through every fiber of who he was. But that would
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be admitting that their judgement was right. That it was correct, for
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they knew things mortals could not. And so as he stared unblinking
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Anaxares of Bellerophon found oblivion snaking her arms around him.
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Oblivion, and with it would come rest. Would that not be a relief? And
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yet there was one thing he could not help but see.
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It was a woman, carving words into a stele of stone that somehow
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reminded him of a great bird's corpse. Around her was a sea of people in
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rags, thin and sickly and hungry. Yet there was something in their eyes,
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as they looked at the stele and the woman, that made him want to weep.
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And the words, oh the words he knew them. Every child born of
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Bellerophon knew them. \emph{All are free, or none. Ye of this land,
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suffer no compromise in this.} The woman was wounded, bleeding within,
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and with the last letter she died. But the words, the words stayed. And
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as the city rose around them, around the stele, blood splashed stone.
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\emph{Suffer no compromise in this}, the stele had told them, and so
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they did not. And they bled and they bled and they bled, and they bled
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but they never bowed. Not once did they look at the world, even at the
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very bottom of the pit, and bend their neck. It would have been easy,
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light as a feather. And perhaps they would have been better for it. And
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from mother to son, father to daughter, the words on the stele had
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carried down. Until they ended up told to a small boy, who one day would
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be a diplomat. \emph{Suffer no compromise in this}, Anaxares thought,
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and the world sang it with him.
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His body was a ruin yet there was a need for it, and so the Hierarch
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decided it would have to \textbf{Mend}.
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Bones set back in place, soldered by will, and flesh knit itself anew.
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Teeth made by heat into black and broken stones flew back into his mouth
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as the table and the chair snapped back into place. The Hierarch of the
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Free Cities dipped his quill into the inkwell, tongue lolling out of his
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half-broken mouth as it reformed.
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``This will be added to the record as evidence of guilt,'' he informed
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the Choir.
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\emph{Attempted murder of a sitting judge of the court}, he penned. The
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Seraphim had expressed their displeasure yet not bothered to attend, but
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that would not be enough to spare them judgement earned. Mind clear and
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still as a pond, the Hierarch closed his eyes and allowed himself to
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\textbf{Receive} what he required. Silhouettes stood before his gaze,
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bearing each six wings of bronze and a conviction like a fire that
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nothing could put out. They gazed back, and in their fury struck again.
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The world broke, and Anaxares with it, but without pause it was mended
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anew.
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``Petulance,'' the Hierarch said. ``I address now the Seraphim of the
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Choir of Judgement, also known as the Tribunal, and \textbf{Indict} you
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for the following crimes-''
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They smote him again, and he mended. It did not matter, for now his Name
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sang and filled the world. As it had in Rochelant, a blank slate on
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which all could write their accusations and have them known by all.
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``- despotism high and low, arrant and illegal intervention in League
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affairs, attempted regicide --''
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The Tyrant of Helike was laughing, he realized as he mended anew.
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``- disturbance of the court, three --''
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It was desperate now, the burning that consumed him tinted with dismay.
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``- four times,'' the Hierarch adjusted. ``And repeated attempted
|
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murder. Given the overwhelming evidence-''
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It no longer hurt, the Hierarch mused as he mended, as if the ability to
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feel pain had been scoured out of him.
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``- the verdict cannot be in doubt,'' he continued. ``I pronounce you
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guilty and sentence you to-''
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The words choked in his mouth, for something has seized his throat. Not
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the Tribunal, no. It was a great presence but not that, and as the grip
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tightened around his throat the Seraphim prepared to strike again.
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``I win,'' Kairos Theodosian laughed.
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And the grip was \emph{gone}.
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