590 lines
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590 lines
30 KiB
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\hypertarget{epilogue}{%
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\chapter*{Epilogue}\label{epilogue}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{epilogue}} \chaptermark{Epilogue}
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\epigraph{``And on the first day of the year four hundred and ninety-three
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after the Declaration did a stranger slay High Lord Baraka Sahelian in
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the streets of Wolof, and she did not flee. Instead she challenged the
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Sahelians in such a manner: `Come now, you who believe you might triumph
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over me, that I might teach you the error of your ways.'\,''}{Extract from the Scroll of Dominion, twenty-fourth of the Secret
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Histories of Praes}
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Inch by painful inch, Malicia had dragged the Dread Empire of Praes out
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of the pit and herself along with it.
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She allowed herself to feel a sliver of pride over that, though only for
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a passing moment. To grow conceited over victories would signal the
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beginning of a swift descent. Yet victories she had won, slowly and
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carefully laying the foundation for them until they could be brought to
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bear against her enemies. The throne that had been crumbling under her
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had been forged anew by the fresh blood she'd spilled abroad: watching
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the Imperial Court through the enchanted wall that said to be the work
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of Dread Emperor Sorcerous himself, Malicia read the lips of the
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highborn gathered before her. Rumours had swelled of the developments in
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Salia and the Free Cities. The sudden reverses against the Grand
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Alliance only echoed more loudly for the way it had before seemed on the
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rise to pre-eminence, restoring the prestige eroded by Ashuran
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depredations and the losses in Thalassina and Foramen. Malicia did not
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rejoice of this, for she knew every speck of that clout would be needed
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for what was yet to come. Though in dark days the High Seats and lesser
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nobles were more easily convinced of great changes, there were many who
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would balk at the mere setting of a precedent.
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The crop before her, however, looked ripe for harvest. High Lady Abreha
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Mirembe's absence, for Alaya had refused to relieve her from her duties
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as Governess of the Blessed Isle, had naturally prompted protest from
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Aksum and the Mirembe. In attempt to make her influence keenly felt
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Abreha had ordered the lords and ladies sworn to Askum to refrain from
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attending court until she was summoned back to Ater, but to Malicia's
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eye this had backfired. Lord Kosu's lion-like mane of hair could be
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picked out from the crowd, as could Lady Sesay's famous enchanted dress
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of pure gold. Those two ranked among the most powerful vassals to Aksum,
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and another half dozen lesser nobility sworn to Abreha had ignored her
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edict and attended regardless. None whose holdings were close to the
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city of Aksum, for Abreha Mirembe's wrath would run hot at the defiance,
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but enough that the High Lady of Aksum's position was revealed for the
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worsening drought that it was. A year ago, Abreha had been but a few
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manoeuvres of having herself proclaimed Chancellor regardless of
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Malicia's opinion of the matter. Now the vultures were beginning to
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circle her, her defeats at the hands of General Sacker when she'd
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attempted to intervene in Callow having soured her position.
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In the wake of the recall of the inaptly named Legions-in-Exile, the
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highborn of Praes had come to believe the entire affair a long-reaching
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scheme of hers and General Sacker one of her agents in humbling High
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Lady Abreha. Perhaps if Sacker's soldiers had not so neatly slaughtered
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the Askum forward parties and driven the refugees back to the Blessed
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Isle -- where they must now be fed at the expense of Abreha -- her
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influence could have been salvaged, but the defeats had been both swift
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and utter. The Governess of the Blessed Isle was then left with the
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dilemma of either pursuing a punitive campaign into Callow and risking
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starting a war with Laure or admitting herself to have been almost
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contemptuously swatted down. Abreha had attempted to sidestep the issue
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by accusing General Sacker of treason, which the goblin general had
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answered in kind, which had been trouble at the time. Amadeus was a
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rebel in all but name and conceding to the shadow of his influence would
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have been a grave mistake. By stretching out giving answer, however,
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Malicia had been able to feign control of the situation and leave the
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High Lady of Aksum's support to wither on the vine.
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With the currents within Praes mastered, it had been time turn her full
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efforts outwards. The League of Free Cities had been the easiest grounds
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to make gains in, and so where she had first concentrated her efforts.
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It had swiftly become clear that Penthes could be bought, courtesy of
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Amadeus sowing crippling chaos across the nobility during his last visit
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and Kairos Theodosian then pouring oil on the fire. Reaching an accord
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with the Tyrant of Helike had proved necessary, for through the Hierarch
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he wielded great influence over the rest of the League. They'd agreed on
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the Exarch-claimants that should be spared, and in binding them
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irremediably through participation in a darker scheme: the deployment of
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Still Water against the fleets of Nicae. From there, it was only a
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matter of ensuring that her position in the Free Cities was strong
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enough Kairos Theodosia's coming treachery could inflict only minor
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damage. The Magisterium was approached and promised protection from
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invasion until it had finished its cycle of replenishment for the Spears
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of Stygia. The deal had to be further sweetened with magical tomes, but
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in principle Malicia had no objection to an empowered Magisterium tying
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down the resources of neighbouring city-states.
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Antagonizing Atalante had been as simple as inciting the Tyrant and
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other greats of the League to constantly and publicly slight some of
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their most beloved preachers, culminating in their delegation being
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forced to carry a nailed manuscript of the Book of All Things as a
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formal member during the conference in Salia. The utter humiliation and
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the rest of the League's acquiescence to it had made them walk away from
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the situation the moment they were no longer bound by law to be
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involved. The Secretariat's longs-standing tendency to state neutrality
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when its interests were not being threatened -- as well as the dire
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state of its coffers after maintaining so many mercenaries in its
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service for so long -- meant that so long as they were not provoked they
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could be counted on to be neutral as well. All that was required then to
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utterly isolate the Tyrant of Helike had been to sever or turn Nicae
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from the rest, which Theodosian might have assumed to be difficult given
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their shared treachery against the city and its young Basileus. And it
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had been a thorny problem for Malicia, she'd admit, at least until
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Catherine had returned to the surface and begun reminding the rest of
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Calernia of the looming threat she represented.
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It'd only been a question of aiming at Basileus Leo Trakas in
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particular, from there, and he was not all that complicated a man.
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The deceased Strategos whose authority he'd usurped had been a close
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ally of Cordelia Hasenbach, and now so was Catherine Foundling. A
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foundation for mistrust. She'd also had dealings with the Tyrant, at the
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best of times his enemy as well as his ally, and made the leading heroic
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lights of the Grand Alliance defer to her will several times. Best of
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all she had the soul of Akua Sahelian, the sole known user of Still
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Water, bound to her service. It'd not been all that difficult to tip
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wariness into fear and then fear into the making of mistakes. Not that
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her victory there had been as complete as it could have been, Malicia
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silently conceded. Kairos Theodosian had risen from the grave to spit on
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her plans one last time, a poisonous snake even in death. The Eyes had
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confirmed that one of his two foremost generals had sworn herself to the
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war against Keter while the other, General Basilia, had openly declared
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war on Penthes. A weakened Helike might be able to maul the even more
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desolate Nicae, should it support Penthes, but it would not find Penthes
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itself so easy a prey. The distance between the city-states was
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significant and marching there would involve making pacts with the
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states between them, which Malicia fully intended to sabotage.
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Still, where the League of Cities might have informally been an ally to
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the Dread Empire instead it was likely to spiral into another civil war
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that tied it down for the foreseeable future. In the longer lay of
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things, the Empress would see what might be arranged. If the war went
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badly for General Basilia and her Helikeans, the Magisterium might yet
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be convinced to step in for easy spoils. And if it went well? Then the
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Magisterium it might yet be convinced to step in lest victory allow
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Helike to resume pre-eminence among the League. The Tyrant might have
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allowed his people to reach tall heights while he lived but in his death
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he had left them stranded and surrounded by potential enemies. There
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would be some pleasure in teaching Helike the consequences of its
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actions, Malicia would confess. Kairos Theodosian had been an atrocious
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little prick, convinced he was amusing and that his sneering smugness
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was somehow endearing. It'd been draining to deal with him even when he
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was genuinely trying to cooperate with her, and passing the duties to
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Ime had not been possible: the moment the little shit had sniffed out
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how abhorrent she found him, he'd insisted their bargaining be done only
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between rulers.
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Steps coming from the deeper reach of the hidden corridor the Empress
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still stood in, studying her court as she awaited the proper time to
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enter, shook her out of her thoughts. Ime's pace was brisk, befitting
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urgent news. Malicia did not turn, eyes on the overly lingering
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courtesies Lady Nazar and the younger brother of Lord Salee -- affair or
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scheme? The Salee and Nazar lands bordered one another, lending
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potential weight to either. It would not be the first time Lady Nazar
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allowed a foe's younger sibling into her bed as well as her plans.
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``Speak,'' Malicia said, eyes moving to catch yet another of the
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thousand little details that might allow her to keep the court under her
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thumb.
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``Duchess Kegan had our envoys drawn and quartered,'' Ime said. ``In
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front of cheering crowds.''
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Unpleasant, but not unexpected. The Deoraithe were not an expansionist
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people by nature and with Kegan's appointment to Governess-General of
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Callow they'd begun accruing honours in the kingdom as the duchess
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appointed kin and allies to offices. Competent ones, sadly, which only
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added to the faction's influence. It meant that the Black Queen's
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promise to the Deoraithe of independence-in-all-but-name along with a
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tight military alliance was a very difficult bribe to better.
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``The Legions?'' Malicia asked.
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``The Okoro mages cadres were made welcome by Marshal Nim, and
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construction of the ritual grounds is progressing at a steady pace,''
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Ime replied.
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\emph{Good}, the Empress thought. When the time came and signal was sent
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by the Exile Legions mages, the ritual could be initiated and the armies
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forced back into Creation from these `Twilight Ways'. Returnign exactly
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at the centre of fortified killing ground, manned by her more loyal
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armies. High officers of dubious loyalty would be taken hostage and kept
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at the Tower, the unsalvageable purged and more trustworthy men forced
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in place. Heavy-handed but necessary. The Legions of Terror needed to be
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unshakeably hers before Amadeus returned. It meant more blunt action
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than she would have preferred employing, but in these times such
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bluntness could serve as a reminder of her strength as well.
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``And?'' Malicia asked.
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There would be more. Neither of those reports had been time sensitive.
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``Lord Amadeus has gone missing,'' Ime hesitantly said. ``Neither our
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people in Salia nor in the Army of Callow know where he is. We believe
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Queen Catherine herself is unaware.''
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Alaya stilled.
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``You are certain?'' she said.
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``It is like he vanished into thin air,'' Ime said.
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He was not dead, Alaya decided. She would have\ldots{} felt it, somehow.
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She would have. And though the Empress had been harsh in demonstrating
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to him the futility of defying her, it was no more than he had earned.
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He'd know that, understand how measured the answer had been considering
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the gravity of his mistakes. Had she not held her hand until he claimed
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a right to her very throne? Even allowing for what had no doubt been
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poisonous whispers by Scribe -- who, it was now clear, after decades was
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finally done pretending to be anything but an enemy -- there was no
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light under which those actions could be seen that was anything but a
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betrayal. It was, Malicia knew, better this way. Now there was no longer
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anything let wondered and unspoken, no question of what would happen if
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he turned against her. He had, and he had lost. Swiftly, utterly,
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without ever landing a blow in return. And with that question finally
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laid to rest, they could forge a fresh understanding of who and what
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they were. Amadeus would not have taken his own life over such a thing,
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for sober admissions of his blunders were at the heart of who he was. He
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was still alive, which meant he was coming home. One way or another.
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``It is likely he went into the Twilight Ways,'' the Empress said.
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``Agreed,'' Ime said, standing by her side. ``And though I know it
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displeases you to even consider this, Your Dread Majesty-''
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``He could be returning as a foe,'' Malicia said. ``I am aware.''
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Amadeus yet commanded loyalty with much of the Legions and had many
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sympathizers among the Empire's bureaucracy. Scribe had seen to that.
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Some of the High Seats might be using to use him as a stalking horse for
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their own bid for the Tower, too, High Lady Abreha most of all. There
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might even be some lesser nobles that would genuinely rally to his
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banner, should he raise it. Though despised by most highborn, his tenure
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as her Black Knight had also seen him become widely feared. For some
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that meant respect, especially with families who had martial
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inclinations by tradition. His Duni birth meant most would not even
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consider him a possible claimant, true, but there would be some with
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greater interest in deeds than skin. More worrying were his ties to the
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Clans and the currently rebelling Tribes, though Malicia had already
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begun to check those potential threats with measures of her own.
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``I would win,'' the Dread Empress of Praes said.
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``You would,'' Ime agreed. ``And so I caution you of assassination.''
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Malicia glanced at her spymistress, almost amused.
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``You believe he'd run me through in open court?'' she asked.
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``At this point?'' Ime said. ``Yes. Or, at least, I'm unsure enough of
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the answer I have to consider the possibility.''
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``Without his Name, I could have him frozen with a word,'' Malicia
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noted.
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``That is no reason to expose yourself unduly,'' Ime said.
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``I do not intend to,'' Malicia flatly said. ``I am not a debutante
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thankfully accepting an ally's antidote, Ime. Regardless of his reasons
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he has failed and betrayed me. It will be years before I can even begin
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to trust him as I once did.''
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She paused.
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``But I will not rob myself of what could be restored out of petty
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fear,'' Alaya said. ``He will have a place in my court, should he
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return.''
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What was there left to fear, after all? In Praes, her vise was
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tightening around all who might yet oppose her. In the Free Cities, she
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stood queenmaker and holder of strings as the crows gathered above. In
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the far west she had sown chaos and confusion, stranded for months the
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Army of Callow, and last of all she stood the sole ally of Keter on
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Calernia. The Dead King \emph{needed} her, lest the entire continent
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band against him as the sole crucible of darkness. Lest every hero turn
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north, the sum of every Hell and Heaven march against him. Malicia would
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betray him, in the end. That much had never been in doubt. She would
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betray him the moment the armies of the Grand Alliance were savaged
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beyond ability to harm her, and in the uneasy peace that followed the
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Dread Empire of Praes would stand without peer. Hers to mold into what
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it should be, as she reigned untouchable from atop the Tower.
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The storm had come for Dread Empress Malicia, First of Her Name, and she
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had \emph{beaten} it. She had survived the crucible thrust upon her by
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Below, and now she would claim her dues from Creation.
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``It is time,'' the Empress said, eyes on the court. ``Have them
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readied.''
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``By your will,'' Ime said, bowing low.
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Malicia was left to stand alone, watching her court. Where she would
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soon enter and introduce before the lords and ladies of Praes the
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beginning of a new age. From the Northern Steppes, chieftains had come.
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Blackspear, Graven Bone and Stag-Crowned. Large, powerful clans of the
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southern stretches. Their chieftains had come to be proclaimed Lords of
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the Steppes, empowered to collect tribute in the name of the Tower from
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the other clans while themselves standing exempt of it. There were some
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among the court who would despise this, and what would follow yet more.
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For there was one more awaiting, hidden. She would be presented as the
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very first of her kind: High Lady Wither of Foramen, having renounced
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her former title of Matron as she returned Foramen to the Praesi fold.
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The Great Game, it always changed.
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The only thing that didn't was that Alaya of Satus always, \emph{always}
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won.
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---
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Tariq listened in wonder to the roars of the crowd. Mere days ago the
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people of Salia had been angrily rioting, boiling out onto the streets,
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and yet now the same mob was cheering Cordelia Hasenbach so vociferously
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it seemed as if the very sky above might collapse from the ruckus.
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Merovins Square was considered one of the great works of Procer, the
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great Salian gathering place built over generations of the rule of the
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family of the same name. In the upper reaches of the part of the city
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men called the Joinery, massive arches of pale stone formed a perfect
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circle above great open avenues. Statues and monuments of every stripe
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dotted the square, some so worn by ages that the faces had been eaten
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through by rain and sleet while others were but a few years old. The
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tall, slender monument to the dead of what Procerans called the `Great
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War', for example. The twisted marble, showing a ring of men and women
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both dragging each other up and pushing each other down, had chilled him
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when he'd first glimpsed it. The sculptor has shown great skill in
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making the faces move from triumph to agony and grief under the vagaries
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of the `Ebb and the Flow'. A fitting monument to a bloody civil war.
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And now a young father was hoisting up his daughter so that she could
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peek over the weeping face of a marble woman and have a better look at
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the First Prince addressing the people of Salia. Merovins Squared had
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filled with thousands upon thousands, like a sea of people split by
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elegant islands of stone and metal. From where Tariq stood, under the
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shade of a great roofed terrace overlooking the magnificent wooden
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pulpit from which Cordelia Hasenbach was addressing the crowd, he could
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only barely make out the words the First Prince was speaking. Yet there
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was no mistaking their thundering approval, the way it echoed through
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the sunny afternoon air. He was not the only one who had been invited to
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wait here, far from it. The Grand Alliance's shine must be burnished,
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for the people to put their hope in it, and so the great names had all
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been brought. Young Razin and Aquiline, pretending to be speaking
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politics over wine when they were truly flirting in that heady, hesitant
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way of those still unsure of the affection of the other. Tall and
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serious Yannu Marave, in the cast of whose face Tariq could not help but
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seeing Sintra. Itima Ifriqui, the sole of the Blood could still remember
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him having a full head of hair, though their long acquaintance had
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yielded little fondness. Respect, yes, but the Peregrine had always held
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in distaste the fondness for bloody vengeance of the Brigand's Blood.
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Others too, the seconds of their realms: Princess Rozala Malanza and
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Lady Vivienne Dartwick, seated in the shade and speaking in low tones of
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granaries and treasuries. Tariq's opinion had already been sought over
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the matter of a temporary common treasury for the Grand Alliance, though
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he'd demurred from giving an opinion. It was a sound notion, as far as
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he was concerned, but he must wean the Blood from the habit of seeking
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his council. The chances he would survive the coming war were slim, and
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the surrender of his \emph{crown} had only made him warier of speaking
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on matters of rule. Yet it was the last here on the terrace that his
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eyes lingered over. Hanno of Arwad, once the Sword of Judgement and
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perhaps one day once more, was leaning against the balustrade and look
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down at the crowd. At his side the Black Queen of Callow, hair loose
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down her back and a light smile on her face, was looking down with him
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and speaking without reserve. The easy cordiality that held between the
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two, natural as a sparrow's flight, had surprised him. Perhaps it should
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not have been, for those two had never fought before and for a hero
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sworn to the Seraphim the White Knight could be said to be\ldots{}
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unusual.
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Tariq approached, as much out of curiosity as desire to converse.
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``- wait, so if you recall someone that understood High Arcana, wouldn't
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you-''
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``Only so long as I am within the memories,'' the White Knight replied.
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``Which makes you correct, but the knowledge itself impossible to use.''
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``You still get to learn languages by the fucking basketful, so I
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wouldn't complain,'' Catherine Foundling drily said. ``Even back when I
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still had Learn, it took me months to learn what I knew. Even had to
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learn Chantant the hard way.''
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``I find Tolesian significantly easier,'' Tariq admitted, coming to
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stand at Hanno's side. ``Though that might be because of the
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tradertongue and Lunara loan words.''
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``Everyone should just speak Lower Miezan,'' the Black Queen suggested.
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``Chantant is the single most spoken language on Calernia, I believe,''
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the White Knight said. ``Should it not be the chosen tongue, by virtue
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of this?''
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``It's got more exceptions than a Wasteland loyalty pledge,'' Catherine
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Foundling snorted. ``Over my dead body.''
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The Grey Pilgrim's brow almost rose, for though the Black Queen was
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known as something of a wit and prone to bantering, there seemed to be a
|
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genuine rapport between the two he'd not expected. They were both young
|
|
and attractive, Tariq thought, so perhaps\ldots{} No, he decided,
|
|
flicking them a long and considering glance. The Black Queen had a
|
|
roving eye, a fact he'd heard had been the subject of great interest
|
|
among Proceran royalty, but the White Knight had no reputation for
|
|
dalliances. And seemingly little interest in them, which the Grey
|
|
Pilgrim could only approve of considering the days they lived in. Below
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|
them, the crowd roared again,
|
|
|
|
``The First Prince is in fine form today,'' Tariq said.
|
|
|
|
``She is a gifted speaker,'' Hanno noted. ``As one would expect of a
|
|
woman bearing her title.''
|
|
|
|
``She's offering them hope,'' the Black Queen said. ``She could be
|
|
stumbling over half those sentences and still they'd cheer fit to shake
|
|
the earth.''
|
|
|
|
``The Grand Alliance has lost a founding member, with Ashur,'' Tariq
|
|
cautioned.
|
|
|
|
``The League of Free Cities retreats, or joins our ranks,'' the White
|
|
Knight said. ``And the dreaded Black Queen has been tamed and added to
|
|
our ranks. There is reason to rejoice.''
|
|
|
|
Young Catherine replied with what he believed to be fairly obscene
|
|
language in Kharsum, to Hanno's apparent amusement, but Tariq was
|
|
grimacing. Precious little of the League had joined, no matter the
|
|
posturing, and Tariq mistrusted those that had. General Pallas and her
|
|
ten thousand, the appallingly named \emph{Tyrant's Own}, might not have
|
|
the stomach to truly see through the war to the north. It remained to be
|
|
seen, and soldiers were not to be turned away, but these were not to be
|
|
relied on.
|
|
|
|
``Best for all of us that Cordelia has her day,'' the Black Queen said.
|
|
``If parading us all before the crowd puts some spine back in Procer,
|
|
I'll even smile and say pretty things.''
|
|
|
|
``Your generosity is remarkable,'' Tariq said, only half teasing.
|
|
|
|
Most of her allies had, after all, until recently been at war with her.
|
|
The Peregrine cast a discreet look at young Razin and Aquiline once
|
|
more, heart clenching. Blood, both of them, and that would matter in the
|
|
days to come. But Aquiline Osena had not so long ago tried to kill the
|
|
man she now courted and yet now the smiled softly at one another. Razin
|
|
Tanja, defeated and orphaned, had not been embittered or broken but
|
|
instead risen past what he had been taught. Tariq had heard of his
|
|
words, of the renunciation of the honour killings. Of the harsh words
|
|
he'd spoken at what Levant had become. And Gods, but Tariq was feeling
|
|
his years. His soul had been wounded, and his body was nearing the end
|
|
of its days. There was a future for the Dominion, but it lay not in
|
|
Yannu Marave, who embodied at once the best and the worst of Levant, or
|
|
in Itima Ifriqui's borderlands savagery. Yet those two, the seed of what
|
|
they might yet become, it would need to be nurtured. Protected. And he
|
|
might not live long enough to see this through.
|
|
|
|
``I would, Queen Catherine, ask of you a favour,'' Tariq said.
|
|
|
|
Dark eyes studied him, amusement sliding off her face.
|
|
|
|
``Funny, that,'' the Black Queen said. ``I've been meaning to ask one of
|
|
you as well.''
|
|
|
|
``A trade might be arranged, then,'' the old hero said, pleased. ``When
|
|
the Grand Alliance marches north, you are to be among the great
|
|
warleaders of it.''
|
|
|
|
``Seems likely,'' the young priestess acknowledged.
|
|
|
|
``There are two of mine I would have you take under your wing,'' Tariq
|
|
said. ``Under your protection.''
|
|
|
|
She followed his gaze to Aquiline and Razin.
|
|
|
|
``You've got plans for them,'' the Black Queen said.
|
|
|
|
``It is a new world you would make,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``I will
|
|
not have Levant left behind.''
|
|
|
|
Slowly, she nodded.
|
|
|
|
``I am told you might be one of the few people alive capable of removing
|
|
a compulsion from someone's mind,'' Queen Catherine said.
|
|
|
|
``I have some experience with this,'' Tariq acknowledged.
|
|
|
|
Sorceries to that effect were more easily disrupted, but even alchemies
|
|
and Speaking could be purged if one knew the way. The Peregrine had
|
|
greatly benefitted from the tutelage of the Ophanim in this.
|
|
|
|
``I believe Dread Empress Malicia to have planted commands among several
|
|
officers of the Army of Callow,'' the Black Queen said. ``I'd request
|
|
your assistance in removing them without harming the officers in
|
|
question, which I'm told could be\ldots{} difficult.''
|
|
|
|
``This I would offer free of recompense,'' Tariq frankly said. ``I will
|
|
not begrudge you my hand's work when it is to be used to aid your
|
|
soldiers in fighting for the preservation of mankind.''
|
|
|
|
She seemed surprised, which had him pushing down a grimaced. It had not
|
|
been unfounded a conclusion, but Tariq was attempting to bridge the gap
|
|
and vexed to see how deep he had helped dig this one. The Grey Pilgrim
|
|
was not unaware that there was only so long one could keep treating
|
|
someone as an enemy before they became one in truth.
|
|
|
|
``I'll keep the favour, then,'' the Black Queen said, eyes watchful as
|
|
she studied him.
|
|
|
|
Below the crowd roared anew at some fresh turn of phrase of the First
|
|
Prince. White, Grey and Black, the three of them looked at the lone
|
|
silhouette of Cordelia Hasenbach. The stubborn soul that would not allow
|
|
the Principate to fall to its knees, no matter the coming doom.
|
|
|
|
``The Tower stirs,'' Tariq quietly said. ``The Ophanim whisper of it.''
|
|
|
|
``I suspect,'' the Black Queen quietly said, ``that the Tower is about
|
|
to have a great deal of trouble on its hands.''
|
|
|
|
Suspect. Was it true, then, that she did now know where the Carrion Lord
|
|
had gone?
|
|
|
|
``And if Praes sallies forth?'' the White Knight asked.
|
|
|
|
``Then I will get the east in order the hard way,'' Catherine Foundling
|
|
replied, tone steady as stone.
|
|
|
|
It was a small, almost imperceptible thing. Tariq Fleetfoot saw it
|
|
anyway, as did Hanno of Arwad. A flicker, a spark. When the Queen of
|
|
Callow had spoken the words and meant them, something had begun to take
|
|
shape.
|
|
|
|
A Name, Gods help them all.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was a beautiful realm, Amadeus thought.
|
|
|
|
A summer night unending, starry and warm. The kind of realm that made
|
|
for a pleasant journey even when the sum of your earthly possessions was
|
|
a horse, bundled armour and a fortnight's worth of rations. Bridle in
|
|
hand, sleeves rolled up on his tunic as the sword at his hip moved with
|
|
his leg, he wandered down the road snaking forward through the Twilight
|
|
Ways.
|
|
|
|
Amadeus no longer had his armies, not even his personal guard -- he had
|
|
left them in Catherine's hands, requesting she safeguard them through
|
|
the strife to come.
|
|
|
|
Amadeus no longer had spies, or wealth or even the power of a Name. He
|
|
had sent away Scribe, failed Captain and lost Warlock. Assassin was
|
|
gone, if not from Creation then at least from his service.
|
|
|
|
Alaya would see him kneeling, or forever gone from her sight.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Tabula rasa}, a blank slate. After so many decades, the thought of
|
|
it should have angered him. Should have brought in him despair and
|
|
bitterness, for all he had built went up in smoke. Instead he felt
|
|
relieved. Like a weight had been lifted from his shoulder. It was just
|
|
him, now. Him and a sword and a plan against all the world. He looked up
|
|
at the starry sky and laughed.
|
|
|
|
``Evening, stranger,'' a voice drawled. ``Where might you be headed,
|
|
that it has you in such a merry mood?''
|
|
|
|
Leaning back against a tree, shrouded in darkness, Hye Su was gazing at
|
|
him with mild interest. It'd been years since they last saw each other,
|
|
and she'd hardly changed at all -- save for the burns on the side of her
|
|
face, a mark of Summer challenged but not beaten.
|
|
|
|
``East, I would think,'' Amadeus mused.
|
|
|
|
``Whatever for?'' Ranger asked, tone nonchalant.
|
|
|
|
Voice high and clear, he sang.
|
|
|
|
``The last is strangest, she said to them
|
|
|
|
The easiest and the most solemn
|
|
|
|
For when the tower is yours to claim
|
|
|
|
You will have forgotten why you came.''
|
|
|
|
There was a moment of silence, and then the Lady of the Lake pushed
|
|
herself off the tree.
|
|
|
|
``Might be I'll walk with you a while, then,'' Hye Su said.
|
|
|
|
``I thought you might,'' Amadeus smiled.
|
|
|
|
And into the starry night they went, side by side.
|