434 lines
21 KiB
TeX
434 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-73-discerning}{%
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\section{Chapter 73: Discerning}\label{chapter-73-discerning}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Poison is the weapon of the trade, knife the weapon of the
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intimate and sorcery the weapon of war. To use any for the improper
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purpose is the mark of inferior breeding, save if greater game is yet
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afoot.''}
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-- Extract from `The Behaviours of Civil Conduct', by High Lady Mchumba
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Sahelian
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\end{quote}
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Akua leaked a sensation of query into the Night, an implicit question as
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to whether or not she should leave given the nature of our arriving
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guests, but I shook my head. While she was close to neither she was
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likely to be a fairer hand at reading them than either Vivienne or
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Hakram, and that lack of closes itself was not without its uses. I
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doubted a distraction as petty as that would be enough to get beneath
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the skin of the Scribe, but it took more than one stone to build a
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house. Adjutant smoothly rose to fetch another two seats without my
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asking, while Vivienne pressed into my hand a cup before pouring her
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own. Cold ice-cooled water, sadly, but I did get drunk a lot faster than
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I used to these days so perhaps that was for the best. Only a fool
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blunted the edge of their sword just before tugging at a tiger's tail.
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\emph{Might not be necessary}, I reminded myself. It would not do to
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assume hostility from Scribe because of the less than stellar terms we'd
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parted on last time we spoke. Or even with those in mind given that if
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my father asked her to play nice, I believed her likely to do so. Still,
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I'd recently learned that Black did not have nearly as tight a leash
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over the Scribe as I'd once assumed.
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It would not do to presume in favour of her either.
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It was still half a surprise every time to see Black in anything but
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plate when it was daylight, though I noted that while he wore a dark
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tabard and matching long-sleeved tunic the faint hint of a coat of mail
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could be seen under them. Hard to unlearn a lifetime's worth of
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paranoia, I supposed -- though when it came to Praes it could not realty
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be called \emph{paranoia} could it? Scribe was as slippery to the eyes
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as she'd always been, even when I was actively trying to watch her. It
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wasn't invisibility, for she was definitely there, but trying to
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\emph{notice} anything about the villainess had my attention sliding
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away like water off a duck's back. She had ink-stained hands, and she
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was not tall, although she might just have been slouching. Her clothes
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were loose and made of cloth. I bit the inside my cheek, using the pain
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as a spur as I narrowed my eyes. She had pale, seemingly bloodless lips.
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They were not smiling. Black took a seat at Adjutant's invitation and I
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only then realized how long I'd been staring at Scribe, with only little
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to show for it. Something to revisit later, perhaps. I sent an idle
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prayer to my patronesses, though who knew if they'd deign to intercede
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for such a trifle.
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``Would I be correct in assuming you have been parsing through the
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reports of the Jacks?'' the Carrion Lord calmly asked.
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``More or less,'' I agreed. ``Speculating as to the consequences of the
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mess, too. An insider's eye of the affair would be appreciated.''
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The last sentence I spoke casually, though none here were fool enough to
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believe it. I was reserving anger along with judgement, but I was less
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than pleased at the fact that Cordelia Hasenbach had apparently come
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rather close to being buried in a shallow grave. If the Eyes of the
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Empire truly had been either authors or helpers to this episode of
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convulsive stupidity, I would see to it that heads would roll unless
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\emph{very} good reason was given. And I did not mean it as a figure of
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speech, this once. Black glanced at his aide, either ordering or
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encouraging.
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``The Eyes of the Empire were involved,'' the Scribe calmly confirmed.
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``Not directly, but in the nascent stages of the conspiracy and on its
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edges when it came to a head.''
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``Do the Procerans know?'' Vivienne flatly asked.
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``The Circle of Thorns did as it took place. By now I would venture this
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has expanded to the First Prince and her most trusted,'' Scribe said.
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My eyes flicked to my teacher, whose face had remained serene even as
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one of his oldest companions casually admitted she'd just attacked the
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Principate in front of Cordelia Hasenbach while we were under formal
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truce and headed for the negotiating table besides. He was unmoved, so
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there was likely more to the story. At least some semblance of a reason
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for me not to denounce Scribe as an agent of the Tower and send her
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fucking crucified corpse to the First Prince as an apology.
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``Elaborate,'' I coldly ordered.
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``After the ambush sprung by the Grey Pilgrim that saw Lord Black
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seized, the Tower reached out to me through the Eyes of the Empire,''
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Scribe said. ``The Empress intended a rescue mission in Salia, paired
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with a strike at the internal stability of Procer, and given the
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circumstances I agreed with the necessity. Lady Ime and myself, over the
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span of several months, laid the groundwork for certain factions within
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Procer to come to the conclusion a coup was feasible.''
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``The rumours that Rozala Malanza was backing the coup,'' Hakram
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gravelled. ``They were not simple slander.''
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``It was difficult but not impossible to impersonate her by letter,''
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Scribe agreed. ``Given that neither the House of Light nor the Silver
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Letters use scrying mages and the First Prince's own order was rendered
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helpless by the interdict cast over Iserre. We've had a convincing
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forgery of the royal seal of Aequitan since the Proceran civil war, when
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we funded Aenor Malanza's bid for the throne through the Pravus Bank.''
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``The coup happened,'' I said. ``Which means the trigger was pulled on
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this scheme, and recently too. After you were informed of my intentions
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for treaties with the Grand Alliance.''
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``I was ordered by scrying link to end any ongoing operations, erase any
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evidence of Praesi presence in the capital and ensure the loyalty of all
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agents in the city,'' Scribe agreed.
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I glanced at Black, who inclined his head in confirmation.
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``In this I did not succeed,'' Scribe said. ``Ime had several long-term
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plants among our scrying mages I was unaware of, and she used the
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Tower's clout to mobilize the Eyes in the capital for action before I
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could clean up all loose ends. It appears the Empress had judged the
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Liesse Accords to be an existential threat to herself and her continued
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reign.''
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Well, I grimly thought, she wasn't wrong about that.
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``Given actions that could not be denied, you had to ensure your
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loyalists among the Eyes were seen as undertaking damage control,'' Akua
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quietly said. ``Which is where the Circle of Thorns was brought in. The
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First Prince will not take the word of anyone here as to the actions of
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your agents, but she will heed the reports of her own spymaster. A
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calculated move.''
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``Concessions had to be made to the Circle in order for their leader to
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agree not to spread knowledge of our involvement beyond the necessary,
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and hand over the written proof of Praesi involvement,'' Scribe said.
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``I gave formal agreement to the Praesi and Callowan delegations backing
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the First Prince when she requests relief ships be allowed through the
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Nicaean blockade around Ashur.''
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I'd likely have agreed to that anyway, I mused. Oh I'd have tried to
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exact a little something to sweeten the pot, or made a show of asking
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for nothing in exchange to foster a sense of debt between myself and
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Hasenbach, but this was not a great loss for me. I was still swimming in
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leverage. On the other hand, Scribe had just entered a biding commitment
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in my name. That she'd presumed to speak for me was galling enough.
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Considering that Black was effectively my dependant under Proceran law
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at the moment, Hasenbach would not be entirely without grounds to kick
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up a fuss if his aide made promises and then they were gone back on.
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It'd never hold without the strength to enforce it and I could cut right
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through by sending the Highest Assembly the charred corpse of Scribe
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along with a polite note informing them she in no way spoke for me, but
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it'd sour my reputation with some people I badly needed the willing
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collaboration of. Worse still, though, was that simply by speaking in my
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name when negotiating the cover up the Scribe had implicitly stated I
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was in some way related to this. Sedately, I set down my cup on the
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table.
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``I'll not insult your intelligence by asking you if you know what
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you've done,'' I calmly said. ``I assume if you were willing to be in
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killing distance of me, you have further explanation as why I shouldn't
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execute you out of general principle.''
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Black's lips thinned, but he did not object. Neither fucking should he.
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If Adjutant had entered a binding agreement on the behalf of the Black
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Knight, back in the day, even if my teacher had then judged it worth
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upholding he would have put Hakram's head on a pike as a warning for
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anyone else wanting to overstep. All else aside, I was the Queen of
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Callow and a villain in my own right. That someone not in my service or
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given my explicit permission had \emph{presumed} to speak for me in such
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a delicate situation was worthy of violence.
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``The Empress was aiming at the Accords themselves, apparently
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considering them the primary threat,'' Scribe replied, voice unruffled.
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``The Silver Letters brought stolen goblinfire into the city and Ime's
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agents set fire near their safehouses in attempts to trigger a blaze.
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Such an event would have destroyed large swaths of Salia and, given your
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reputation for the substance's use, affected popular opinion enough to
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make made negotiation near impossible. Especially for a weakened First
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Prince, be it a surviving Hasenbach or a freshly elected Malanza. The
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odds were more than fair that the Grand Alliance itself would
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collapse.''
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I smoothly drummed my fingers against the table. Her answer, unspoken as
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it'd been, was that she might have overstepped but she'd done so while
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in the process of averting what could have been a great crisis for me.
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Certainly one much worse than the minor concession this had ended up
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costing me -- and the unfortunate implications to Scribe having spoken
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for me could be smoothed away by making it clear to Hasenbach it'd been
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an exception and not to be taken as face value again. It still got stuck
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in my throat that her own personal failure to get her house in order
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would cost me, and that Malicia's unimpeded schemes would be considered
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my problem, but I supposed an argument could be made that I was the one
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who was diplomatically cornering the Empress. Scribe's repeated mention
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of the Accords as the main target was certainly hinting at that heavily.
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Black cleared his throat.
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``Regardless of circumstance,'' he said, ``offence was given. We will
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offer reparations to the Kingdom of Callow for having drawn on its
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influence to clean up our own mistakes.''
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Scribe did not speak for a moment, as if reluctant.
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``As of this morning, the Jacks serving under Duchess-Regent Kegan of
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Callow have been granted access through liaison to my informants within
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the Wasteland,'' the Scribe said, ``along with a list of all suspected
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Malicia agents within the kingdom.''
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My brow rose. Those were\ldots{} not small things. Black had been outing
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Malicia's agents in my kingdom for a while now, true, but he'd done it
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slowly and at a pace Vivienne was adamant had been chosen so his
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\emph{own} agents would not be outed by the revelations. And the
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cooperation with Scribe's own faction in the Eyes would go a long way in
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keeping Kegan from ending up in a grave between Ratface and Anne
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Kendall. Those were heavier reparations than I would have felt
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comfortable asking for, if I'd set the terms, which my teacher would
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know. \emph{Ah}, I thought, meeting green eyes with my own. This was not
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just reparations it was a polite gift-assisted request not to kill
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Scribe for having crossed me. Which I was finding difficult to refuse,
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all thing considered. Black was being genuine here, I decided, this was
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more or less the way he dealt with allies. But there was something about
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the way Scribe was acting\ldots{} Oh, she didn't like me. Which was
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fine, as the sentiment was broadly shared: the cordial beginnings of our
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acquaintance had begun to fade effectively the moment I sought power
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independent of my teacher, which I suspected had simply moved me from
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asset to liability in her eyes. Still, while she didn't like me I would
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not deny she was an intelligent woman.
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Which was where the flaw could be found. My temper had waned some, these
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days, but not quite \emph{that} much. So why would she test it by
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appearing reluctant over Black's reparations? She had to know I'd not be
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all that well inclined towards her, and exactly what those reparations
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were meant for. Meaning either she didn't consider her life or freedom
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worth these concessions from the perspective of the resources available
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to Black, which was too warped a view to be objectively credible, or she
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was playing me. Playing up reluctance so I'd feel more grateful for my
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teacher's contrastingly fair attitude? Could be, it would be just like
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her to damage her own reputation to prop up his own. Even made sense
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from a tactical perspective, given that she and I were unlikely to ever
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be on good terms and so the loss relative to gain was greater. Except
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that I could taste it in the air, now that I'd notice a flaw: I was
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being sold a story. Not the way the Pilgrim or the Bard would, no. That
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wouldn't be Scribe's game. Instead I'd been invited to stroll through a
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house of mirrors so that I could take in my own reflections and hold
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them as truth. Even my father's blunt but sincere bribery had been used
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as an ingredient in the brew, something I'd find and read as true and so
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believe the \emph{rest} was true.
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So, I was being had. And Black hadn't been brought in on it. \emph{So
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was this really Malicia's ploy at all?} It was true the Empress was only
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losing so much even if it became public she'd helped along the coup,
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considering the Grand Alliance had been founded in large part to bury
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her and the Accords would entail her removal regardless. This could be
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Malicia realizing that openly allying with Keter had burned too many
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bridges, and that the same alliances taking shape to drive back the
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Kingdom of the Dead might turn towards her if victorious. Sloppy work,
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by her standards, but then she had to be running out of tools to use. On
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the other hand, if I was frustrated in my efforts to establish alliances
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to the west she had to know I'd be headed east instead -- and with a
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sword in hand. Short-sighted, yes, but honestly still a feasible mistake
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if Malicia was desperate enough. Which she had to be, with the Tribes
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having taken Foremen and the Dread Empire on the edge of rebellion from
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repeated defeats. Feasible, though, was why people thought the hooded
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figures with tattooed eyes on their skin were the true Eyes of the
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Empire instead of the chatty innkeepers. Feasible meant you stopped
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looking because you had the answer. Yet I couldn't see, frankly, what
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Scribe had to gain from all this.
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``Appreciated,'' I said, not bothering to force a smile. ``I'll want a
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report of everything that took place so no detail can be sprung on me at
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the table.''
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``Naturally,'' Black conceded.
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He dipped his head in thanks, trusting in the word I'd just as good as
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given.
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``Vivienne,'' I said, ``I'll need you to arrange a scrying session with
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Duchess-Regent Kegan as soon as possible.''
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``I'll see to it immediately,'' she briskly replied, rising to her feet.
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``Akua,'' I said, simultaneously dumping into the Night a sense of
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stillness, ``we still need to bring General Rumena into the loop.''
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``As you say, dear heart,'' she smiled.
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In the Night she shaped her will as a sense of action, then a question,
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and I assented through the same. Neither of us missed a beat, or
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otherwise gave sign of this.
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``I'll arrange for that report presently, then,'' my father said,
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sounding rather amused as he rose to his feet.
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His old friend followed suit without missing a beat.
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``Scribe,'' I said. ``A word, if you would. I'll require a few more
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details out of you in case Hasenbach sends for a private meeting soon.
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I'm not walking into that blind.''
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``The report-'' she began.
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``Eudokia,'' Black sharply said.
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She returned to the seat. I nodded thanks at my teacher, who
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acknowledged them with a discreet dip. No, he most definitely hadn't
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been brought into this. I smiled at Hakram, who was lingering behind me,
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and drained my cup of water before handing it to him. Clicking his fangs
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in amusement, he moved to fill it again. Scribe waited patiently even as
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I reached for my dragonbone pipe and slowly stuffed it, only then
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clearing her throat.
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``If you could refrain?'' she said.
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A heartbeat later I felt Akua's working slither around us, smooth and
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silent, and tapped a finger against my pipe to light it. I puffed out,
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waiting until Hakram had set down the filled cup at my side before
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speaking.
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``You get one chance to tell me the truth,'' I said. ``After that, my
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patience will run out.''
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Adjutant's muscles shifted the slightest bit, coiling as he readied for
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strife. He'd not hesitated in the slightest, I thought with affection.
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``You are seeing shadows of your own making,'' Scribe said.
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I breathed in, then spewed out a steam of smoke.
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``Hakram,'' I said.
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Over two hundred pounds of raw fighting orc struck with blinding
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quickness, leaping across the table and catching a surprised Scribe by
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the throat. She began screaming for help. I leaned back into my seat.
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``We're under containment,'' I said. ``Screaming won't help.''
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``They betrayed us?'' Adjutant casually asked, slamming her against the
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wall and dragging her gasping form up the wall.
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``She's lying,'' I said. ``But whatever she's up to, Black isn't in on
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it.''
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``You are making a mistake,'' Scribe gasped. ``There is no deceit, only
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your need to be right.''
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She didn't try to bring Black's name into this, for which I afforded her
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a sliver of respect.
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``You had months with the Eyes in Procer,'' I said. ``Oh, I'm sure that
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everything you told us about how it unfolded is correct in detail. That
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there were plants answering to Lady Ime among the mages, even that the
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order to start fires near possible munition locations came from the
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Tower. What I don't believe for a moment is that you couldn't have
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prevented it from happening. You had \emph{months} with the Eyes in
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Procer, Scribe. What was your game?''
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Black, I thought, would not question her story. It wouldn't even occur
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to him, I thought, the same way that it would not occur to me to wonder
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if Adjutant was lying to me. Too much of the bedrock of who we were
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depended on the certainty that they could be relied on, even when all
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else failed.
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``Sometimes we fail, Catherine Foundling,'' Scribe gasped. ``Sometimes
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it is not malice, or scheme, or treachery. Sometimes we just
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\emph{fail}.''
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``I will torture you,'' I frankly said. ``I won't like it, but the
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stakes here are too high for me to leave stones unturned out of
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squeamishness. I'll bleed you, and if that doesn't work I'll ask one of
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my people to peel your mind like an onion until the secrets come
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spilling out.''
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``We trained this in you,'' Scribe laughed. ``I suppose it is our own
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doing, in the end. There is nothing to be found, Black Queen, save the
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unravelling of what you have wrought.''
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I blew out a long breath.
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``Rip out an eye,'' I said.
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It occurred to me a moment later that Hakram had only one hand left,
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made of bone, and that it was already holding up Scribe by the throat. I
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had begun to rise, to do the dirty work myself, when I saw Adjutant was
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moving. At the end of his stump folds of gleaming translucence were
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taking shape, almost spectral on appearance. They folded into
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themselves, methodically, until a broad clawed hand had come together. I
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glanced at his face, saw only the pleased baring of fangs, and the point
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of two claws touched above and beneath Scribe's eye. And then the hand
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dispersed.
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``No,'' Adjutant said.
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I blinked in surprise.
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``Pain won't do anything to a woman like that, Catherine,'' Hakram said,
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calmly studying Scribe. ``And neither will something live having her
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mind sliced open.''
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``We don't have anything else to threaten her with, Adjutant,'' I flatly
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said.
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``We do,'' he disagreed. ``Send for the Carrion Lord. Let him see
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this.''
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I began to tell him I'd sent Black away in the first place to spare him
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this when I noticed stillness. Scribe had gone utterly still, even
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through her aspect I could feel that. Hakram had found the pulse of her,
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somehow.
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``She's not kept him ignorant out of disloyalty,'' Adjutant said. ``Have
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you, Scribe?''
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Silence.
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``I suppose you would understand, wouldn't you?'' Scribe rasped.
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``You love him,'' Hakram Deadhand said, almost gently. ``Not a call of
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the flesh or a tender feeling. The way a knife loves a steady hand, the
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way a sparrow loves flight. It can't be helped.''
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It felt wrong, to be here. Like I was intruding on a moment to which I
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alone of us could claim no kinship. Yet my mind turned heedless of the
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rest, cogs falling into place. The details had been there all along,
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hadn't they? The conversations I'd had with Scribe were few, but one had
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mattered more than the rest. When I'd tread the halls of the Tower for
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the fist time, and she had whispered a dangerous secret in my ear.
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\emph{Ranger and I disagreed on many matters, Catherine, but there was
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one thing we always agreed on.} Was it really that simple, that\ldots{}
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I hesitated to say petty, but what else could it be called? No, not
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petty. Personal, and in a way that was worse.
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``Malicia,'' I croaked out. ``This wasn't about Procer or the Accords or
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anything else. You did all this so he would have no choice but to kill
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Malicia when he returns to the Wasteland.''
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