395 lines
19 KiB
TeX
395 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-53-avowed}{%
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\section{Chapter 53: Avowed}\label{chapter-53-avowed}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Count them all, in the snow}
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\emph{Red and gold and black as night}
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\emph{Count them all, high and low}
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\emph{Seven crowns broken by rite}
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\emph{Brought they forth, in accord}
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\emph{Peace, oaths and a sword.''}
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-Iserran children's rhyme
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\end{quote}
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If felt like the fact that my hands were currently filled with a pipe
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and liquor might be detracting some from the solemnity of this occasion,
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but maybe it was just me. Gods, I wished I'd gotten ten hours of sleep
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in me before having to parse this. On the surface this seemed like a
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coup, but not looking further than the surface was how you lost feathers
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at this game. Levant was backing my bid for being a member of the Grand
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Alliance, and Ashur had been struck down into irrelevance by the Battle
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of Thalassina and then being knifed in the back by the League. I forced
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my tired mind to keep slogging on, but as far as I could see the heart
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of what this meant was that if I made a bargain with Cordelia Hasenbach
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-- which, given the amount of things I had to trade, I should be able to
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-- then Callow would be brought into the fold. Was this a case of
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putting a leash on the beast you couldn't defeat, an attempt by the
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Pilgrim to bind me to his causes? It hardly mattered, though, in the
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end. I'd been trying to get a foothold in those treaties for years now,
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and if they were seeking a peace because they thought they could win
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that where war had failed them then I could live with that. Because I,
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too, sought more than my signature on declarations of alliance from
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this. I would get the Liesse Accords signed, and whatever else could be
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said of tonight it was also was a step towards that end.
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Discretely as I could in this situation, which wasn't all that much, I
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pressed back the flask into Hakram's hand and hide the pipe behind my
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arm to empty it into the snow. Already I was half-wishing I'd drunk the
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whole thing, as much for the wine's touch of warmth in the face of the
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cold morning air as the tonic that'd shaken off some the lethargy
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clawing at my thoughts. Leaning against the dead yew offering I'd found
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in the depths of Twilight, where lied the grave of king the world had
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decreed to be good, I shivered but matched their expectant gazes.
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``I have one foe,'' I said, ``and he dwells north, behind the walls of
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Keter, where his tyranny lies serene. Everything else is chaff.''
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Would that I had my cloak, as much for warmth as for the presence it
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lent.
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``You have bled my people,'' I said. ``And we have done the same to you,
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every one of us dancing on damned strings. Let that end with this dawn,
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for we share one war still and it will not be found on this field.''
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``War on Keter,'' Aquiline Osena called out, voice loud and clear.
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``Honour in victory, and should doom find us then honour in defiance
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\emph{unbent}.''
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The last word clapped out like a challenge, proud and finding reflection
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in those that heard it.
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``War to the north,'' Razin Tanja agreed, his words ringing out. ``As
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oath was sworn in Blood and smoke. The shames we will redeem, the graces
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we will earn.''
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``To the Crown of the Dead we bring steel,'' Itima Ifriqui smiled,
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hard-toothed and starved. ``Through wasteland and snow, until tall walls
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come to echo our scorn.''
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``Oath was given. War to the knife,'' Yannu Marava said, eyes cold and
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limpid, ``to ruin and carrion things and silent dusk. Let Creation know
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that the Dominion of Levant marches to war, and the sword will not
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return to the sheath until the Enemy has broken or we are dust.''
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Would my countrymen have shivered this way, I wondered as I watched the
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fire light in the eyes of the warriors around us, if a king of the Old
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Kingdom had called on their oaths? I remembered still the sight of
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Edward Fairfax standing bedecked in bells and spite, the words that
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heady call that'd sounded beyond the veil of death -- \emph{rise,
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Callowans, rise once more for we have debts yet unsettled} -- and called
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the sum of my failures to war. It was a bastard throne I had made, and
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bastard was the claim I had on those who had chosen to follow me into
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strife. This, though? It was older, purer. The stuff fables were made
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of. I watched it ripple through the hundreds of armsmen around us, that
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intangible weight that betrayed history's gears turning. Sometimes, I
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thought, it didn't have to be a scheme. Sometimes the stars were aligned
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and Creation let fate flow like water down the river. A hundred thousand
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touches too light and too small to have been seen, conspiring to shape
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something grim or beautiful or both. The Levantines sounded swords and
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axes on shield, though this was no acclamation: the rhythm sounded like
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a strange dirge, like grief and doom and wonder.
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``The Anthem of Smoke,'' Princess Rozala Malanza murmured under her
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breath.
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It was, I remembered, one of the great story-songs of their people. Not
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unlike \emph{Here They Come Again} for mine, or perhaps \emph{Red The
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Flowers}. There was an anger to the tune, I thought, and why would there
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not be? Levant had been born of bloody, merciless rebellion. Their Named
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were not the white-clad knights of the Old Kingdom, the tricksters and
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preachers of the League or even the blinkered, colourful exemplars of
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Procer. No, that lot had tasted the blood in the mouth from the start,
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hadn't they? Slayer, red-handed killers one and all. Binder, shackling
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doom to ride it to war. Brigand -- that incongruous Chantant word in
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Levantine hands, the scornful dismissal of \emph{bandit} instead turned
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into declaration of war. Even the Champion had stood for a people who'd
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preferred burning their own homes to surrendering it. And at the heart
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of them all a Pilgrim in grey, and how did the famous line go again?
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\emph{His stride rebellion and stirring ember.} Oh, theirs were not the
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finest armies I had seen. They lacked discipline, lacked training,
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lacked equipment. But they were brave, I thought, and the manner of
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savagery I saw in their bearing I thought might be kin to the sort I'd
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glimpsed in another hard people. One I'd come to trust, and in many ways
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they was still the backbone of my armies.
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One served as my right hand, too, and another as the marshal of my
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hosts.
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Savages as they might be, I thought, striking each other at every turn
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and writing honour's couplets in blood, but when the dark pivots came
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they wouldn't break easy. It was slight, and fading, but there remained
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something in them of the people who'd humbled the Principate when it
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stood at the height of its power. \emph{May the Hidden Horror yet choke
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on it}. I stood in silence until the hammering of steel on steel ended,
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trailing off into the clearing sky.
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``So be it,'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
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And oh, he sounded exhausted but there was a brightness to his voice as
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well I'd rarely heard there before. Pride, I thought, if not without
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sadness. I could not blame him, for Levant had sworn anew to do the
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right thing and that never, ever came without a price.
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``I stand witness to oaths sworn again, and let none break them while
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claiming honour,'' he said. ``Let it be remembered that when the Enemy
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came for the world, Levant did not shirk its duty.''
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The sound of steel sliding out of its sheath drew all gazes to my side,
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where Rozala Malanza had drawn the slender blade at her side. In the
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morning's cast the princess was a sight, long dark curls loose behind
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her and matched in shine only by the gleam in those equally dark eyes.
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Tall and curved but hard-handed, as much general as she was princess,
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the Princess of Aequitan breathed out mist. In war too, had that one
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been forged. Her mother's war, the one whose defeat had haunted her
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life, but other since. The Battle of the Camps, where ambitions were
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ruined and I first tasted the fear that would lead me down the road to
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Keter. This one as well, though, had left a mark. \emph{A princes'
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graveyard}, Leonor of Valencis had called it, one from which only one
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crown emerged untouched. Her own, for having judged it less than the
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lives of the people it ruled over. I'd admired the gesture then, and
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still did now. Of all the princes and princesses of Procer I had beheld,
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none save the First Prince herself could be said to have character
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worthier of respect.
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``I am not the First Prince,'' she said. ``Yet I stand the sole of my
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title in Iserre, and the south entire. I speak only to that, which is
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right enough to my eye.''
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I studied her in silence, not alone in this: so did the four of the
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Blood, and the Pilgrim as well. The Peregrine had been at her side
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before, I remembered, when he'd led the heroes of the northern crusade.
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``We have been foe before,'' Rozala said, princess still but in that
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moment Arlesite even more, ``on Levant we warred, unjustly, for many
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years. And to the east, across the mountains\ldots{}''
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She looked at me then, and I did not soften gaze or offer sympathy. I
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still remembered the bloody gaps left in the ranks of my army after I'd
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awoke from Winter's grasp, on the last day of the Camps, and though war
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was war even if I did not count it grudge neither would I simply
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\emph{forge}t it.
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``We spoke righteous words, and schemed that which was not,'' the
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Princess of Aequitan said. ``A fresh entry to a tally long kept of
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contempts offered unprovoked. I say this not to apologize, for I bear
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not so great a crown it can change the lay of the past, but to\ldots{}''
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She hesitated, struggling for the word.
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``Acknowledge,'' Rozala Malanza said. ``That even though treaties were
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signed, that alliances were made and bargains stuck, we did not
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\emph{earn} this. That in the face of the darkness what we have sown
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might have seen us stand alone, if you all had not chosen to heed
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beliefs of a higher order.''
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She let out what might have been a laugh had it not been utterly without
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mirth.
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``To acknowledge that there were choices to be made and you chose to act
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in honour,'' she said. ``Knowing that like the viper of old lore we have
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sunk our fangs in the flesh of our benefactors before, still you chose.
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And I cannot -- I cannot offer anything for it that would not be
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insult.''
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She'd stumbled, in the last sentence, like it'd been disgraceful to
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speak it.
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``There are no honours I could grant that would be higher than those you
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claimed simply by making this decision,'' Princess Rozala said, raising
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her chin. ``I will not pretend that wealth or promises would be worth
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the blood you have and will shed, though should you wish them of me you
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have all I own. Yet I can, Merciful Gods, at least I can say that this
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was \emph{heard}. That it will be remembered, that it will not slip
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quiet into obscurity once the menace has passed.''
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She breathed out shallowly.
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``Shame on us,'' Rozala Malanza softly said, ``if we ever forget it.''
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Her sword she thrust into the ground, through snow and ice and earth,
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and it bit deep.
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``And if ever comes to that,'' she said. ``On that day I, or one of my
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line, will come for that sword again. To take it up and wield it until
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the shame has been cleansed.''
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My fingers clenched. That had not been small oath, I thought, or a
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feeble one. The Princess of Aequitan had sworn, in her own way, that
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should Procer turn against those who were coming to its help in its hour
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of need she would rise in rebellion. No, more than just her. She had
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sworn as a Malanza and bound her entire line to the oath.
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``Rozala Malanza,'' the Grey Pilgrim called out, voice clear and bright,
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``hail.''
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Like a snake uncoiling the call spread through the Levantines, Blood and
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not, until the \emph{hail} rang out like thunder. Softly I struck the
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butt of my staff against the ground, looking at the sword and wondering
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what manner of curse would take anyone trying to take it up save in
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fulfillment of the oath. There'd been a weight to the princess' words,
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Named or not, and such a thing was rarely without consequence. No,
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they'd remember Rozala's Oath for many years to come. After the last
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hail died, like the wind had gone out of all of us we began to disperse.
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The force that had held us all spellbound had ebbed, used to nothingness
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or passed afar.
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And so the great battle on the plains of Iserre ended with three things:
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peace, oaths, and a sword in the ground.
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---
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I could feel the vigor leeching out of me as we began walking downhill,
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the half-scattered Levantines parting respectfully for us. Princess
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Rozala had made her own way down, apart from Hakram and I and directly
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headed towards the horse and foot she'd brought. I'd traded a meaningful
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look with Tariq before we parted ways, both of us aware that there would
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be need for talks of all sorts in the days to come. Gripping as the
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exchanges on the hill had been in their own way, they would amount to
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little and less if the diplomatic legwork did not follow behind the
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grand gestures. Verbal agreements at sunrise made between recent enemies
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were not actual treaties, though my life would be a great deal simpler
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of they were. Still, I'd be useless before I got some sleep in me and
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Tariq was in even worse state: freshly-resurrected, robbed of an aspect
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and with no finger on the pulse of where his people had been headed
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before we returned. I, at least, could rest certain that Vivienne and
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Juniper would keep things running as they should in my absence. With
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Hakram to watch over them, these days I did not need to keep nearly as
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close an eye on the Army of Callow's workings as I had in the early
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days.
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It was for the best, in my opinion. I still believed myself a fair hand
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as a general and an occasionally inspired tactician, but the army could
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not come to rely on me. Black, when he'd first forged the modern Legions
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of Terror, had been very careful to ensure that his presence and Name
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would be supplement but never \emph{required}. The Legions, and now the
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Army, must be perfectly capable of functioning without my being
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involved. It freed my hand to address other perils, true, but there was
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also an issue of legacy -- I would build no host that would be crippled
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by my death or abdication, whichever came first. I'd been taught better
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than that. Two cohorts and a pale-faced General Abigail were awaiting us
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when we reached the bottom of the hill, which had me casting a mildly
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reproachful look at Adjutant. She was far too high-placed an officer to
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be in command here if someone higher up the ladder had not requested it.
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The culprit seemed obvious, and after the general hurriedly distanced
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herself from us under pretence of leading the cohorts back to camp from
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the front, turned out to be unabashed.
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``Wanted to see how she holds up under pressure,'' he quietly told me in
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Kharsum.
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``She's held command in battles without folding in the slightest,'' I
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pointed out in the same. ``She's a twitchy thing, mind you, I won't deny
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that. But she thinks fast on her feet and she's got the right
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instincts.''
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``Reminds you of anyone?'' Adjutant mildly said.
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I rolled my eyes.
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``I was never all that shy when it came to getting into scraps,'' I
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replied. ``Not every canny Callowan girl is my kin in spirit.''
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``If you say so,'' he teased.
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``I do,'' I said. ``And you're being cagey. Haven't told you anything
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you didn't already know, so what's your actual reason for bringing her
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along?''
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``There's more than one kind of pressure,'' Hakram said. ``Many moving
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parts, tonight, and many ways it could have spun out of control.''
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I grunted, conceding the point. Keeping the lid on the pot was different
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than keeping your head screwed on straight when the blades were already
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out.
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``So?'' I asked.
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``She kept her head,'' he said, almost approvingly. ``General staff
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material, that one. She'd also thank you for sending her far from the
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frontlines.''
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``She needs accolades first,'' I murmured. ``A few feats under her belt.
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Otherwise the nobles will squeeze her too easily.''
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The bastard system of fresh Callowan rule I would be passing on to my
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successor had governors holding many of the great territories that'd
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once belonged to the aristocracy, but the nobles hadn't been stamped
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out. Yet there were still baronies up north, Duchess Kegan in Daoine and
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even highborn stripped of their lands still held a lot of influence.
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Though the unspoken threat of my disapproval -- paired with the open
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secret I was less than fond of aristocrats -- had kept a true noble
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faction from forming since the effective dissolution of the Regals,
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there was no guarantee such a state of affairs would be maintained under
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whoever followed after me. Rebellions or even just unrest, would be a
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nasty turn after the way Callow had exhausted and would further exhaust
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itself prosecuting war against the Dead King. Best to nip that in the
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bud with a large standing army whose head would be both popular with the
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people and not bound to any of the great nobles and dignitaries of
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Callow. Whether Abigail of Summerholm could be that woman still remained
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to be seen, but for now she was at least the foremost candidate. I was
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shaken out of the reverie I'd slipped into when thinking when I caught
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sight of a familiar silhouette approaching. Ivah, by now well-known in
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the Army of Callow's circles, found the shield wall opening for it
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without a comment.
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General Abigail glanced askance at me, silently asking whether her
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presence would be required for the conversation that'd follow, but I
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shook my head. And tried not to be too visibly amused at her
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poorly-hidden relief.
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``Ivah,'' I greeted the drow. ``Still up, I see.''
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``My tasks have yet to end, Losara Queen,'' it replied. ``I bring forth
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message from your shade, as well as your mantle.''
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It did, in fact, have my cloak with it. It spread it out, though not
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before handing me a small stripe of parchment, and I turned to the side
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to cast better light on it. \emph{He is one again}, Akua had written me.
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\emph{Losses were slight. Exhaustion will keep him slumbering for a
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time.} A tired smile stretched out my lips. It'd been a damned ride of a
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night, but there'd been more victories than defeats. Foremost among them
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was that my father's soul had been reattached to his body and he'd wake
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before too long, whole and not greatly lessened by the experience. Akua
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had come through for me once more, as she was in the habit of doing
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these days. Good news. I thought I'd heard a scuffle behind, but when I
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glanced there was nothing out of the ordinary. Hakram laid the Mantle of
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Woe on my shoulders and I breathed out in comfort. It was not so warm as
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that, but I'd grown used to it more than I'd ever believed I would.
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``Masego is stable?'' I asked.
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``He is,'' Hakram gravelled. ``And still asleep. We have him watched.''
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I snorted.
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``Archer let you post guards?'' I asked. ``Which brings to mind, did
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Roland return to the Proceran camp in the end?''
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``The Rogue Sorcerer,'' Adjutant frowned. ``Archer was not sent out on a
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task?''
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My stomach dropped.
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``No, she wasn't,'' I said. ``You haven't seen her or the Sorcerer, I
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take it.''
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``They did not come to our camp,'' he said. ``And neither were mentioned
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to me otherwise.''
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``Shit,'' I muttered. ``Did anyone recently move their -- no, you don't
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even need to answer that.''
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I sighed.
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``Still got that flask, Hakram?'' I asked.
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He nodded, though his eyes were curious.
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``Hand it to me,'' I grunted. ``I'll need the tonic if I'm to have talks
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with Kairos.''
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