492 lines
24 KiB
TeX
492 lines
24 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-77-artless}{%
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\section{Chapter 77: Artless}\label{chapter-77-artless}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Even the most skilled of liars are only ever wielding a lie.
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Truth is the superior artifice, for it will strike deeper than even the
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most perfect deception.''}
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-- Princess Beatriz of Salamans, later thirteenth First Princess of
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Procer
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\end{quote}
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``I'm not going to lie,'' I muttered under my breath, ``it pisses me off
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a little that anybody can be rich enough to have a room dedicated to
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\emph{tea-drinking}.''
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Hakram was ahead of us, engaging our guide in what sounded like idle
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conversation about Salian cloths and their obvious superiority to that
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of the despicable yet superficially similar works from Lange, so I could
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vent my indignation without every sentence making it straight to the
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First Prince's ear.
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``I expect they'll have one filled with only spices, should we look,''
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Vivienne drily added. ``You know, to make the one that's just a giant
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gold ingot stand out less.''
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``Right?'' I grunted. ``Hells, Vivs, you were born noble-''
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``A baron line, short on land and incomes even before the Conquest,''
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she reminded me.
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I shot her an incredulous look. Those poor nobles, so very impoverished.
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``Did your house have stables?'' I asked.
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``I'm not dignifying that with an answer,'' Lady Dartwick informed me.
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``I bet your servants had matching livery too,'' I scathingly said.
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``\emph{You} have servants with matching livery, \emph{Your Majesty},''
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she exasperatedly replied.
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``Eh,'' I said. ``More like I'm borrowing them for a few years. And I'd
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help if any of them wanted to find real decent honest work, like running
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a tavern-''
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``Nests of criminal activity, aside from those in better quarters,''
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Vivienne told me.
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I almost gaped at the audacity of that.
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``You're the Queen of Thieves for Callow,'' I indignantly said.
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``Mere rumours,'' she smoothly said, ``all I'm saying is that your
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notion of what good, honest work is tends to be rather skewed given
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your\ldots{}''
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``We're in Procer now, you know,'' I growled. ``Lese-majesty's something
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they actually enforce here.''
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``Everything,'' Vivienne mused. ``Your everything, really. Didn't you
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use to participate in an illegal fighting ring?''
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``I was also a waitress,'' I defensively said. ``That was lawful -- wait
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why am I justifying myself to you, you used to be the bloody
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\emph{Thief}. Have you actually ever had a job?''
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``It's sad to see one so steeped in her criminal ways rising so high,
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but these are dark days,'' Vivienne sighed.
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``That's a lot of backtalk, coming from someone who couldn't even murder
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Hakram,'' I muttered.
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``Is no one ever going to let that go?'' she complained. ``Do you all
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want me to murder Hakram \emph{now}, you niggling harpies? Don't you
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think I won't, you'll drive me to it.
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There was a commotion in front of us, the attendant that'd been sent to
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guide us concernedly asking Adjutant if he was all right. He had, I
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grasped from context, stumbled and let out a choking sound. Merciless
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Gods he'd been eavesdropping with his Name the whole time, hadn't he? My
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cheeks burned a little, but I cleared my throat and put on a mask of
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queenly dignity. Vivienne looked mildly concerned about her dear friend
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Hakram Deadhand having stumbled, a degree of shamelessness that was
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positively royal of her. We were close now, the guide told us with an
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unnecessary amount of bowing.
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``Do you think it still counts as a labyrinth if it's this full of
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tapestries and nice woodworks?'' I asked.
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It really was nice woodwork, too. In the same style as those in the
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royal palace in Laure, which I'd grimly admit to myself probably meant
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we'd imitated a Proceran style. They also had tapestries that weren't
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about hunting, nature and warring with Praes which I'd confess was a
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nice change of pace.
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``It's the classic Alamans scheme, my queen,'' Vivienne drily said. ``If
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you throw enough jewels at your enemy, they're bound slip and break
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something eventually.''
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``They'd be in a lot less shit if they'd put some of that tapestry coin
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on good walls instead,'' I grunted in agreement.
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``Don't be silly Your Majesty,'' Lady Dartwick sardonically said. ``This
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is the Principate, if there is need of a wall that's what stacking
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peasants is for.''
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I swallowed a laugh at that. I'd never heard that one before and serving
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drinks in a tavern that catered to both legionaries and Callowans meant
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I'd heard a \emph{lot} of cheap jokes at the expense of Procer. Under
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the Empire's occupation it'd been safer to go after Procer than to take
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a shot at Praes. Since not even the most quiescent of my people had been
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entirely free of the urge take a verbal swing at the Wasteland on
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occasion, Procer had been getting rough treatment among my countrymen
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even before the Tenth Crusade so selflessly provided them with fresh
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ammunition. Relentless mockery of our hosts had me in a rather pleasant
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mood by the time we arrived at the small hall where the First Prince of
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Procer was awaiting the three of us. The fair-haired woman who'd been
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chatting with Adjutant the whole way rapped her knuckles against the
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door to signal our arrival and bade us farewell, looking almost
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reluctant at ending her conversation with Hakram. A majordomo in
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tasteful silks emerged from the room and bowed, intimating he would be
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announcing us. As the guest of highest rank, etiquette dictated I enter
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first.
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``Her Majesty Queen Catherine of Callow, first of her name, protector of
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Daoine and high priestess of the Everdark.''
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He had a pleasant, ringing voice, exactly the kind you'd want in someone
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charged with announcements. Queen \emph{of} Callow, huh? Not so long ago
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Hasenbach had refused to even recognize me as Queen \emph{in} Callow,
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much less the rightful liege lady of Duchess Kegan of Daoine. And
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someone had been talking to drow, though that might simply be the
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consequence of the Pilgrim feeling chatty. I entered, the polished plate
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on my frame making me regret having left my staff behind with every step
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I took. A bit of Night smoothed the pain quick enough, but when that
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ended I'd be left feeling the consequences of my pride tonight. I
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stepped into the hall, followed by the announcement of \emph{Lady
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Vivienne Dartwick, heiress-designate to the Kingdom of Callow}. Much as
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I disliked the Proceran propensity for luxuries, I could not deny that
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the parlour before me was a beautiful piece of work. A tall plaster
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ceiling led into great arched windows of glass that let in the winter
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midday sun, the lighting coming to rest on a long low table of painted
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wood covered by a perfectly transparent pane of glass. The walls and
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draperies were in a pleasant pale green, and the seats prepared at the
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table looked sinfully comfortable with their matching cushions and broad
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armrests. The First Prince of Procer was seated at the centre of the
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table, two people standing behind her in respectful deference, and I
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advanced to the table as behind me the announcement of \emph{Lord Hakram
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Deadhand of the Howling Wolves, the Adjutant} sounded.
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One of those two people behind Hasenbach was long familiar to me.
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Princess Rozala Malanza's classic Arlesite good looks were only called
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into attention by the light mail and closely cut tabard she wore, but it
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was the sword at her hip worthy of a raised eyebrow. Few people were
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allowed to be armed in the presence of the First Prince: I'd worn no
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sword today and so divested myself of nothing, but Hakram had left
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behind his axe and Vivienne a surprisingly high quantity of knives
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before we were allowed into this wing of the palace. A point was being
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made by Hasenbach, one directed at me: \emph{I trust Rozala Malanza to
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be armed and standing behind me. Procer is not so divided as you think.}
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The other one behind Hasenbach I did not know, though he was quite aged
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-- if bearing that burden rather well, hair having gone a distinguished
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silver instead of white or falling -- and wearing well-tailored but
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otherwise rather humble robes. On his right shoulder two pale hands
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intertwined had been embroidered, which struck me as priestly imagery,
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but I would not assume anything in a place like Salia. I imagined
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introductions would come soon enough, regardless.
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The First Prince waited to speak until Hakram had come to stand at my
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right, a towering pillar of steel and muscle, and Vivienne at my left --
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just as whip-slender and hard-eyed as in her thieving days, but grown
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steady in a way she'd never been while Named.
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``Welcome to Salia, Queen Catherine,'' the First Prince of Procer
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greeted me.
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It'd been about a year since I'd last seen Cordelia Hasenbach, though
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this would be our first meeting outside the unearthly domain of darkness
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and cold that I'd used as our bridge when I still stood Queen of Winter.
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As was often her habit she'd dressed in the dark blue that was from the
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heraldry of her native Rhenia, the cut of it conservative -- her
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neckline ended an inch beneath her collarbones -- but close on her
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frame. It was flattering, though there was no hiding that Hasenbach had
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been born with a warrior's build: tall and broad-shouldered, with a
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strong jaw and hale complexion. Her discreet touches of cosmetics,
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golden eye shadow that made the vivid blue of her eyes stand out even
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more and the painted nails at the end of the wrists revealed by sleeves
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ending in an undercut of puffy lace, worked to shape her appearance
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rather than to change it, which I thought clever of her. If she'd tried
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to hide her features it would have made her look comical, while as it
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stood her height and haleness only enhanced the palpable weight of her
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presence. Her crown was as a simple circlet of pale gold, holding back
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long golden curls I'd always considered to be the most appealing part of
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Cordelia Hasenbach -- rich and full, they cascaded down her back in
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perfect ringlets.
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``Your hospitality has been impeccable, Your Most Serene Highness,'' I
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replied.
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She inclined her head in acknowledgement.
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``Our honoured general Princess Rozala Malanza requires little
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introduction for you, I am told,'' Cordelia smiled, ``but I expect my
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other attendant is not so well-known.''
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My elbow moved towards Vivienne, softly and as if by happenstance, and
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her own pushed back against mine. Good, so she did know.
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``Lady Dartwick?'' I said.
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``Unless I am sorely mistaken we are in the presence of Brother Simon of
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Gorgeault, current head of the Holy Society,'' Vivienne smiled. ``It is
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an honour to meet such a distinguished colleague, Brother Simon.''
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``As I am honoured to meet you, Lady Dartwick,'' the old man replied,
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lips quirking.
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That smile had been almost roguish, I thought. Must have been a
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heartbreaker in his youth, that one. Regardless he was not in priest
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robes, so he should be a lay brother who'd taken no vows. Interesting
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Hasenbach would want him here for this, though. There were implications
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to that. The First Prince wordlessly invited me to sit and there was a
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discreet shuffle as the order of seating was seen to. Myself first, as
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reigning queen, then Vivienne as my designated successor, then Rozala as
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a ruling princess in her own right and then the broad equivalence in
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rank between Brother Simon and Adjutant -- who while Named was a villain
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and only actually owed lordly address under the Tower's law. A small
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swarm of servants brought trays of silver bearing a tea pot of Ashuran
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porcelain and matching cups, as well honey to sweeten the brew.
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``They are Yan Tei leaves,'' Hasenbach pleasantly told me. ``Bitterer
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than the Baalite imports and the plants of the Thalassocracy, though I
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find they have a richer taste.''
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My own passing familiarity with tea came largely through Aisha's stock
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-- which was Baalite leaves mixed with cheaper Ashuran ones -- and the
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few times Black had served some while we were in Ater. His were from
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another country across the Tyrian Sea, though, which I suspected to be
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where the Ranger's father was from. He didn't break out the cups often,
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which didn't surprise me given the astronomical cost of even a single
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pot's worth of brew. It was one of the few luxuries he indulged in,
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which I'd always found rather amusingly subdued of him given the sheer
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amount of power at his disposal. I'd brushed up on etiquette before
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beginning the journey to Salia and made sure all my closest companions
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did as well, so none of us touched the brew after it was poured for us
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save when Hakram sweetened his own with honey. Princess Rozala did the
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same, I noted with amusement, and looked somewhat discomfited that only
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the orc at the table shared her tastes.
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``So what \emph{is} this palace, if you don't mind my asking?'' I said.
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``It was the winter home of the Merovins, in the days where they still
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numbered many,'' the First Prince said. ``After their line waned it
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became the favoured location for winter solstice balls instead, though
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it had not seen that use since the Great War.''
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``Not been in a feasting mood?'' I idly said.
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``There were better uses for our coin and hours,'' Hasenbach replied.
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``The latter is even harder to replace than the former, I have found.''
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Was that an invitation to stop wasting time? I wouldn't exactly mind.
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Every day spent dancing around what needed to be done was one more day
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tossed away as our truce with the Dead King came closer to ending. I
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understood the Principate had its pride and its ways, but the Principate
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was also on the brink of annihilation and more than slightly on fire.
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There was dignity and then there was idiocy.
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``Ah,'' I said, drawl thickening, ``are we to actually \emph{talk},
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then, or do we continued this pleasantly inane ritual of taking each
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other's measure? We were past that a year ago, as far as I'm
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concerned.''
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Malanza let out a choking sound, but my eyes were on Hasenbach. She had
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presence, as much as ever, but I wasn't feeling\ldots{} weight off of
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her. The kind Name would bring to bear simply by being. Might be she was
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on the more discreet side of things, when it came to that, but that
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would be rather odd for a ruler. Temper tended to get ripples going,
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through, so it was worth a try. The Warden of the West studied me for a
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moment and then allowed for an amused half-smile. She seemed, I thought,
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tired. It only occurred to me then that the golden eye shadow might not
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be artifice of beauty but meant instead to hide the dark circles of
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someone gone too long without sleep. Still, not a hint huh. I'd be
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unusual for a fresh Named to have that much control over their power,
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but then this Cordelia Hasenbach and not a farmboy with a grudge and an
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old sword. She'd held the reins of the greatest empire on the surface of
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Calernia for years before she'd even had a Name. If she had one.
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``I have spent more then twelve hours preparing for this conversation,
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did you know?'' Cordelia ruefully said. ``Some of the finest minds in my
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service studied ever scrap of knowledge we have of you, from your
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favourite wine to the tactics of your earliest battles.''
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``And \emph{this} is what you came up with?'' I replied, brow raising as
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I cast a look around us.
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``It all seems rather pointless, does it not?'' the First Prince said.
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``Yet what can I possibly arrange that would bring to bear even the
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tenth of the wroth of an angel, or a fraction of the horrors of the
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Folly? We have nothing that can move if you if you do not wish to be
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moved, and more masterful hands than we have failed to use you. It is an
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unpleasant truth, this, and not one I find it easy to face.''
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``We have been at war almost as long as we've been speaking,'' I
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acknowledged. ``And there are things about your country I despise, and
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likely always will. The grounds for alliance between us are not fondness
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or kinship.''
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``Yet my people are in dire need of your help,'' Hasenbach said. ``And
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so as you have proposed let us \emph{talk}.''
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That was as clear an offer as I'd get, I figured, so I took her up on
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it.
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``You do not seem to be Named,'' I said.
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Cordelia Hasenbach brought her porcelain cup to her mouth and inhaled
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from the brew before taking a cautious sip.
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``I am not one of the Chosen, or the Damned,'' she confirmed, elegantly
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setting down her cup.
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I hid my relief. It might be useful to have a heroic First Prince
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holding up the Accords from her side, but to be honest it wasn't worth
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the risks coming with the Intercessor being able to meddle with Cordelia
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directly. Rather less elegantly I reached for my own cup and took a sip.
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I didn't grimace, because I wasn't a damned savage, but it looked like
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Hakram had been showing wisdom in honeying his. Wasn't exactly an avid
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admirer of sweets, though, so even then it'd be rather like trying to
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put out a barn fire by throwing sharpers at it.
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``Have your spies passed on recent news from the northern fronts?''
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Cordelia asked.
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``We've only ever had rumours from Lycaonese lands,'' I frankly replied.
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``As for the rest, we know the general state of it -- Cleves was
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reclaimed, Hainaut's last lines are on the edge of collapse -- but
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little more.''
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``Prince Papenheim has used the truce to solidify the lines in Hainaut,
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though the Dead King has seemingly massed around six hundred thousand
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soldiers to break them open anew when the three months end,'' the First
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Prince said. ``Hannoven has fallen, as you likely know, and Rhenia has
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been scoured save for a handful of fortresses where my subjects suffer
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siege. Only one fortress remains standing in Twilight's Pass, and when
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it falls -- and fall it will, given the great host waiting before it --
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the Principality of Bremen will follow in short order. Only Neustria
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will remain then, and I am told its lowlands will be effectively
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impossible to defend against an enemy with such overwhelming superiority
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in numbers.''
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A heartbeat of silence passed in the wake of the stark assessment the
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First Prince of Procer herself had just spoken of the war she was about
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to resume losing.
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``Cleves has been reclaimed,'' Cordelia Hasenbach acknowledged. ``But at
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great cost. Four Chosen died and more than twenty thousand trained
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soldiers. Meanwhile the Enemy's ranks swell equally with every dead, be
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they farmer of princess.''
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The fair-haired princess sat stiff-backed, but her voice was raw.
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``My generals now believe that the battles for Cleves might in fact have
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been trap,'' she said. ``The fighting was meant to bleed our number of
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professional soldiers, you see. To thin the number of Chosen and leave
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as much as a third of Procer's armies stranded behind enemy lines when
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Hainaut falls and the dead hordes close the circle behind them.''
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Cordelia Hasenbach raised her cup again, hand forcefully steady, and
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took a sip. The porcelain cup then returned to the plate with so small a
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sound it might as well have been silent. The reclamation of Cleves, I
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thought, was the closest thing the Principate had known to a victory
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since the Dead King had begun invading. Malanza had fought there. I
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looked at her now, and though her face as ashen the fact that she did
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not \emph{disagree} spokes volumes. How much of a blow must it have
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been, to come to realize even that sole victory had been a greater
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defeat in the making?
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``I will not lie to you, Queen Catherine,'' she said. ``You would find
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out regardless, given your ties to the Eyes of the Empire and the
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surprising skill of your Jacks. When the truce ends, if hostilities
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resume the Principate will fall within five months at most.''
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Her frank assessment of the state of Procer's norther fronts had rung
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loud in the silence, but this? Coming from her, of all people? Even
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Hakram stilled in surprise.
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``The last strongholds of Hainaut might hold for two months, perhaps,''
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the First Prince evenly said. ``After which the dead will tear into
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Brabant and the masses of refugees there, which will within another
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month make the numbers of the Dead King too large to successfully fight
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on the field. If the armies in Cleves intervene to prop up Hainaut we
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will lose Cleves, and Hainaut will then fall to a pincer regardless.''
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She paused.
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``The Morgentor, the last fortress of Twilight's Pass, will likely hold
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until the other fronts have collapsed,'' Cordelia said, a hint of pride
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to her voice. ``Yet it will fall, and though the truce you bought us has
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allowed the southernmost of my people to flee into Alamans lands
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we\ldots{}''
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Her voice broke a little there.
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``We do not retreat, Catherine Foundling,'' she said. ``Even when we
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should. It is not in our nature. Some will go as ordered, but more will
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flock to walls and fortresses and they will die screaming defiance
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against the dark. It will be the end of us as a people.''
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I said nothing to that, for what was there to say?
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``When those fronts collapse so will Procer,'' the blue-eyed woman told
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me. ``Already the cracks have begun. I have stripped the western
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principalities bare of grain to feed the heartlands and bare of men to
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fill our ranks, but keeping the northern armies supplied has emptied our
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granaries and our treasury. Foreign trade has broken down and the
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principalities untouched by war grow weary of paying their taxes to
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Salia. Even if the Kingdom Under lifted its sanctions, we would not be
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able to afford their armaments. There will be starvation, and despite my
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best efforts shortages of steel ensure that we can hardly even keep our
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current armies in fighting fit.''
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She slowly breathed out.
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``I expect that the moment Salia falls the Principate will end,'' she
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said. ``Southern principalities will secede and form alliances with each
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other and abroad, throwing the rest of us to the dogs. To be frank, I'd
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expect Ariel of Arans to offer to pay you fealty for protection before
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it even came to that -- and neither Bayeux nor Orne would be far
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behind.''
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Cordelia Hasenbach met my eye squarely.
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``You must understand, now, that I do not have a single thing to
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threaten you with,'' she quietly said. ``I have no armies to send forth,
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no coin to cajole or coerce with and my alliances are weaker than yours.
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Besides, those allies I do have would not war on you for my sake, for
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you have them bound by debt and respect. I have through steel and insult
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|
ended any inclination between us that could now be called on, much less
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|
between our respective peoples.''
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|
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|
The thing was, there was a part of me that was savouring the words. The
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|
same part that remembered my every desperate plea to this same woman to
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call off her armies and rapacious princes. That remembered every spurned
|
|
offer of peace, every sentence of scathing dismissal and barely-veiled
|
|
contempt. She'd been so godsdamned \emph{arrogant}, telling me she could
|
|
choose the fate of Callow because she had the swords and the
|
|
righteousness and that I should just go into exile like a good little
|
|
thug after shutting my mouth and abdicating. And now she needed me. They
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|
all did, her entire alliance and the heroes behind them too. Even the
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|
Grey Pilgrim had good as admitted to it. They had sneered and spat and
|
|
tried to kill me, and now I \emph{fucking had them}. Cordelia Hasenbach
|
|
had laid out before me the death of her nation and her people, and yet I
|
|
could not help but think that they'd brought this all on themselves.
|
|
That if they'd left Callow alone, that if they'd let me fix it instead
|
|
of hounding me every step for their own hungry purposes, they wouldn't
|
|
be tumbling down the cliff right now.
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|
|
|
Then, to my surprise, she pushed back her seat and rose. Not well, in
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|
opposition to the understated elegance of her every other movement. It
|
|
was clear her leg had been broken and not finished healing. The pain had
|
|
her lips thinning as Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer and
|
|
Warden of the West, knelt before me.
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|
|
|
``I have a responsibility,'' Cordelia said, ``to the people of the
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|
Principate. To rule, to guide and to protect. To ease their worst
|
|
inclinations and spur their finest ones. I have failed them in this.''
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|
|
|
She was proud, Hasenbach. Not the kind of person something like this
|
|
would come easily to. Not someone to do it unless she believed it to be
|
|
necessary. Rozala was halfway to her feet, protesting her ruler kneeling
|
|
before a foreign queen, but neither of us paid her attention.
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|
|
|
``I have no right to ask grace of you now, and no might to compel it,''
|
|
the First Prince said. ``So I can only beg that you act as I did not,
|
|
and help those I cannot.''
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|
|
|
That I'd savoured this, for even a moment, tasted like ashes in my
|
|
mouth. Because it wasn't her or her reign she was begging for. It was
|
|
her people. And while I might not be leading a crusade into Procer, I
|
|
could not deny it felt poisonous that I could be in this moment and
|
|
begged at instead of begging. Not because I enjoyed the helplessness of
|
|
it, but because I'd never liked to think of myself as someone who would
|
|
need to be implored to save lives.
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|
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|
``Get up,'' I said, voice rough. ``Enough. There was no need for this.''
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|
|
|
I pushed back my own chair, rising to my feet, and the eyes of both
|
|
Malanza and Brother Simon went to me. Watching, weighing.
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|
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|
``Get up, Hasenbach,'' I said. ``You and I are going for a walk.''
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