388 lines
20 KiB
TeX
388 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-57-hearing}{%
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\section{Chapter 57: Hearing}\label{chapter-57-hearing}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``It was written in faraway Mieza that law is what separates men
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and beasts. We know better, in Praes: law is what separates the beasts
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wild and tame.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Terribilis I, the Lawgiver
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\end{quote}
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It was tempting to send for Hakram and Vivienne, who in some ways were
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just as much the architects of the Liesse Accords as I might claim to
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be. The shape of them had come from me, but it was Adjutant who'd
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discretely gathered jurists from Callow and Praes and pressed them for
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understanding until a cohesive body of law could be put together.
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Vivienne herself had been at our side the entire way, spreading out her
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Jacks far and wide to obtain the practical knowledge that was needed to
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make any of our fancies a functioning reality -- yet burning, ardently,
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to see it done. Some days I suspected she'd spent more hours working out
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how the Accords could be made to hold up than either of us, moved by
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sheer want of seeing them take hold. It wasn't like they wouldn't be of
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use when arguing, either. Hakram had a ludic way with cold logic, and a
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mastery of details I'd never be able to match. And Vivienne's brand of
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argument, half ruthlessly pragmatic and half genuinely passionate, did
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tend to reach people neither Adjutant nor myself would get to. I didn't,
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though, because it would be missing the point of this exercise. Black
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wasn't simply demanding that I convince him, he was giving me the
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opportunity to cut my teeth on selling the Accords to a foreign ruler in
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a relatively safe manner. Here, if I stumbled, it would not be a
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disaster that struck at all I'd fought for.
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Even now, I thought, he was a sort of teacher still. Some things you
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never entirely outgrew.
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Still, in the end it would be me that carried the Accords to the shore
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if they were to ever reach it. Vivienne, while heiress-designate to
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Callow, was still deep in my shadow from an outsider's eyes. And Hakram,
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and Gods it was unfair, but Hakram wouldn't be taken seriously by any of
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them save if he had a knife at their throat. Because he was villain,
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because he was an orc, because he had chosen to stand at my side instead
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of raising his own banner. It angered me, the suspicion that in
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centuries to come the Liesse Accords would likely be written of as my
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work alone and other names with claims just as deep would be allowed to
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fall to the wayside. History, I thought, would shortchange Hakram of the
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Howling Wolves Clan. I'd fight it every way I could, even when he might
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wish I did not, but I did not believe it would be enough. For too many
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out there the story would feel neater without him -- less challenging of
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what they thought they knew -- and I well knew the knots people were
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willing to tie themselves into to allow their view of the world to go
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unchanged. Yet it was undeniable truth that when the deal was brought to
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the table where Hasenbach and the Blood and Ashur's committees sat, it
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would live or die by the wagging of my tongue. And so I dare not call on
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the others now, less that same tongue fail me on a day mistake would
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mean lasting calamity.
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Still, it was past noon and we both kept to some of the Wasteland's
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ways: though I did not send for the others, I did send for wine. And so
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Black and I claimed that old Mavian prayer for ourselves, breaking out
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bottles of some sharp Iserran wine -- \emph{Prière de Fou}, it was
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called -- that lingered on the tongue like sin or vengeance. In the
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afternoon's light he seemed strangely vital, for all the greying marks
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of age in his once-dark locks. With a loose white shirt on his frame and
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woolen dark trousers going into Legion-issue boots, he honestly seemed
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more\ldots{} carefree than I could remember ever seeing him. There'd
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been a heavy jacket of linen on his frame when I first came, but by the
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second cup of wine it was on the back of my seat to my own cloak's side.
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``The throne of Callow recognizes Lord Amadeus of the Green Stretch,
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Praesi dignitary,'' I began.
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I was toasted with a rough clay cup holding wine of which a singe bottle
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could likely but a whole bag of. He was seated at the edge of our heavy
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wooden table, ignoring the perfectly good seat I'd left
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``The Dread Empire of Praes deigns to recognize the Queen of Callow,
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Catherine Foundling,'' he allowed, lips twitching. ``In the depths of
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our mercy, keeping with our well-known concern for the fellowship of
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nations.''
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``Kind of you, eastern devil,'' I drily replied, leaning on my staff as
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I took a sip of my own shoddy cup. ``Now, I assume you've read the
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proposed treaties that were sent to you.''
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``These so-called Accords, yes,'' Black easily replied. ``A blatant
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attempt to weaken, isolate and starve the Dread Empire. And you expect
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us to sign these? You should be grateful our answer wasn't releasing a
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plague in Laure and setting your granaries aflame.''
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Threats, huh. It was true that while I arguably stood the greater victor
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on the fields of Iserre, Callow was not untouchable and despite the best
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efforts of my companions in fact remained rather fragile. Praes had
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other fires to put out, at the moment -- a goblin rebellion that'd taken
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Foramen, the sack of Nok by Ashuran fleets and the annihilation of its
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largest port Thalassina along with every living soul in that great city
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save one -- but Malicia might be able to get a handle on the mess, or
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whoever murdered her and claimed the Tower might. That meant Praes,
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though wounded, could turn its attentions on the fledgling goblin nation
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to its south and a very vulnerable Callow whose armies were largely
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abroad and had been for months. There shouldn't be food shortages though
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the winter, though there'd certainly be a rationing of the handouts by
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the royal granaries Hakram had created. If those went up in flames,
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though? It'd be more than a lean winter we were dealing with. No, the
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Dread Empire was not entirely without answers if cornered. On the other
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hand, there was a reason that even though Black was speaking like some
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arrogant Wasteland highborn even in that pretence he'd not `actually'
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struck at my kingdom. The current lack of open hostilities was something
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very much in the Tower's interest to maintain, lest I turn my attention
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to it instead of the Dead King.
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``If you strike across the border, I'll dismantle Praes after we're done
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up north,'' I said. ``The Grand Alliance already wants to, we both know
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that. The only thing that's truly been standing in their way is trust
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and distance, both of which will be sufficiently seen to if Callow
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becomes a signatory.''
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``When you are done up north,'' Black repeated. ``And there is the
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arrogance. Even should you beat Trismegistus on the field, will the
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Alliance not be ruined in achieving this? You threaten me with soldiers
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already sworn to die very far away. Your own armies are abroad, and
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their loyalties complex besides. If you do no want my concern to be how
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to break Callow before you return, or how to break it when you
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\emph{are} returned, then offer terms other than submission or the
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sword.''
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I drained the rest of my cup and tossed it at his head. He caught it,
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though a lot more narrowly than he would have a few years back, and
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filled it with the Iserran red even as I considered my answer. So he was
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making it clear my position in the Tower's eyes was not so strong as one
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might think at first glance. I could concede to part of that, at least.
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After a costly campaign against Keter, I couldn't see the current
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signatories of the Alliance eagerly embarking on a second military
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enterprise immediately after. In Praes, the prevailing belief among the
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High Lords might very well end up being that Callow was the only threat
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to worry of if it came to war. They might not even be wrong, I thought.
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I was not so sure the Sisters would send a great army of Firstborn to
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aid me again, if blades came out in the east.
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``Then let's see to your worries,'' I said. ``You said that the Accords
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would weaken, isolate and starve the Dread Empire.''
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``When paired with your declared intent and seemingly imminent
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achievement of becoming a signatory of the Grand Alliance,'' Black
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specified.
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I inclined my head in agreement. Wasn't going to be a secret for long,
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assuming it even was at the moment, so I did not mind the boundaries of
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our debate including it.
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``I'm listening,'' I said.
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He rose to his feet and strode across the thinning snow, pressing the
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filled cup into my hand as he passed, and came to stand by one of the
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raised stones. He tapped the parchments hung there with a finger.
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``Weakening,'' he told me. ``Your proposed laws would forbid the
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summoning for extra-Creational entities, save for peaceful purposes, and
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even then under restriction. These are specifically stated to include
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angels, devils and demons.''
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``They are,'' I said. ``Cutting through the legalese, civilian labour
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and advice-giving is fine for angels and devils. Demons are forbidden
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under all circumstances save if all signatories of the Accords agree
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such an act is necessary.''
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``And so you roughly enforce parity of means between Named,'' Black
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said. ``Which will be pleasing to some Named, mostly those incapable of
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actually doing any of this, but you seek to remove those same Named from
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positions of rule. As for lordly concerns, since those matter foremost
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under your laws, you would highly disadvantage Praes as a military
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power. Centuries of accumulated grimoires and contracts, which are
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potent soldiery when called on, are suddenly made invalid. Demons have
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been an integral part of the defences of our cities for ages, as
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deterrent and blade both. Some lasting presences of their kind would be
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difficult to dispose of even were we so inclined.''
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``I've made provisions for that last part,'' I said.
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``Yes, heroic Named under villainous supervision would remove lingering
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mistakes such as Hell Eggs,'' he mildly said. ``If that supervision were
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Praesi in nature, such an act might even be only \emph{mildly} offensive
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foreign intervention in our affairs. Yet you do not address the most
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essential of imbalances: the Dread Empire would be surrendering a great
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deal of strength while other signatories would not. What does the
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limiting of angels mean to Procer or Ashur? To Levant? By weakening the
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Empire, you strengthen all its rivals at its expense. There is no nation
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in existence that would agree to such a thing unless forced -- and
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treaties thrust upon a realm by force of arms rarely last.''
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``Demons,'' I flatly said, ``damage the fabric of Creation. Every time
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one is used, it is an act of war waged on every other sentient being.
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That the Empire has been practicing that sort of diabolism for centuries
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is not an excuse to continue, it is something to \emph{expiate}.''
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``Regardless of such concerns, it remains an advantage surrendered for
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no given rationale,'' he pointed out.
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``You do get something from this,'' I said. ``You get to no longer be
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the Dread Empire.''
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His brow rose.
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``Look,'' I said. ``I've read Malicia's treatise. The famous one, I man,
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`The Death of the Age of Wonders'. The touchstone of what she makes her
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foreign policy is making alliances abroad beyond the traditional Good
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and Evil lines, with the Thalassocracy of Ashur being the keystone. It's
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skillful politics, using it as counterbalance for Procer since
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raditionally it keeps the Principate in check by strengthening Levant
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and ensuring the League of Free Cities is pointed west.''
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``That,'' Black said, ``and alliance with Ashur means that sea trade
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lanes and the grain they represent would be effectively untouchable.''
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``It's a nice thought, but Ashur jumped into bed with Cordelia and just
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spent the better part of a year putting everything in Praes within
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walking distance of the sea to the torch,'' I said. ``Hasenbach is good,
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Black, but she's not \emph{that} good and Malicia had decades at the
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game before she was even born. Why did the Thalassocracy pick her over a
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risen but since restrained Praes as their ally?''
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``Because the Tower can't be trusted,'' he replied. ``Mind you, we had
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the effective heir to the Thalassocracy and some of their foremost
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admirals willing to back alliance after the death of Magon Hadast. But a
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powerful Praes -- and we were, in those days, perceived to have largely
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assimilated Callow -- will always be seen as a continental threat.''
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``And if you sign the Accords,'' I said, ``you get to shed that like old
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skin. Oh, I don't mean that suddenly the Wasteland will be trusted and
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the Tower will be the sudden beloved of people it spent centuries
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sending flying fortresses at. But when decisions are made, high up?
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They'll know that the Empire is sitting at the same table as everyone
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else, following the same rules. The moment other crowns no longer have
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to worry about whether the latest Emperor is going to feed a few
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thousand babies to a snake to summon an army of devils, then they become
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a much more palatable ally. Then \emph{interests} begin to matter again,
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and if that's the game then Praes brings quite a bit to the table. You
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ask what signing the Accords give you? Proof that you're a reasonable
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actor. And Black, how \emph{else} are you ever going to get that?''
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He studied me for a time, then gave half a nod.
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``Some of the Empire's highborn might be swayed by such an argument,''
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he noted. ``Not the better part, but enough to make civil war feasible
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to win. Which brings us to an issue born of your Accords, yet not part
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of them.''
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``Callow,'' I said.
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``Starvation,'' my father agreed. ``Having largely forsworn diabolism,
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the Wasteland might not longer be able to conquer the Kingdom of Callow
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to secure grain supply. Even less so should Callow be a member of the
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Grand Alliance, which involves clauses of mutual protection against
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non-signatory aggression. Praes would surrender the means through which
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to forcefully acquire grain without having first secured other means for
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that acquisition.''
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``Praes can't sign the Grand Alliance,'' I admitted. ``I can't see that
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ever going through.''
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``Neither can I,'' Black replied, amused.
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``So we cut out the middle man,'' I said. ``Praes and Callow, bound in a
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treaty of trade and peace. It's not like we don't take losses selling
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the crops south and west, anyway. The Principate has fertile plains and
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Mercantis gouges us habitually. Besides, in everything magical we're at
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least half a century behind the Empire, if not more, so it's not like
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you have nothing to trade aside from precious metals.''
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``You would be tying our nations at their very heart,'' he warned me.
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``Good,'' I snarled. ``I want it to be that the Tower can never war on
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Laure again without starving itself. I want the fucking stained glass in
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the windows of our palaces not to be \emph{imported from Procer}. All
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these centuries of taxes and steel and young soldiers we've spent moving
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the same border back and forth can be put to better use. Gods, Black,
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just imagine what Praes could do if it didn't waste its talents on
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magical plagues and flying fortresses and bleeding its own people for
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fields! Imagine what Callow might become, if half the yearly taxes
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didn't go to raising knights and raising walls to the east -- we could
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be so much \emph{more}.''
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I laughed, harshly.
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``Did you know that the cathedral in Laure, the one Elizabeth Alban had
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built spending Alamans treasures, is the reason why the House of Light
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is allowed to ask coin of the faithful?'' I said. ``Because there were
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points in Callowan history where the crown was too \emph{poor} to pay
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for its damned upkeep while also raising armies and fighting wars in the
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east. Gods, Black, as nations we've spent more of -- name it! -- on
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killing each other than any single other thing in the span of our
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history. And while we were busy biting each other's tails, the world
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moved on.''
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``There will be those,'' he said, ``for whom those truths will not be
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enough.''
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``Aye,'' I said. ``I had a few of those too, back home. I hung the
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sloppy ones and murdered the rest.''
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He laughed.
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``Those poor Regals,'' he said, lips twitching. ``The fought as barons
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challenging a queen and found themselves instead having slighted the
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Dread Empress of Callow.''
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That there was a fond pride to his tone was not enough to prevent my
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wince. There was some truth to that and I knew it, for I had not learned
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the lessons of rule from my distant predecessors the Fairfaxes and the
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Albans. I'd wielded knife and scheme like one reigning from the Tower,
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tyrant no matter my good intentions. So be it. The Fairfaxes had failed,
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in the end, and I would not suffer that of myself after the myriad lines
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I had crossed.
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``Your meaning is taken,'' the green-eyed man said. ``Thought here are
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objections still.''
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``You trade the weakening for strength elsewhere,'' I said. ``Your
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feared starvation will be sworn away. That leaves what, isolation? Praes
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is already isolated, by virtue of having pissed away every possible
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alliance it could have struck. What fault of that is mine, or the
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Accords?''
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``Don't be childish,'' Black chided. ``You would require of the Empire
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that it willingly embraced your new age -- you must then make a place
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for it amongst that age.''
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``When did the High Lords and Ladies of Praes become lost children I
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must lead out of the woods?'' I mockingly said.
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A true speaker for those highborn might have taken offence to that, but
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while my father was hardly the source of my disdain for nobility he'd
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certainly reinforced the leaning.
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``When you sought to place your will above even the Tower's,'' he easily
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replied. ``In this world you would make, Praes must have a role to play.
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Else its energies will be spent unmaking what you have made.''
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``To be honest, I expect that within thirty years it'll be at war with
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the Free Cities,'' I admitted. ``They'll not be Grand Alliance, and
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maybe not even Accord signatories.''
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``War is one thing,'' he said. ``Inevitable, no matter what treaties are
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written. Yet more is required. Which brings me to this.''
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Striding forward, wine cup in hand, he gestured at another raised stone.
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One holding parchments regarding the to-be city of Cardinal, and the
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academy it was to hold within its bounds. An academy unlike any other
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Calernia had ever seen.
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``The school,'' I said.
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``It was,'' Black said, ``a stroke of brilliance. Forcing Named to
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attend there, teaching them the articles of the Accords as well as
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manners of villainy and heroism? The academy is the means through which
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your dream lasts longer than your life's span. But it does not go far
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enough.''
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In truth the academy was more Vivienne's notion than mine -- I'd been
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more concerned with enforcement, which had led me to the founding of
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Cardinal itself -- but it truly \emph{was} a stroke of brilliance. Oh,
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all those young Named would get practical lessons in how to accomplish
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what they wanted but they'd also get an education in the Articles of
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Strife: the manners of violence that were allowed of Named, depending on
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situation. How to keep mortals away from the damage, when it was
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allowable to kill another Named over a disagreement and what methods
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were legal to employ in that killing. And what methods would instead
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bring down on your head the wrath of the signatories, including the
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Named sworn to lethal enforcement of the Accords for a period of ten
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years at a time. I would leave behind a world where someone using a
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magic plague to wipe out a city would be met with heroes and villains
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from all over Calernia coming down on your head like the wrath of the
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Gods, where someone breaking the acceptable rules of warfare would be
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barred from Cardinal, from the Twilight Ways, from receiving support by
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any signatory government. Shatranj was a horrid metaphor for war, as war
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wasn't a game. But the strife between Named I fully intended on making a
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continent-wide tourney, a pit fight that'd allow the Gods to claim their
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due and the rest of us to keep on moving.
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``You named these very accords after a tragedy wrought by sorcery -- it
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was a Named practitioner, to be certain, but it was still magic that
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brought the madness,'' Black said. ``Shaping Named is not enough.''
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``You want me to regulate sorcery,'' I frowned.
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``I want you to make this Cardinal of yours the greatest centre of
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magical learning on Calernia,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch said. ``And
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to crown it the thief of our worst follies, made to serve higher
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purpose.''
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