598 lines
27 KiB
TeX
598 lines
27 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-concourse-iii}{%
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\section{Interlude: Concourse III}\label{interlude-concourse-iii}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``All law is upheld through violence, but when violence itself
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becomes the law then only disorder can come of it. As prosperity
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requires order, to ensure prosperity a ruler must therefore suborn
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violence to law.''}
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-- Extract from the memoirs of Dread Emperor Terribilis II
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\end{quote}
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Razin Tanja was not yet lord of Malaga, and in truth might never be.
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Father had named him heir, before they left Levant, and so of all that
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could lay claim his right would be the foremost and hardest to dispute.
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Yet he remained only heir, until he'd stood the ancestral grounds of the
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Tanja and been acclaimed to lordship by his closest kin. Razin had no
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right to call on the oaths once sworn to his father and so the captains
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of Malaga could defy him his orders if they so wished, though on
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war-grounds with the death of Akil Tanja still fresh they'd chosen to
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follow his commands nonetheless. It was because of that frail
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arrangement and the rights of his Blood he was considered to have voice
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equal to the other three standing at this council, though it would be
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foolish to assume the others did not regard his standing to be the
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lowest among them. Yet here they were nonetheless, the four of highest
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authority among the Dominion's armies, having woken from the
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waking-dreams the Peregrine had sent them to hold these talks.
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There were only seats and a deep-dug firepit within the tent, for though
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it belonged to Lord Yannu Marave it was not the same they'd before used
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for war councils. This one was rather smaller and behind ancient
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ward-stones brought from Levant, gifts from the Gigantes that had been
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rarely made and were even more rarely taken away from ancestral grounds
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There they kept veiled from sorcery and spying the affairs of the
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families owning them, as it should be. Though the stones could have been
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set around a larger tent, Razin knew enough of sorcery to know that
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certain patterns must be kept arithmetically exact to exert their full
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strength. The wonder-makers of the Titanomachy were free in speaking the
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secrets of use when they granted gits, though never the secrets of
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making, and no two such gifts were ever truly the same. If the Lord of
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Alava had chosen this lesser tent, it would be for good reason. Razin
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would acknowledge, in the quiet of his own thoughts, that the closer
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seats and crackling flames set to the talks a different tone than that
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of the battle-councils.
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It was easier to see the truth of the others this way. Lord Yannu Marave
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-- \emph{Careful Yannu}, as the man was known in Levant -- had not
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personally taken the field, yet the general of the Champion's Blood
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looked drained under his sweat-flecked facepaint. For him Razin found
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little compassion, for the man had slain his father even if the matter
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had been settled in fair and honourable duel. He found near as little
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for Lady Itima Ifriqui of the Brigand's Blood, who had held command of
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the Vaccei warriors but left her eldest son to lead the vanguard that'd
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tried the fortifications of the Callowans. Moro of the Brigand's Blood
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had been made to sleep again, fed herbal potions concocted by binders so
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that if there was more to be seen in dreams one of the Blood would see
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it. He might yet be allowed entrance to this tent, should he come with
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pressing knowledge. Though Lord Yannu sat on the other side of the
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flames and Lady Itima to Razin's right, to his left was the only person
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in this tent he counted as more companion than foe. Lady Aquiline Osena,
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who twice had tried to see him slain before they had shared strife
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against the drow. He found his gaze drawn to her bronze-green paint, the
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sinuous lay of it covering every inch of skin not covered by her tanned
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leather vest.
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He'd not forgot the sight of her running over moonlit snow like a
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whisper of smoke over water, beautiful and terrible like some ancient
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goddess of the hunt from olden days. Ashen Gods, how could he? He might
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as well been branded with a hot iron. Aquiline found his gaze, for he'd
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allowed himself to linger too long, and though the cast of her face was
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difficult to read under the colours she did not seem displeased in the
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slightest. Though Razin had known women before, something of the wicked
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glint in her eye had him feeling like he should blush. He looked away,
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careful not do display undue haste in doing so that would draw attention
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from the others but found he had to force down something like a smile.
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``The Peregrine is dead,'' Yannu Marave said, voice shattering the
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silence. ``We have all seen it.''
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And more besides, Razin thought. The journey the five Bestowed who'd
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gone to fight the Dead King had not been shared in full, he thought, but
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enough had been offered to know what need be known. The Grey Pilgrim had
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gone to death for the sake of all the world, and though the Black Queen
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was wicked and scheming she had not schemed his death nor broken the
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bargains she had made. The same could not be said of the Regicide, which
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had troubled all. Laurence de Montfort, though unfortunately Proceran,
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had been held in high esteem by most of them. Rarely had the Heavens
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known so righteous or unyielding a servant.
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``The Tyrant of Helike must die,'' Lady Itima of the Brigand's Blood
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harshly said. ``The Theodosian line should be ended for good, lest the
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viper keep biting again and again.''
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``Are we to wage war on the League, then?'' Aquiline replied,
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unconvinced. ``The One-Eyed King is poison to all he touches, but still
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surrounded by a great host.''
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``We can petition the Grand Alliance for soldiers,'' Lady Itima
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insisted.
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``Which ally would you petition, Ifriqui?'' Razin calmly said. ``Ashur,
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broken at Thalassina and besieged on its own island by the fleets of
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Nicae? Or perhaps Procer, who even now makes desperate war on the Hidden
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Horror?''
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``You would let this go unavenged, Tanza?'' the Lady of Vaccei sneered.
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``All knew you without magic, but are you without \emph{honour} as well?
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You talk like a coward.''
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His teeth clenched, his anger rose.
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``Razin Tanja rode with a slayer band and fought death steel in hand,''
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Aquiline sharply said. ``Can you claim the same tonight, Itima Ifriqui?
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Did you even come close enough to drow or legionaries to loose a single
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arrow?''
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``I have nothing to prove to you, girl,'' Lady Itima replied, tone just
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as sharp. ``When you've fought in half as many battles as I have, then
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you-''
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``The Peregrine is dead,'' Yannu Marave repeated, calmvoice cutting
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through the rising voice. ``And so, without his wise hand to guide us,
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we must decide where the honour of Levant lies.''
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Though neither of the two ladies were pleased with the interruption,
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they allowed it nonetheless. There would be other nights to pursue their
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feuds.
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``Dangerous words, Marave,'' Aquiline warned. ``It is the Holy Seljun
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who keeps the Dominion's honour, on behalf of the Majilis.''
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``Must we keep to that pretence even now that he is dead?'' Lord Yannu
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asked, tone exhausted. ``Custom is custom, yet we all knew who was the
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Isbili we followed -- stripped of that name or not. In this tent are
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four of the five that would be seated if the Majilis was called to
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session. The fifth has not been more than a decoration in my lifetime.''
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``Hasn't been a ruler of the Pilgrim's line worth the name since Yasa
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Isbili,'' Lady Itima conceded.
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``What it is you suggested, Lord Marave?'' Razin stiffly asked.
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``That decision must be made as to the fate of this Grand Alliance,''
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the Lord of Alava said. ``What has it brought us, to warrant what we've
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lost in its name?''
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``You'd abandon the Tenth Crusade?'' Aquiline asked, genuinely
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surprised.
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``What Tenth Crusade is that?'' Yannu Marave asked. ``We've marched for
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more than a year now, and I've yet to see it. We have fought soldiers of
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Callow, soldiers of the League and now the drow servants of the Black
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Queen. Was it not the Tower we swore to war upon? Pretty words were
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spoken yet the truth is plain: only Ashur tread Wasteland soil, and it
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has been defeated. The Tenth Crusade is done, and if there can be said
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to have been so much as a thimble's worth victory to it then it belongs
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to the Queen of Callow.''
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He exhaled.
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``Let us go home,'' he said. ``Let us bury our dead and see to our
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lands, instead of chasing shadows for Cordelia Hasenbach's sake.''
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``Oaths were made,'' Lady Itima said.
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``To march,'' Lord Yannu said. ``March we have, and fought too. How much
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more can be owed? Aid was given, oaths kept.''
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``And what will happen, when the Dead King devours the entire Principate
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and raises it as an army that'll outnumber grains of sand?'' Razin said.
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``Do you suppose he'll simply stop at our borders and turn around?''
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``The Red Snake Wall has never been breached,'' the Lady of Vaccei said.
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Her Blood knew the great work better than any other, having often snuck
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past it to raid Arlesite lands, but this was foolishness. Aquiline
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agreed, it seemed.
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``Never has the Hidden Horror tried it,'' the Lady of Tartessos said.
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``Mighty as the enchantments of the spellsingers are, the Crown of the
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Dead is a spawning pool of endless fresh horrors. What manner of
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abomination might be made from the corpse of an empire? Best not find
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out, for all our sakes.''
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``It is not written in stone that Procer will fall,'' Lord Yannu said.
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``Bestowed have flocked to the north, and now both the Black Queen and
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the League offer truce to the First Prince. Let Procerans see to the
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defence of their own lands, and if friendship so compels your souls we
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may offer other bounty than the blood of our people. Foodstuffs and
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arms, loans of gold to fund their war.''
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``And so when the war for Calernia's survival is ended, we shall be
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remembered as those that crawled back to our own lands after the first
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taste of bloodshed,'' Aquiline scathingly said. ``Or, even as the
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continent dies around us, we'll be cursed as the cowards who might have
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preserved it -- if not for the \emph{wisdom} of Yannu Marave.''
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``Thousands have been lost already,'' the Lord of Alava said. ``Our old
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ally the Thalassocracy is ruined for at least a generation even if it
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shakes the Nicaean boot off its throat, which is hardly certain. Would
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you exhaust our every army as well so that Salia can reclaim Levant
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after the war end? We all know how much \emph{alliance} meant to
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princes, after Callow lost its armies in the last eastern crusade.''
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``The First Prince is an honourable woman,'' Lady Itima said with a
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grimace, looking like it cost her to admit it.
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Though the Brigand's Blood was fervent in its hatred of enemies abroad
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and Procerans in particular, the Lady of Vaccei had spoken of Cordelia
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Hasenbach with respect more than once. The peace forged between Vaccei
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and Procer by its First Prince could have been so costly as to ruin the
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Ifriqui, for none had stood behind Lady Itima in her warmongering and
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would have protested heavy reparations overmuch, but Hasenbach had been
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restrained and allowed for honour in peace. That'd been remembered just
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as much as the many treacheries of the Principate.
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``Will her successor be as well?'' Lord Yannu retorted. ``Or will our
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spent lands be hungrily eyed by Arlesite crowns and a would-be conqueror
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be elected after her?''
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``To ward off a betrayal that might be,'' Razin mildly said, ``you
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instead offer a betrayal that is. I see no honour in this, Marave. Only
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fear.''
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``Hear hear,'' Aquiline said. ``It might be the Tower we declared war
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on, but it is the Dead King that now seeks our end. Until the Last Dusk
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that old thing will be our enemy, and I will not retreat without even
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catching sight of his armies \emph{once}.''
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The Lord of Alava turned to fix Itima of the Brigand's Blood with a
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steady look.
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``Your judgement, Lady Itima?'' Lord Yannu asked.
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The older woman hesitated.
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``It is not the war we agreed to fight, no denying that,'' she said.
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``And you speak sense in being wary of Arlesite friendship. Yet honour
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must be observed. Some may remain, but others should return.''
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Lord Yannu said nothing, gazing at them over the fire.
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``Then let it be remembered that when the Enemy marched, Vaccei flinched
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and Alava turned tail,'' Lady Aquiline Osena said, tone cold and
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contemptuous. ``Tartessos will not shame itself in such a manner. My
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captains will remain, and I with them. Run back behind tall walls, if
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that is the sum of you.''
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The gaze moved to him.
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``Malaga stays,'' Razin simply said.
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``You're not lord, boy,'' Lady Itima replied. ``You've no call to make
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that decision. It will be put to the captains.''
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``I imagine it will,'' Razin Tanja of the Grim Binder's line replied.
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``I will be certain to tell them the Lady of Vaccei believes them so
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cowardly as to flee. No doubt they'll be eager to prove you right.''
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It might have been enough, Razin suspected, just for the captains to be
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told that retreat was Lord Yannu Marave's own notion. His slaying of
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Father had seen him politely despised among the men and women who'd
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spent decades in the service of Akil Tanja. Now that one of the
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Brigand's Blood had called their bravery into doubt this way? Gods,
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there might be honour-duels over insinuations they'd even considered
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returning south. Lord Yannu gazed at him for a long and silent moment,
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until he tiredly sighed.
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``Has your shoulder been fully healed, Razin Tanja of Binder's Blood?''
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the Lord of Alava asked.
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It had been. Though the drow's blow had been hard enough it was still
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tender, the healing of his binders had ensured that within perhaps a day
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he would perfectly hale. As it was, save for a mild ache when he moved
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there was naught left to fix. Still, a strange amusement took him when
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he realized they were not even speaking of the same shoulder wound as
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the previous time -- it was not a goblin blade that'd hurt him last but
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a monstrous drow appendage.
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``It has,'' Razin acknowledged.
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He would not lower himself to lying over the matter, even if Yannu
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Marave meant now to kill him just as he'd killed Father.
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``By smoke add dust you vowed enmity between us,'' Lord Yannu said. ``To
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be set aside until healing was seen to.''
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The Lord of Alava rose from his seat, graceful for all his exhaustion.
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``Let us settle matters of honour, then,'' Yannu of the Champion's Blood
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said.
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``As was sworn,'' Razin calmly agreed, rising to match him.
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The tent was not large, he thought, yet neither was it so small it could
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not be put to use as duelling-grounds. It would best to keep this away
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from the eyes of their captains, regardless.
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``Will either of you require an officiant?'' Lady Itima drawled. ``I've
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no horse in this race, and so put forward my name.''
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Razin declined, as did Lord Yannu. Theirs would be a duel to the death,
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not first blood or first wound, and so there was no need of another pair
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of eyes to adjudicate when to call a halt. Aquiline had risen as well,
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and leaned closer so her whisper would not be overheard.
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``I've seen the two of you fight, Razin,'' she said. ``You're one of the
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finest blades I know, but he is finer still and experienced in such
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duels besides. You will not be the victor in this.''
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``He is tired,'' Razin replied.
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``So are you,'' she said.
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``I vowed enmity nonetheless,'' he told her.
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She studied him in silence.
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``So you did,'' Aquiline conceded.
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She leaned closer still, and for a heartbeat he believed she might kiss
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him. Instead he swallowed a gasp when he felt a knife slide into his
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lower belly. He'd not even seen her draw. Still studying him, the Lady
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of Tartessos nodded approvingly.
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``You didn't scream,'' she said, sounding proud. ``Good. You may
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consider this the formal beginning of our courtship.''
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``Well,'' Razin croaked, ``you've certainly made an impression.''
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``Lady Aquiline, what is your meaning by intervening here?'' Lord Yannu
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coldly asked.
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Aquiline graced his reply with a twitch of the lips before turning to
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the Lord of Alava.
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``As Razin Tanja is injured, he may not fight you,'' the Lady of
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Tartessos said.
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That was one way to delay the matter, he conceded. She'd even been kind
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enough to slide the blade somewhere that had little risk of killing him.
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Yet it would amount to little, for Yannu Marave's intent remained: the
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man would slay either himself or Aquiline, and so ensure that few enough
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captains remained that those of Malaga or Tartessos would follow the
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rest home simply not to be stranded without allies in the midst of the
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Principate. Before long, there would be one more-
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``And so I claim his right as his champion,'' Aquiline Osena casually
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continued. ``Any may contest this claim if they so wish, but it will
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have to be blade in hand.''
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``Aquiline,'' he began, ``don't-''
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``Alas, he has become delirious from the pain,'' she said. ``And so his
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word can no longer be taken over the matter.''
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Lord Yannu's cool eyes moved from him to the Lady of Tartessos,
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assessing.
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``So it seems,'' the Lord of Alava agreed.
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The choice was clear, Razin supposed, between a mere unacclaimed heir
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like himself and a true ruling lady like Aquiline. If one of them had to
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die, in Yannu's eye she would be the better choice for unlike him, she
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could call on oaths to force her decisions onto captains. Knowing there
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was no point, he set aside the urge to continue protesting. Both
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duellists moved to the side of the tent, where they would have more room
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to move, and the other two of the Blood were invited to withdraw to the
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opposite end of the tent. Knife still in his belly, Razin obeyed.
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``Even if she is the victor,'' Lady Itima casually told him. ``I've not
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agreed to your own decision.''
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``What do you want, Ifriqui?'' he grunted.
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``The Tyrant of Helike,'' she murmured. ``If not the annihilation of his
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line, then at least his head.''
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Aquiline and Yannu unsheathed their long, hooked swords and bowed. The
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Lord of Alava was taller than her, he could not help but notice. Larger
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and heavier with a great deal more blood on his hands. The Slayer's
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Blood were unnaturally skilled duellists, it was true, and Aquiline
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skilled even compared to her kin. Yet the Champion's Blood were known to
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reap lives like wheat and laugh through wounds great and small. There
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was no telling who would be the winner.
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``We've no soldiers for that reckoning,'' Razin said. ``And no ally to
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borrow them from.''
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``You know my terms, boy,'' the Lady of Vaccei simply replied. ``They
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will not change. If you and the girl want my warriors, earn them.''
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The unspoken threat being that otherwise she would leave with her host,
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and perhaps the Alava men as well. If Yannu was slain and no other
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captains left, the Alavans might be shamed into remaining with the
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greater army -- lest they be known as the sole warriors of the Dominion
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to have fled. It the Vaccei swords left with them, however, there could
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not be talk of dishonour. Or at least not quite as pointed, which for
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men who wanted to leave would suffice. Of course, this meant nothing
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unless Aquiline won. The two duellists had begun to move, he saw, yet
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blades had yet to clash. They were fighting over position, for now,
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looking for an opening to end it quick and clean. They were both tired
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and well-aware of it. The Alavan captains would be hard to keep, he
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thought, if Lord Yannu was killed. The hill-folk of Alava disliked
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taking orders from any save the Champion's Blood, and were prouder than
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most. Aquiline suddenly lunged forward, blade flickering forward, but
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Lord Yannu calmly parried and withdrew, with the hook of his blade
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scoring a long cut on the Lady of Tartessos' cheek. Red blood trailed
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down onto paint of green and bronze.
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This would only end when one of them died, Razin thought, and in that
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moment the though disgusted him. The Peregrine's corpse was hardly cold
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that already the children of others lines were killing each other over
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disputes of honour. Was there really any honour to be found in this?
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Razin wondered, watching Aquiline deftly manoeuvre around the fire pit
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to avoid a blow that would have taken her hand and scoring a cut of her
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own on Lord Yannu's face -- above his brow, where the blood might
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trickle down onto his eye if he was not careful. There was skill, that
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much was certain. Admirable skill. But honour? It was his own father
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being avenged, Razin reminded himself. His father who had been slain in
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a honour-duel much like this one, disagreeing over a decision of great
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import. Theirs were hard ways, Razin Tanja knew, but he'd been taught
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that they were also \emph{honest} ways. Unlike Procerans who poisoned
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and schemed, unlike the Free Cities and their empty trials, those of
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Levant did not leave the rot to fester. The brought it out, cut it out,
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settled the matters so they would not grow and settled them in honour.
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Honour-duels, he thought. Honour-wars. So much honour was there to be
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found in the Dominion, and all of it derived from blood.
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``If he kills her, the Osena will feud with the Marave,'' he quietly
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said.
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And, though it would be early and almost presumptuous of him to say, the
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Tanja as well.
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``So they will,'' Lady Itima shrugged.
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She was unmoved, for this was simply the way of the world. Steel touched
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steel, as they watched, as a quick exchange that had Razin's heard
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racing saw Aquiline avoiding a cut throat but taking a blow to the side
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of the head from Lord Yannu's heavy pommel. She seemed dizzied, and so
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his stomach clenched in fear. Razin Tanja had stood just like he was
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standing now and watched his own father be slain, because this was an
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honourable way to settle things and it would be dishonourable of him to
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do otherwise. \emph{This settles nothing}, he thought. \emph{It is rule
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by the blade, and it brings ever more the same.} If Aquiline slew Yannu,
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avenging Razin's own father, then some other Marave would one day come
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for her to avenge Yannu. And then in years after someone would come for
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her killer, and on and on and \emph{on} it would go until either Levant
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died or the Last Dusk came to pass. Razin felt as if he were standing on
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the edge of a tall precipice, as if he were about to fall, and every
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inch of him wanted to retreat. To take a step back. But he thought, in
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that moment, not of anything his father or teachers had ever said but of
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a pair of cool brown eyes and a cutting grin wreathed in smoke.
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\emph{You mock yourself}, the great monster of their age had told him
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almost gently, \emph{by pretending today did not happen. It did. Learn
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from it, or die in a ditch somewhere blaming everything but yourself.}
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``Enough,'' Razin Tanja of the Binder's Blood said.
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Lady Itima eyed him curiously, but nothing else came of it.
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``\emph{Enough},'' Razin hissed, and he ripped the knife out of his own
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guts.
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Even when the blade clattered on the ground they did not cease their
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fighting, though when bleeding and wincing he stepped in between them
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the blades were held back.
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``Razin,'' Aquiline harshly said, ``do not-''
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``How many years has it been, since the Dominion was founded?'' he
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|
interrupted. ``Three hundred and change, I'd say. That is how long it
|
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has been since Procerans ceased killing us and we've started doing it to
|
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ourselves. Enough, damn you.''
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``You dishonour yourself,'' Yannu Marave scorned him. ``Fearing
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defeat-''
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|
``The Valiant Champion took up arms to end tyrants, didn't she?'' Razin
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said. ``Rulers who forced their will through force of arms. I wonder how
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much difference she'd really see, between you and a prince.''
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The Lord of Alava paled, either in dismay or white-hot fury.
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``If there is \emph{honour} to be lost,'' Razin said, scorning the very
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word as he had himself been scorned, ``then let it be mine.''
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|
``You would let your father's death go unavenged?'' Aquiline asked, and
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there was something like contempt in her voice.
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|
That wounded, it did, but still he must press on. \emph{Learn from it,
|
|
or die}, he told himself.
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``Someone has to,'' he snarled back. ``What does this change? What does
|
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any of this change?''
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|
Something in him snapped, for if he'd been able to see this why hadn't
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they? Why did it have to be him, bearing those disdainful looks like
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he'd somehow spewed in their cup by arguing that more killing wasn't
|
|
going to get them out of the put killing had first dug.
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|
``It settles our disagreement,'' Lord Yannu said. ``Move aside, Tanja,
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or be struck down.''
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Razin laughed.
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|
``Do it,'' he said, extending his arms and wincing from the wound in his
|
|
gut being stretched. ``Is this what we are now? Even when the world is
|
|
half-ended we kill each other over battle plans and decisions and how
|
|
we've killed each other over the last two. Are we truly that\ldots{}
|
|
\emph{little}?''
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|
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|
``I will not warn you again,'' Yannu Marave calmly told him.
|
|
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|
``Move, Razin,'' Aquiline said, and though there was still disdain in
|
|
the voice there was more worry.
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|
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|
It was not much of a balm, but it was not nothing.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Razin said. ``If you want to force this through look it in the
|
|
eye, Yannu Marave -- admit that you are willing to cut down an unarmed
|
|
man to get your way.''
|
|
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|
``Damn you, boy,'' Lord Yannu hoarsely said, but raised his sword
|
|
anyway.
|
|
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|
The knife came to rest against his throat without anyone having it heard
|
|
unsheathed. The Lord of Alava stilled.
|
|
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|
``Keep talking, Tanja,'' Lady Itima said.
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|
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|
A convulsive chuckle ripped its way free of his throat.
|
|
|
|
``Do I truly need to make some great argument,'' he said, absurdly
|
|
amused, ``of why we should cease slaughtering each other at least on the
|
|
same night when \emph{the sky almost fell on our heads}?''
|
|
|
|
There was a heartbeat of silence.
|
|
|
|
``Gods Above,'' Razin said. ``Look at us. We might as well be an Alamans
|
|
farce: the four fools who duelled on the night the world almost ended.
|
|
We've fought half a score in battles and skirmishes against the Army of
|
|
Callow and the League and the drow, yet the closest the Dominion's
|
|
armies have come to breaking this winter is this very hour. Think on
|
|
that, for a moment. We've wounded ourselves more viciously than the
|
|
Black Queen and all her heretic cohorts put together.''
|
|
|
|
``Much have you chided us,'' Aquiline said, ``yet you've said nothing of
|
|
how to mend the wound.''
|
|
|
|
``We bring back the Peregrine's corpse,'' Razin Tanja said. ``And we put
|
|
it to a proper pyre. And when that's done? We don't butcher ourselves
|
|
like \emph{fucking animals}. If we are to decide the fate of Levant,
|
|
then let Levant have a say.''
|
|
|
|
``The Holy Seljun?'' Lady Itima said, sounding surprised.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Lord Yannu softly said. ``He means the captains. He means that
|
|
we speak our case to an assembly of our soldiers, and choose our way by
|
|
acclamation.''
|
|
|
|
Razin nodded.
|
|
|
|
``And if the soldiers choose to go home?'' Aquiline pointedly asked.
|
|
|
|
``Then we go home,'' Razin said. ``We have to be willing to lose,
|
|
Aquiline, to bend. Otherwise this only ever ends with swords bared.''
|
|
|
|
``That has been our way,'' she replied, ``and it has served us well.''
|
|
|
|
``Has it?'' he softly asked. ``The Grey Pilgrim has been dead for nary
|
|
an hour, and already in this tent the seeds of a decade of war have been
|
|
sown. Can you truly say our way has served us \emph{well}?''
|
|
|
|
``I will agree,'' Yannu Marave said, ``to sending warriors to bring back
|
|
the Peregrine in honour.''
|
|
|
|
Razin admired, against his will, how calm the man's tone was when
|
|
Itima's knife had yet to leave his throat.
|
|
|
|
``The escort and the assembly both have my agreement,'' Lady Itima of
|
|
the Brigand's Blood said. ``Be it battle or retreat, let it be chosen
|
|
before Gods and men.''
|
|
|
|
``The escort and the assembly,'' Aquiline agreed after a moment, tone
|
|
brisk. ``The right decision will be clear to all that are not craven
|
|
fools.''
|
|
|
|
Razin Tanja idly wondered if it would be ill-taken to send for a priest
|
|
or a binder for his stomach wound before an honour guard of warriors was
|
|
assembled to take the Peregrine back to his kin.
|
|
|
|
``The escort and the assembly,'' he said, as if there'd been any doubt.
|
|
|
|
He was still bleeding from the belly when they left the tent, but at
|
|
least no one had died. That was, he decided, better than he'd had any
|
|
right to hope for.
|