490 lines
23 KiB
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490 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{seed-i}{%
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\section{Seed I}\label{seed-i}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``In declaring all that is not Good to be Evil, one surrenders the
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better part of the world to the Enemy.''}
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-- Theodore Langman, Wizard of the West
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\end{quote}
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The librarians were skulking about again.
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Amadeus was going to have to kill a few before this was done and over
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with, he suspected, which would have been trouble if Dread Emperor
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Nefarious still took interest in anything but his seraglio and his
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grimoires. The Deep Library, as the misshapen people of this place
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called the true Imperial archives -- those hidden deep beneath the
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Tower, where none without permission could enter -- was purely the
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Emperor's to oversee. It'd been that wat since it had grown from a tomb
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full of secrets to one of the greatest repositories of knowledge on
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Calernia, in the days where Dread Emperor Sorcerous had reigned and
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learning had flourished in Praes like never before. The Deep Library was
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as a small city, now, those that saw to its obscure labyrinthine stacks
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and records born and raised within the depths. Few had ever seen the
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light of day, and centuries of inbreeding and exposure to old sorceries
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had warped them in\ldots{} unseemly ways. They wore the hoods by
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imperial decree, as some ancient Tyrant having been disgusted by their
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appearance. For all that they'd made clear their disapproval of a mere
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\emph{Duni} like Amadeus being granted access to the stacks even if he'd
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come with a writ bearing Nefarious' own seal. It'd been the Chancellor's
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hand that'd pressed it down, truth be told, but the rats scuttling in
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these deeps had no way of knowing that.
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``I can hear you,'' the Black Knight calmly said. ``Come into the light
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or be treated as a spy.''
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The Chancellor no doubt had suborned a few eyes among this lot and
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tasked them with study of what it was \emph{he} was studying, but he'd
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hardly be the only one. The old families of the Wasteland would have
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agents of their own, entire bloodlines of traitors cultivated over
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centuries whose practical worth was greater than that of a vault full of
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rubies. The ring of flickering lights cast by oil lanterns -- mage
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lights would have been more efficient but they tended to go wild in
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these parts, affected by the ancient wards and magics -- revealed the
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yellow-robed silhouette of a lesser librarian. To a guest bearing a
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seal, like Amadeus, they were to be ordered about as wished though it
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was customary to allow one of the greater librarians to see to it
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instead, expressing wishes to the greater so that they could send the
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lesser to carry them out. Of course, that would require one of the
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greater librarians to have remained in attendance of the Black Knight as
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was also customary instead of vanishing back into the dark maze. A
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distasteful parting shot had been made about getting mud on the scrolls,
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for which Amadeus had considered taking the woman's tongue as a warning
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to the others. He'd decided against it, for now anyway. There were yet
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more ways in which the keepers of this place could hinder his research,
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which was too important to risk on what was hardly likely to be the last
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reference to his breeding he'd hear.
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``This one has what was sought, Lord Black,'' a mellifluous voice spoke
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from under the hood.
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The Mtethwa spoken had an archaic bent to it, for those speaking it had
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been separated from other speakers for so long they'd not changed their
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manners along the same lines. The court address was properly done,
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though still unfamiliar to his ear: highborn had only begun using such
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courtesies with him since he'd slain the Heir and put a permanent end to
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their struggles.
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``The Thalassinan records, yes?'' he questioned.
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``It is so, Lord,'' the librarian agreed.
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He gestured for the yellow-robed stranger to approach. Stuttering steps
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brought the tablets he'd sent for, and Amadeus allowed the librarian to
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set them on one of the rare corners of the reading hall he'd claimed
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that wasn't covered. It looked like utter chaos, at first glance, piles
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of scrolls and manuscripts and stone inscriptions sprawling under
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ancient maps of Praes and eastern Callow. The divisions were not
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geographic, in truth, but chronological. Inconveniently enough, he'd had
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to spend longer finding the right time and place in histories to look
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for answers than actually finding the answers he sought. The seal that'd
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allowed him access to the Deep Library had been a reward claimed from
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the Chancellor, but it was not without bounds: he had only seven days
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and nights to seek his answers. He'd not slept more than two hours
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apiece in the last five days, and if Amadeus could have avoided that
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without measurably impairing his mind's ability to retain details he
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would have done so. There was no telling when he would next have such an
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opportunity.
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``If this one may speak, Lord,'' the librarian said.
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Black's eyes flicked up in surprise. He'd expected them to leave as soon
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as the precise duties were discharged.
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``It may me presumptuous of this one to grasp at the intent of one of
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hallowed rank, yet it seems that it might be grain quantities in
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particular being sought,'' the librarian delictely said.
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``That is correct,'' Amadeus said. ``Under the tenure of Rector Cornelia
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Orbivia, to be specific.''
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Which had been irritatingly difficult to find out with any degree of
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accuracy. The Miezans had famously put everything to writing and what
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remained of the records of their occupation was surprisingly extensive,
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but Praes had been one of the most distant overseas provinces of their
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empire. Which meant that, far from the stern gaze of their imperial
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rulers, the rectors overseeing Praes had been habitually corrupt and
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falsified the reports they sent to Mieza in order to better enrich
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themselves off imperial revenue. Cornelia Orbivia had been unusually
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corrupt even among rectors, to the extent that Amadeus had found himself
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reluctantly impressed by her gall. On the same year where Taghreb tribal
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record of the Banu Hiraq spoke of several large gold shafts being mined
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in the Grey Eyries, she'd had the gall to send envoys to Mieza
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requesting funding for the rebuilding of the Wasaliti levees that she
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otherwise `could not afford'. As a nice touch, she'd even mentioned that
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failing to repair those works would agitate the local savages. Amusing
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as that had been to find out, Rector Cornelia's falsifications made it
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difficult to assess what the yield of fields under her rule had actually
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been. Which was unfortunate, for under her successor the Miezans had
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begun trading regularly with the Callowan chieftains of Summerholm and
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that influx of grain would throw off the numbers in a way Amadeus
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couldn't really account for.
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``The harbour records of Thalassina would only provide incomplete
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understanding, Lord,'' the librarian said, ``as they do not account for
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ships that were exempt from duties and inspections by Rector's decree.
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This one presumed to send for the records of such exempted ships, if it
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pleases the hallowed one.''
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``It does,'' Black replied, eyes narrowing by the barest of fractions.
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``Yet are you implying that Rector Orbivia kept \emph{record}s of her
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own corruption?''
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``Hallowed one, they are in fact from the array of charges brought
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against her by Imperatrix Iusta,'' the librarian said. ``Who later
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recalled Rector Orbivia and had her drawn and quartered after public
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trial.''
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More than once, perusing Miezan histories, it had occurred to Amadeus
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that the Praesi apple had not fallen far from the tree.
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``Those charges would be accurate, in your opinion?'' he asked, cocking
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his head to the side.
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``This one recalls the Imperatrix was reputed for her preoccupation for
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justice,'' the librarian said. ``Yet the hallowed one need not take this
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one's recollections as facts, for such is mentioned in the \emph{Annales
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Zosimia} and the \emph{Sicorat Aheli}.''
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Amadeus' brow rose. The famous historian Zosimia had been prone to
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embellishing when the truth of things proved insufficiently exciting for
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the audience, but as a rule they'd been faithful in relating what more
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reliable and unfortunately lost histories had believed to be the truth.
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The Sicorat, on the other hand, was not a Miezan history but a Baalite
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one. Amadeus' passing knowledge of tradertalk had him suspecting the
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meaning of the title was something along the lines of `Foe-Tale', which
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was an apt summation of the relations between the Hegemony and the
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Empire during their shared span of history. That rather added integrity
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to the source, in his eyes. Invectives from an enemy ever flowed freely,
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but praise? That was a rarer thing, and grudgingly given.
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``Have the Annales Zosimia sent to me,'' he ordered. ``Do you have a
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translation of the Sicorat from I assume to be the original High
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Tyrian?''
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``This one knows only of a highly revisionist reinterpretation of the
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work penned by High Lord Saman Muraqib during the reign of the Dread
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Empress Maleficent the Second,'' the librarian replied. ``It does
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contain several accurate translations of the Sicorat Aheli's text,
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spread among High Lord Saman's own writing.''
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The Black Knight almost snorted. Considering the second Maleficent had
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clashed more than once with the Thalassocracy of Ashur in her day and
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that the islanders were the last remnants of Baalite rule on Calernia it
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was no great stretch to infer the nature of the Taghreb aristocrat's
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commentary. The man would hardly be the first of the Wasteland's
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highborn to rail at the Ashuran `perfidy' in not allowing Praes to raise
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a fleet worth the name. He would not even be the first to frame Praes as
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the inheritor of Mieza and Ashur that of the Hegemony, poetically fated
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to war as their progenitors had been.
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``My palate might not be discerning enough to truly understand the
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depths of High Lord Saman's wisdom,'' Amadeus drily said. ``His work
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shall rest, I think.''
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``By your will, hallowed one,'' the librarian said, bowing.
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The Black Knight hummed and considered matters for long moment. Weighing
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risk, weighing dues.
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``Your name?'' he asked.
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``This one is called Nafari, hallowed one,'' the librarian replied.
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``After arranging for the Annales,'' Amadeus said, ``I believe you will
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find your duties take you far from this part of the stacks. For some
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time, too.''
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The hooded librarian stiffened.
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``It will be so, hallowed one,'' Nafari croaked out. ``Manifold thanks
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from this unworthy one.''
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Amadeus did not further acknowledge the exchange, unwilling to tip his
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hand too deeply. This one had been helpful, and polite. The slight risk
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could be taken as gratitude. It was forgot before long, for the promised
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records had arrived and so he returned to his calculations. To his
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surprise, though Rector Orbivia had smuggled out the wealth she'd stolen
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from imperial revenues at a rate of between five to eight ships a year,
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a significant part of that theft was grain. The quantities allowed him
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to add the last finishing touch to his estimates of grain yields, yet
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the detail remained in the back of his mind like a wiggling tick. Rector
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Orbivia had been nothing if not apt in extracting wealth from her
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office, Amadeus thought. Why, then would on a year where she had sent
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six ships sailing to Liceria would a full three of them have been filled
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with grain? The same hull filled with slaves, for example -- orcs had
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been rare on the other side of the Tyrian Sea and wildly popular,
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fetching high prices on Miezan slave auctions -- should have secured
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much greater profit. Had grain been easier to obtain, in those days? It
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was possible, for the Wasteland had not yet earned its name through
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Sinistra's cataclysmic blunder. Yet agriculture had grown more
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sophisticated since those days, and the crops reaped relative to the
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amount of cultivated land had been numerically higher in those days.
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Something was beginning to dawn on him, slowly, as he kept open his
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leather journal with his lower palm and marked in ink the numbers for
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Rector Orbivia's tenure.
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Yet it would have been absurd, when Praes held so many other ways for a
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Miezan rector to enrich themselves, unless he was missing a detail. The
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Annales Zosimia were brought to him, all seven volumes, by another
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yellow-robed librarian. This one did not speak nor linger, and Black dug
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throughout the fourth tome until he acceded to the parts concerning
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Imperatrix Iusta. It was easy enough to confirm Librarian Nafari's
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words, namely that the Imperatrix seemed to have displayed a very real
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concern for justice even when it was politically inconvenient for her.
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Yet it was not those sentences in Old Miezan that caught his attention
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but instead slight details of military history. An attempt from the king
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of the Luxor, a Baalite ally, to seize the lesser city of Antisma on the
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coast of Caracisson. The last name was familiar, and referral to the
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Miezan history of the \emph{Bellum Stobogii} shed some light over it:
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Caracisson was a rich stretch of coast in the Miezan province of
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Stobogia Minor. Which, along with its northern sister-province of
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Stobogia Major, were the Miezan empire's traditional breadbasket due to
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their great fields and golden summers. Over the reign of Imperatrix
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Iusta, according to the Annales, no less than eight battles had been
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fought over the provinces against a variety of northern nomadic tribes
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and southern Baalite-backed petty kingdoms. Looking further back through
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previous reigns, the trend had begun at least four decades earlier.
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And like that it fell into place, bitter as the epiphany was.
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When Alaya arrived, she found him with a cup of wine in hand and a dark
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look on his face. His mood had turned sullen, now that he'd put the
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pieces together. Even wearing a cloak and drab vestments she was a
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vision, as if the lackluster clothes had been picked to make her beauty
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evident by contrast. There'd been a time where Amadeus had felt the
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first stirrings of interest in his friend, though the notion had been
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buried early and he missed it not. The thought that he might force a
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manner of affection onto Alaya that she could not reciprocate was
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viscerally repulsive to him, moreso for the nature of how she'd been
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brought to the Tower. That she'd been graceful in enduring her situation
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did not detract in the slightest from the atrocious nature of it. Alaya
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dropped onto the seat at his side without any of the put-on grace that
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might be expected of her higher in the Tower, wordlessly accepting the
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cup of wine he'd poured her and offered. She drew back her hood and
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Amadeus found his eyes lingering on her cheekbone. He'd learned to
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recognize the sight of mage-healing, and even the most exquisite of
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sorceries could not avoid flesh being made tender when it was knit anew.
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He said nothing, for he knew pity would burn her like acid. His friend
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drank a sip of the cup and made a spluttering grin against the rim.
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``Gods, that tastes truly awful,'' Alaya said. ``From the Green
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Stretch?''
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``Where else could they make such a horror?'' he grinned back.
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It'd been worth suffering the rest of that bottle just for the smile, he
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thought. She drank again, deeper this time.
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``It might as well be vinegar with a handful of grapes left to stew
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inside,'' Alaya said, sounding fascinated. ``This might be the single
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worst wine I've drunk, Maddie.''
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``Only the finest of the worst for you, Allie,'' he toasted.
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She quietly laughed, the way she had back home when she was truly amused
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and not simply putting on merriment for the patrons at her father's inn.
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They both drank, and he let her take the reins of the conversation
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without qualms.
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``Dare I ask what had you glaring balefully at parchment when I
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arrived?'' she asked.
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His jaw tightened, until he mastered himself.
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``I believe,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch said, ``I've grasped how the
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Wasteland was made.''
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She straightened in her seat, fingers tightening against the cup.
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``I expect,'' she said, ``your answer runs deeper than Sinistra's
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famously ruinous attempt to steal the weather of Callow.''
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He dipped his head in agreement and she breathed out.
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``Tell me,'' Alaya ordered. ``All of it.''
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She held no office, wielded little influence and bore no Name while,
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Duni or not, he was still the Black Knight of Praes. Yet it did not
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occur to him that this could be anything but an order, or that it could
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be disobeyed.
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``I began studying it because Sinistra's ritual was, in essence, our
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first great national act of lunacy,'' Amadeus said. ``Before her, we had
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a hundred and twenty years of relative success: the Grey Eyries annexed,
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and though Summerholm did not fall its Counts were near enough to
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vassals of the Tower. We backed them against Alban attempts to bring
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them into their realm them twice, Alaya! Why would Sinistra, then, risk
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such a ritual? Was she simply mad, consumed by the urge to wield her
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sorcery?''
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``Was she?'' Alaya asked.
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``Last year,'' Amadeus said, ``Wekesa, Sabah and I broke into one of the
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lesser spell repositories of the Warlock. While Apprentice had his
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design on volumes writing of wards, my own interest was in a rumour:
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namely that old failed rituals were kept there and used as tools of
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teaching for the Warlock's pupils.''
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``And you found the ritual Sinistra tried to use there,'' she murmured.
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``I did,'' he agreed. ``And Wekesa believes it sound in principle,
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though wildly ambitious and with laughably little margin for error. If
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heroes had not interrupted it, the sorcery could have functioned as
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intended.''
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``She could be a talented mage and mad nonetheless,'' Alaya said.
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``We've certainly precedent enough for that.''
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Not, he knew, because she was arguing against him. It was the way they
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spoke, the two of them, presenting the opposing view so that weakness in
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argument and knowledge could be made evident. \emph{Iron sharpens iron},
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highborn might have said, though she was anything but a foe.
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``Agreed,'' he said. ``On the other hand, if the ritual was well-formed
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then it had to be tailored to the realities of where it was meant to
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affect. That implies\ldots{}''
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``There was an observable phenomenon on Creation she was reacting to,''
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Alaya said. ``Was the land souring?''
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``I wondered the same,'' he smiled. ``And early Imperial records to make
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increasingly frequent mentions of famines and food shortages from the
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moment of the Declaration onwards. Yet considering that there were
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little changes to agricultural practices after the end of the Miezan
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occupation, the source of that issue had to be older.''
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``Explaining why you've a pond of books in Old Miezan spread over this
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hall,'' she drily said.
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His lips quirked, but the mirth left him soon enough.
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``It was Rector Cornelia Orbivia who led me to the answers,'' Amadeus
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said. ``The last of the Miezan rectors before trade with Callow was
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established. She was spectacularly corrupt, you see, yet somehow found
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it profitable to sail ships full of grain back Liceria.''
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``Meaning,'' Alaya said, ``that even compared to the wealth of the more
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traditional resources offered by Praes grain still remained a worthy
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investment.''
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He felt a rush of affection, heady and sudden, for this woman to whom
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he'd never really had to explain his thoughts. Who he could speak a word
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to and have a page understood. If it was not love, then what was this to
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be called?
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``Stobogia Minor and Major, the breadbaskets of Mieza, were under
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pressure from Baalite allies and displaced tribes to the north,''
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Amadeus said. ``The worth of grain would have risen accordingly.''
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``More than that,'' Alaya murmured. ``It became a strategic resource.
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The city of Mieza was famously populous and the heart of their empire in
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every way. Grain could buy the love of the hungry, bind them to causes.
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And even for the less ambitious, it would have been prized. A ship
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filled with rubies and gold ingots would attract attention: an army
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could be raised with such a prize, or offices and officers bought. To an
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Imperator, it would have smacked of rebellion in the making. Grain would
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not attract near as much attention, if sold discretely, yet still turn
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great profit.''
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She paused, turning dark eyes to him.
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``And this was when, in the Miezan span?'' she asked.
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``Between the First and Second Licerian War,'' Amadeus said.
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``The practice won't have ended at all, after,'' Alaya said. ``After the
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Second much of their empire fractured and governors raised their own
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private armies to try to claim the throne and fight the encroaching
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Hegemony. I expect that with the collapse of the usual grain markets,
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Praesi harvests kept ambitious armies fed on campaign more than once.''
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He'd not considered that, truth be told, for his interest had been in
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the consequences here and not across the Tyrian Sea. Yet every sentence
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she'd spoken only confirmed what he'd suspected.
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``So now you understand what drove the madness,'' he said.
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``Madness?'' she asked.
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He set aside his cup and leaned forward, snatching the leather-bound
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journal where the ink he'd put down had long gone dry. He opened it at
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the correct page and passed it to her.
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``Grain exports from the province of Praes,'' she acknowledged. ``I take
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it the sharp rise is when trade with Callow begins?''
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``It is,'' Amadeus agreed. ``No move to the fourth page of the
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journal.''
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She moved.
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``Comparative yields for fields now and under the Miezans,'' she noted.
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``Higher in those days, yet the land might have been more fertile then.
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Less ravaged.''
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``Ninth page,'' he said.
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There she would find the compared yields of eastern Callowan fields
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compared to those of northern Praes under the Miezans. Alaya's eyes
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narrowed.
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``This implies,'' she slowly said, ``that the lands now called the
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Wasteland were significantly more fertile than Callow's own fields as
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of\ldots{}''
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She trailed off, glancing at him.
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``Seventy years ago,'' Amadeus said. ``The most recent instance an
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Imperial agent had a look at the ledgers of the Count of Summerholm. The
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numbers to the side are for, respectively, one hundred and three years
|
|
ago and two hundred and fourteen years ago.''
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``Largely the same,'' Alaya said. ``Which means it is not a lone oddity.
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Yet it should not be possible -- no, it \emph{isn't} possible. Not
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naturally.''
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``Field rituals,'' Amadeus softly agreed. ``They used sorcery to
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increase the crop yields beyond what nature allowed, year after year,
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|
because grain was more useful to them than gold and we were too far for
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|
their enemies to strike at us. And so, like a body healed again and
|
|
again by sorcery without care to its natural functions\ldots{}''
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``The land began to rot from the inside,'' she completed.
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|
``Dread Empress Sinistra might have been mad,'' Amadeus acknowledged,
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``and have significantly worsened the situation, but she was not the
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cause of it. Her ritual was a desperate attempt to turn back the death
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|
throes of what became the Wasteland.''
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Her jaw tightened.
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``We still practice field rituals, Amadeus,'' she said.
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``Trismegistan magic, not Petronian,'' the Black Knight replied. ``And
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they are meant to ensure the land can be cultivated at all, not to offer
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|
unnaturally great bounty. Wekesa assures me the grounds are exhausted
|
|
but not damaged by the rituals. For all his other flaws, Dread Emperor
|
|
Sorcerous was a brilliant mage.''
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|
Eyes bright, almost excited though nothing had been revealed since doom
|
|
and the source of it, Alaya drank of her cup again.
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|
``So you've found answers,'' she said. ``What do you mean to use them
|
|
for?''
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``To make this empire,'' the Black Knight said, ``into more than a
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covenant of the hungry.''
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``An ambitious enterprise,'' Alaya commented, eyes veiled.
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|
``It is,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch said, holding her gaze. ``It'd
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take at least two to see it through, at a guess.''
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|
Something flickered across her face, then, that he could not put a word
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to. It stayed there, for a time, until her chin rose and her eyes blazed
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with something utterly implacable.
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``So it will,'' Alaya said, and it rang like an oath.
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