435 lines
20 KiB
TeX
435 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-34-seven}{%
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\section{Chapter 34: Seven}\label{chapter-34-seven}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Never once have I betrayed, for such an act first requires the
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extension of trust.''}
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-- Dread Empress Foul II, the Forthright
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\end{quote}
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Now, far be it from me to even remotely imply Kairos Theodosian was not
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at best the worst ally anyone would ever have and at worst essentially a
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malignant disease inflicted on Creation. That said when it came to, uh,
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the sheer number of crowned heads gathering in the Principate at any
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given time then he almost had a point. I'd had Hakram drill me on the
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names and attendant principalities, and still I was pretty sure I had at
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least two of them confused. Both Princess Bertille of Lange and Princess
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Leonor of Valencis were women in their late forties with dark hair and
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tan skin, which considering I'd never spoken a word to either did not
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make differentiating them at a glance easy. Still, it wasn't them that'd
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matter in that throng of royalty. The keystones here were two,
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princesses both. One of them familiar by now: Princess Rozala Malanza of
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Aequitan, who was still glaring at the Tyrant of Helike for his casual
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murder of her illusory form. Kairos seemed genuinely delighted at the
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prospect of having made yet another powerful enemy. The other I'd met
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only once before, when we'd had that pleasant chat under afternoon sun
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where I'd politely asked her and a few thousand riders to turn back.
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Princess Sophie Louvroy of Lyonis, one of Hasenbach's staunchest
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partisans in Procer and I suspected the check sent on Rozala in case her
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command of a large army so close to Salia prompted\ldots{} ambitions.
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Where Princess Rozala was dark-haired and dark-eyed, tall yet curvy in
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the way that classical Arlesite beauties tended to be, Princess Sophie
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was a pale blonder with blue eyes and a narrow face. The Princess of
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Lyonis was a few years older, I knew from the reports of the Jacks, but
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it was hard to tell at a glance. They were not the oldest of the seven
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royals standing revealed in the eclipse's gloom, nor those ruling the
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wealthiest or most influential principalities, yet there were no denying
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it was they who shared the reins of authority. Princess Sophie did so as
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the First Prince's eyes and ear in the south, while if Vivienne's spies
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had it right then Princess Rozala was considered the informal heiress to
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the coalition of crowns that Prince Amadis Milenan had laboriously
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assembled. Since the Battle of the Camps said Prince of Iserre had been
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cooling his heels in the hands of the Kingdom of Callow as a prisoner,
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so given the ever-fluid nature of Proceran politics it was only natural
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a successor had emerged. They could do worse, silently conceded. Malanza
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was a skilled commander, and though no great diplomat she was not
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without allure. It would be easy enough to contrast her solid military
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record to Cordelia Hasenbach's own lack of anything similar and reliance
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on her uncle the Iron Prince for all things warfare.
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I doubted they'd ever have the votes to seriously threaten Cordelia in
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the Highest Assembly, but as a bloc of opposition headed by Princess
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Rozala they could be a force to reckon with.
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``This is rank madness,'' a dark-haired woman said.
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That accent was Alamans, not Arlesite, which should mean I was looking
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at Princess Bertille of Lange.
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``It is certainly dubious,'' Princess Sophie of Lyonis agreed, watching
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me warily.
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That sounded like a refusal in the making, and from one of the two
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people I would much prefer to be in agreement instead of opposition. It
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would establish whether what followed would be known as a grave
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diplomatic incident or a heroic bargain struck in the face of despair.
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``The exact meaning of giving away a crown are still unclear,'' Prince
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Louis of Creusens calmly said.
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The Prince of Creusens was one of Amadis' -- now Rozala's perhaps -- and
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somehow managed to make a suit of armour quite obviously fitted to him
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look too large for his frame. He had a scholarly look about him, and his
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russet eyes were calm even if half his face was a swelling bruise and he
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was being careful not to put weight on one of his legs. Too
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delicate-looking a man for me to find him attractive, I thought, but he
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was not unpleasant to look at.
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``Would it mean abdication, Your Majesty?'' he asked me outright. ``The
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surrender of our sovereign lands to one of the fae, or even yourself? An
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offer so imprecise cannot truly be entertained.''
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``A trinket will have to be offered,'' I said. ``But what you will be
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surrendering, in truth, is rather more abstract: it is you `right to
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rule'.''
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``To clarify,'' Prince Louis calmly said, ``such a gesture will not in
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and of itself mean abdication?''
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``It most definitely does not,'' the Tyrant grinned. ``And don't let
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anyone tell you otherwise.''
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``It will, save if you are fools,'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
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For once, the sight of every prince and princess there unconsciously
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shifting to face him more fully did not bring out irritation. The
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respect that Tariq commanded and one of the oldest and perhaps the most
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famous living hero on Calernia was, for once, aiding me.
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``Chosen,'' Princess Rozala said, ``I would request your guidance in
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understanding this. I cannot and will not condemn the people of Aequitan
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to a grisly fate, not even for victory this day.''
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``Hardly a victory, that we dance one and all to the Black Queen's
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tune,'' the Prince of Orense scoffed.
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Early fifties, this one, and the long brown hair that went down to his
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shoulders was also bound in a bun behind his head. Prince Rodrigo of
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Orense, of who I knew very little save that his open scorning of the
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First Prince in a formal vote had been the talk of the Principate in my
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absence -- and not in a manner that was flattering for him, considering
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it was Cordelia Hasenbach who'd put an end to the Levantine raids that'd
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ravaged the south of his principality.
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``You never were much of dancer, Rodrigo,'' Prince Arnaud of Cantal
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disdainfully said. ``Leave this to your betters, would you?''
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Ah, \emph{that} fucker. Though not one of the royals here with true
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authority, Prince Arnaud Brogloise had raised my hackles more than once
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in the past. He was, at the very least, a prodigiously skilled actor.
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After the Battle of the Camps, when I'd still had the benefit of fae
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senses, I'd noted that his heartbeat never rose even when he was
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seemingly furious or busy shouting.
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``Arnaud,'' Princess Rozala sharply bit out. ``Chosen, I apologize for
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the interruption.''
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The Prince of Cantal look appropriately chided, though a mite resentful,
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and once more I wondered how much of it was an act if not the whole
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cloth. Rodrigo of Orense's lips quirked a tad smugly, but seemingly
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content with that intervening victory he pursued the conversation no
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further.
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``You are forgiven,'' the Tyrant magnanimously allowed.
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``Though the earthly crown will not be taken from your brow, save if you
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yourself do so, you will have lost the authority of a ruler in the eyes
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of the Heavens,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``Lingering in that role after
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discarding it before Gods and men can only bring calamity.''
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``I figure it'd be subtle at first,'' I said. ``Small nudges. Crops get
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a little worse, people listen a little less. If you keep holding,
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though, then it's a different story.''
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``Disease and strife,'' the Peregrine said, ``and they will only grow,
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so long as authority is kept.''
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``To clarify,'' Prince Louis spoke once more, echoing his own words,
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``abdicating in favour of kin would ward off this\ldots{} curse?''
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``It would,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``Though ever bearing another crown
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would birth it anew.''
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The Prince of Creusens then, to my surprise, turned to me as if seeking
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confirmation. I nodded, as to the best of my knowledge it was true. His
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lips thinned, and I caught his muscles twitching as he stopped himself
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from looking at someone for guidance. By the looks of it, I mused as I
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gauged the angle, it would have been Princess Rozala. One of hers, then.
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Said Princess of Aequitan was standing tall, fingers clenched, and met
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my gaze eye to eye.
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``Foundling,'' she said.
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``Rozala,'' I replied.
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``This\ldots{} lunacy of a land you speak of making,'' the Princess of
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Aequitan said. ``Will you allow passage through it to any who would use
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it to fight the Dead King?''
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``That will not be mine to decide,'' I said, ``but I will bare sword to
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enforce such a term, should it come to that.''
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``The Kingdom of Callow and its allies will refrain from making war on
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the Grand Alliance, until the peace conference is ended?'' Princess
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Rozala pressed.
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``Safe in Callow's defence, or that of its allies,'' I agreed.
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The other woman's jaw grew tight, eyes burning with something that was
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half fear and half fury.
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``There is horror to the north, Catherine Foundling, the likes of which
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you cannot yet grasp,'' Princess Rozala Malanza said. ``We war now
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against the Crown of the Dead not for \emph{pride} or \emph{right} or
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\emph{faith}, but for the ugly prize of scant survival. In that
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struggle, Black Queen, do you claim to be friend or foe?''
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``If your Grand Alliance makes accord with me, Princess of Aequitan,'' I
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softly said, ``oh, what howling ruin I will visit upon the King of
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Death. I have dooms in my arsenal that the world will shake of them.''
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She breathed out shakily and straightened her back.
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``Your word, Foundling,'' Rozala Malanza asked, eyes on mine.
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``On my oath,'' I quietly replied.
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Fingers steady, she unmade the claps of her helmet and ripped it off her
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head. Tossed, it flew and landed at my feet in a sprawl a snow.
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``That's one,'' the Princess of Aequitan. ``Ram it down his fucking
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throat, Black Queen. Hard enough that even in Keter they will hear the
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sound of our coming wroth.''
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``Malanza,'' Princess Sophie hissed, ``you cannot simply-''
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``It would be,'' Rozala said, ``cheap at twice the price.''
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In the heartbeat that followed, I saw the lay of the royalty around them
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clear as day. Those whose gaze held admiration, but also misgivings:
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Louis of Creusens, Leonor of Valencis. Those who were moved to contempt
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instead, Bertille of Lange and Rodrigo of Orense. Arnaud of Cantal's
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face was befuddlement incarnate, though the sudden turn had surprised
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him enough the confusion for once did not reach his eyes. As for Sophie
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of Lyonis, she was a battlefield of fear and shame. \emph{This}, I
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thought, \emph{is why you are followers. Why even though the First
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Prince fears and mislikes her, it Rozala Malanza who was given the
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command.} And I would not let bravery, let sacrifice, pass unremarked.
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Not when I had the means of doing otherwise. Leaning on my staff, I
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limped forward and bent the knee long enough to catch the edge of
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Malanza's helmet. Catching her eye with mine, I tossed it back. She
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caught it, I thought, out of reflex.
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``Foundling-'' she began.
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``Ivah,'' I simply said.
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My Lord of Silent Steps without a word, and stepped out of my shadow as
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if it'd been laying within it. In its hands was held a crown of ivory
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and gold, the front set with a heavy topaz upon which a heraldic griffin
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had been carved. Behind me, Kairos began softly laughing. I held out my
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hand, and the drow placed the crown on it before offering a bow and
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vanishing behind a fresh veil of illusions.
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``The crown of Iserre, offered by Amadis Milenan,'' I said. ``Rozala
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Malanza alone of seven did not flinch, when sacrifice was asked. For
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that, she keeps her crown.''
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I could have waited until the others had been talked or coerced into
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giving their own crowns, but I'd felt in my gut I should not. I was not
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certain, though, whether this was one of the instincts that'd served me
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so well when navigating stories or simply because it would have been
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beneath all involved to give Rozala Malanza the honour her due as a
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trick instead of a forthright display.
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``\emph{Connerie},'' Princess Bertille sneered. ``You do not dictate to
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sitters of the Highest Assembly, Damned. Let Malanza waste her rights as
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she so desired, for I will not give mine.''
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``You presume much, Bertille,'' Prince Rodrigo snorted. ``Not even ally
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to her cause, and you are to be exempt? I think not. At least I-''
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``Enough,'' Princess Sophie snarled. ``I will not have such disorder.
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The Princess of Lange is correct in that a foreigner may not speak to
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the affairs of the Principate. We will, among ourselves, discuss who
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should be exempt.''
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I looked at the Princess of Aequitan, then and what I saw on her face
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grieved me. Nothing in the loss of a crown moved me to sorrow, for I had
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little taste for mine and no reverence for those who'd earned their own
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by mere happenstance of birth. It was the raw, bleak disappointment I
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saw in a respected adversary as she stared the truth of her home in the
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eye. That, even as the sky was falling down on their heads, there were
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princes and princesses of Procer who would rather squabble than look up.
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``It could be put to a vote,'' Princess Leonor of Valencis hesitantly
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said. ``As is our way.''
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Something in Rozala Malanza's eye dimmed a little as the fourth voice of
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seven gave weight to the dispute. From the corner of my eye I saw the
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Tyrant of Helike writhing as if having a harsh episode of the shakes,
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but it was only barely held in laughter that had him convulsing. He
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silently mouthed thanks at me.
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``Shame on you all,'' the Grey Pilgrim quietly said.
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For a moment, the old man's resounding disappointment gave them pause.
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But only for a moment, because even a hero's chiding weighed short of a
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crown kept on the scales of the powerful.
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``Chosen do not rule, in the Principate,'' the Prince of Orense said.
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``Much less those born in Levant. With all due respect, Grey Pilgrim,
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you have already overstepped tonight in presuming to speak for the First
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Prince of Procer. Let us not further-''
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A bundle fell at my feet with dull thump. A straight-edge cavalry sword,
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wrapped in a cloak.
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``I had,'' Louis Rohanon pensively said, ``genuinely believed myself to
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be a decent man, until tonight.''
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The silence in the wake of his words was loud.
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``And still I hesitated,'' the man who'd been the Prince of Creusens
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ruefully said. ``If this is the truth of us, my friends, then we have no
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business wearing crowns.''
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``A delicate heart ever bleeds,'' Princess Bertille snorted. ``Bled all
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the way out, it seems. Keep your empty sentimentalities to yourself,
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Rohanon-``
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``Shame on you all,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, and the light in his eyes
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as he spoke was the coldest manner of mercy.
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The old man took one step forward, the butt of his staff leaving the
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ground.
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``Raise your hand to a sitter of the Highest Assembly and there will be
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war, Levantine,'' Prince Rodrigo warned.
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``He's right,'' the Saint of Swords casually said, laying a hand on his
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shoulder. ``Go for a walk, Tariq.''
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``Laurence-``
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``You, Sorcerer,'' the Princess of Lange barked, face gone pale with
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fright. ``Are you not a chosen of the Heavens? Will you simply allow
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this lunatic thug to murder-''
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The knife sliced her throat open without much of a spill, for Prince
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Arnaud Brogloise of Cantal had a steady hand.
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``\emph{Arnaud}?'' the Prince of Orense gulped out.
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The Prince of Cantal waited until the Princess of Lange had fallen to
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the ground before kneeling at her side, ignoring her dying gasps in
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favour of opening the clasp of her sheathed sword and taking it off her
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belt. He tossed it at my feet.
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``Will this suffice?'' he calmly asked, wiping his bloody knife on his
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forearm.
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``It will,'' I agreed.
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``You'll get the Regal Kindness for this, Brogloise,'' Princess Sophie
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darkly said. ``I'll ask the First Prince the right to force it down your
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throat myself.''
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``Unlikely,'' the Prince of Cantal noted, pawing at his armour and
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producing a small scroll stamped with a seal. ``By the decree of Her
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Most Serene Highness Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer and
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Warden of the West, I have been granted prior and absolute amnesty for
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all actions taken in the preservation of the Principate, as well as
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plenipotentiary power to treat with foreign powers in her name.''
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``You were one of hers,'' Princess Rozala faintly said. ``Gods, Arnaud,
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for how long?''
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``Hers, yours, Milenan's,'' the Prince of Cantal bitingly said. ``What
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childish way of thinking. My only concern, Rozala Malanza, is the
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preservation of the Principate of Procer. What could possibly matter
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even remotely as much?''
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Cool eyes turned to the other royals who had been bickering, until
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moments ago.
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``Must I murder every last one of you, or will a blade at your throat
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prompt a sudden swell of heroism?'' Prince Arnaud mildly asked.
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``I like him,'' Kairos mused. ``He's got that, what do you call it?''
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``Cold-blooded ruthlessness,'' I said.
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``No, that's not it. Ah, a \emph{knife},'' the Tyrant of Helike said.
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``He's got a knife.''
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Princess Leonor of Valencis had taken off her gauntlets, and her fingers
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were working on her ornate silver-enamelled helm. What I had taken for a
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decorative circlet soldered onto it turned out to be a silver tiara
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cleverly set into furrows. The Arlesite princess tossed it onto the pile
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at my feet, smile mirthless.
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``What a slaughter of thrones you have made of this night, Black
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Queen,'' she bitterly said. ``A princes' graveyard, shallow dug at your
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behest.''
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I looked at her then, truly looked at her. She had been among those who
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had admired Malanza's character even as she balked at emulating it, and
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for that she had earned more than simply my contempt. No layabout royal,
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this one, for closer survey revealed hands calloused from the arts of
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war and scars on her skin that had the make of blades. Her eyes were not
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cowed, even in loss, and even in her earlier quibblings she had not been
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spineless. \emph{And yet}. I looked at Leonor of Valencis and what I saw
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was good blood, old blood, conqueror's blood -- gilded history, ancient
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triumphs erected into throne. I saw a woman who'd been taught of
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\emph{rights} alongside right, privilege perhaps not unkindly borne but
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never once questioned. I thought of the High Lords, then, and of
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something Hakram had once told me under a moonlit sky. \emph{And they
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expected to win, too}, he'd said, speaking of our enemy. \emph{Don't
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they always? Sooner or later, better blood wins out.}
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And I couldn't mend that, I knew, because it was not in my hands to
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shape this world like clay -- and it was, perhaps, for the best that it
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was not. It belonged to more than me, that sprawl of terror and
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wonderment, of pettiness and valour. It would take more than an orphan
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girl from Laure to make something new of it, no matter what powers I
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came to wield. But now and then, I thought, now and then I could wield
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the knife my father had pressed into my hand all those years ago. And if
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it was not always given to me to bring something beautiful into
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Creation, then at least I could expunge some unseemly piece of it.
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\emph{You are part of this, Leonor of Valencis}, I thought. \emph{Of
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this land of robber princes and hungry wars, of a tapestry of rapacious
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ambition so despised it took Akua's Folly for you to be trusted again.
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It might be that among your kind you are one of the betters ones, but
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even should you not be guilty you would remain complicit.}
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Let them be thankful I had only taken crowns, for I could have taken a
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great deal more and lost not sleep over it. The only inheritance I'd
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ever cared to claim was steady hand and an indignant rage that had cowed
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kingdoms, and within it there was not a speck of mercy for the likes of
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Leonor of Valencis.
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``Tremble then, o ye mighty,'' I coldly replied, ``for a new age is upon
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you.''
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Rodrigo Trastanes wrapped his sword in a banner, before adding it to the
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pile. Sophie Louvroy ripped twin ornate silver wings off her gorget and
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shot me a burning glare after dropping them. Arnaud Brogloise, face
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betraying not a flicker of amusement, offered the knife still freshly
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touched by the lifeblood of the Princess of Lange. And with that, seven
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crowns had been laid at my feet -- they were, now, mine to pass on if I
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so wished. I went looking through my cloak, producing a bundle of
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wakeleaf that ended up nestled nicely in my pipe. I passed a palm over
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it, added a flicker of Night shaped into flame and inhaled with a little
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sigh of pleasure. Expectant gazes had been turned on me, now that my
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scheme had borne first fruit. Pilgrim, Saint, Sorcerer, Tyrant. And
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myself, nameless but high priestess of unruly goddesses. I blew out a
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stream of smoke.
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``Now,'' I said, ``shall we go on an adventure?''
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Behind me a breach into Arcadia tore opened.
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So it began.
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