370 lines
18 KiB
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370 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-rise-rise}{%
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\section{Interlude: Rise, Rise}\label{interlude-rise-rise}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A treaty is fooling all the people at the right time, an
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alliance is fooling the right people all the time. A war is when all the
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people are fools all the time.''}
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-- Prokopia Lekapene, first Hierarch of the League of Free Cities
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\end{quote}
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The Carrion Lord's spoken Chantant was flawless, the First Prince
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grudgingly admitted. Almost entirely without accent, too, and it was the
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tongue the most people in the hall would speak so it'd been the canniest
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choice. After such an incendiary claim it was no surprise that the hall
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fell into disarray, a hundred whispers filling the room as loudly as any
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ringing shout. There were many faces that Cordelia Hasenbach could have
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watched. The Dead King, the Enemy incarnate, was seated and still not a
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hundred feet from her. The `Firstborn', whose unknown tongue and strange
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disposition married to the sudden strategic importance made increasingly
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important to understand. Even the Carrion Lord himself, who she
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\emph{had} watched for some time as he had that terse, charged exchange
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with the Dread Empress in some eastern tongue. The pale man's face had
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turned corpse-like halfway through, like a mask made of wax.
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Malicia's inhabited body was not so expressive, but she'd seemed shaken
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as well. Perhaps there truly was genuine sentiment between the two of
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them, Cordelia thought. It hardly mattered, with monsters like those.
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The First Prince's gaze had left them before the end, though, turning to
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the tanned woman leaning back into her seat at the same table. Catherine
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Foundling's face had not lost any of the sharp angles that meant no one
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would ever call her a beauty, but where before she'd seemed sullen there
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was now a certain\ldots{} carefreeness. The Black Queen's eyes had
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always been what softened her mien to something short of severe,
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Cordelia considered, but now instead of wild swings of emotion or utter
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iciness there was an unsettling candidness to what could be glimpsed in
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them. The First Prince had found her personable, when spoken to
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face-to-face, which she had not expected.
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Which made it all the more chilling that the sequence of events the
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Black Queen had so offhandedly predicted last night was coming to pass
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so unerringly.
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Cordelia Hasenbach was not above admitting when she had made a mistake,
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and her early assessments of Queen Catherine had been very much
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mistaken. She'd taken the lapses in etiquettes, the strange asides and
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poorly-kept temper to mean that the Black Queen was mediocre diplomat,
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and in truth little more than a charismatic warlord whose grip on power
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was maintained by terror in blood. Considering the other woman had since
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wheedled support out of the Kingdom Under -- the likes of which had not
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been seen since Triumphant's day! -- and somehow become the foremost
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religious figure of the drow and then leveraged this into the Everdark's
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entry into the war, it would be absurd to keep believing as much. And so
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much of this was absurd already, Cordelia grimly thought. How could
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anyone have a pitched battle with the Dominion and somehow come out of
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the slaughter in good odour with the Blood?
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No, Foundling was not a mediocre diplomat. She simply disdained the
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usual means of diplomacy, which had seemed the same when it was through
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these that Cordelia interacted with her. Her Liesse Accords, which
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admittedly she professed to be as much the work of Vivienne Dartwick and
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Hakram Deadhand, were also a diplomatic solution coming from a woman the
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First Prince had once considered a canny, dangerous thug with an army.
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It was necessary to reassess what she'd once thought of the Black Queen,
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for though she was now an ally only a fool kept both eyes on the stag
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when hunting with a wolf. Cordelia had known all of this, or at least
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thought she did. Yet looking at Catherine's Foundling calm face, the
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barely-veiled sympathy she looked at the Carrion Lord with, she could
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not help shiver. For all that the Black Queen had yet to even address
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the hall, every person here had so far danced to the tune of her choice.
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Cordelia set aside the thoughts and the wariness, striking at the table
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as her majordomo loudly called for order. The noise withdrew, leaving a
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palpable sensation of absence in its wake.
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``We recognize the words of the Carrion Lord,'' the First Prince said.
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``Yet let it be said, and known, that this conference claims not the
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authority to install or depose rulers.''
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Enthusiastic approval from the Dominion's tables at that, as they'd been
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understandably wary of the precedents that might be set today. For all
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that Levant now stood strong compared to a weakened Procer and bloodied
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Callow, it would not last forever. None of the Blood wanted foreigners
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to us this conference as pretext to meddle in Dominion affairs a decade
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from now, when their power waned and Procer's waxed. Cordelia waited a
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beat, for her partner in this intricate dance to step in. The Black
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Queen rose to her feet, demanding the floor, and a nod from the First
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Prince to her majordomo had it granted.
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``The Wasteland's affairs are its own,'' Catherine Foundling said, then
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offered the Empress a hard smile, ``at least for now. Yet it cannot be
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denied that the Carrion Lord speaks for the Legion-in-Exiles, and others
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among the Dread Empire. We may not have the right to crown him, but let
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us not shy from practical realities for politeness' sake.''
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And there it was. The line that would allow them to hamstring Dread
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Empress Malicia and bring the Carrion Lord to the table without granting
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her the wellspring of Praesi support that `foreigners attempting to
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place their chosen candidate atop the Tower' might otherwise garner.
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Lord Yannu Marave rose and was passed the right to speak.
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``The Dominion backs the right of the Carrion Lord to speak for the
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Legions-in-Exile and any other who come under his banner,'' the Lord of
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Alava said, his Chantant polished and practiced.
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He had been the right choice, the First Prince decided. Razin Tanja was
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emerging as a rival power among the Blood, and one the Grey Pilgrim was
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taking an interest in, but he was young and not as skilled a speaker.
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``The Kingdom of Callow seconds this,'' Vivienne Dartwick said, tone
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brisk.
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A moment passed as the Black Queen raised an eyebrow at the drow.
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``The Empire Ever Dark recognizes the Lord of Carrion and his rights,''
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General Rumena said, sounding amused.
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It -- Cordelia had learned that the drow eschewed sexes, and found
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insult in their use -- was smiling most unsettlingly, the pale blue eyes
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that seemed universal to its kind never blinking. It was ancient, the
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First Prince tell that much by a simple glance. Yet it also
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\emph{looked} ancient. Given that the Black Queen had once casually
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mentioned her attendant, the one they called the Lord of Silent Steps,
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had been alive before the Conquest and yet looked near boyish the
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princess had to wonder how long it would take for age to become so
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visible among one of their kind. Centuries? A thousand years?
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``Why don't you take this one, Leo,'' the Tyrant of Helike said,
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grinning as he winked. ``Did I not say that I would allow other voices
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than my own to be heard?''
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The Basileus of Nicae, Leo Trakas, looked hesitant at the sudden offer.
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The young man was unfortunately not a well-known quantity to her. Until
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recently his ancient office had been the lesser of the powers in the
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city-state, largely concerned with stewardship and ceremony while the
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ruling Strategos truly held the reins. Strategos Nereida Silantis had
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been an ally of hers, and one cultivated by half a decade of gifts and
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correspondence as well as fair mediation between Ashur and Nicae. She'd
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also died when the Tyrant took Nicae and in the chaos Leo Trakas had
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seized great authority, preventing the nomination of another Strategos.
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His victories against the Thalassocracy had since ensured he was highly
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popular in Nicae, though his hold on rule was a great deal more fragile
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than one would assume at first glance.
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He'd be deposed within the month, should he blunder badly enough the
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people turned against him. The Basileus mastered himself, after a
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moment, and as Kairos Theodosian had no doubt expected him to do he
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chose the safe path.
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``The League of Free Cities abstains,'' Leo Trakas said.
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Which left only one vote, until Procer delivered its own.
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``The Thalassocracy abstains,'' Sitter Ahirom said.
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The man had kept his composure, but it was visibly fraying at the seams.
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As it would be, Cordelia thought. Magon Hadast might have been forced to
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break alliances to repay a debt of gratitude and prevent the starvation
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of his people that might follow \emph{ingratitude}, but keeping company
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with Keter and Ater was nothing to be proud of. Much less when it was
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becoming increasingly clear that neither the Crown nor the Tower were
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quite as masterful as they'd no doubt pretended to be.
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``The Principate of Procer supports the motion,'' Cordelia Hasenbach
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crisply spoke into the silence. ``Four in favour and two abstentions,
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the motion passes. The Carrion Lord's right to speak for the designated
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peoples is accepted by this hall.''
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In the silence that followed, the First Prince of Procer mused, one
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could almost hear the first spark of civil war in the Wasteland.
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---
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It had all been going smoothly, which in Vivienne Dartwick's experience
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meant the other shoe was due to drop.
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The Black Knight -- she knew he held the Name no longer, but how could
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that man ever be anything but the Black Knight in her eyes? -- had a
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seat at the table without this conference and its heart, the Grand
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Alliance, overreaching by attempting to enthrone him. Most importantly,
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the careful wording the First Prince had convinced Lord Yannu to employ
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had deep implications down the line. \emph{And any who come under his
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banner}, the large Levantine had said, and the wording had been upheld
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even if Hasenbach had been careful not to repeat it. It meant that the
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Black Knight could be offered terms now, lenient ones, and that those
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terms could then be made to apply to all of Praes should he become Dread
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Emperor. As Dread Empress Malicia had earned little but hate from those
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in this hall, any terms she might receive would be decidedly inferior.
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It was leverage that might tip the scales win favour of supporting the
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Carrion Lord among certain Praesi, though unless the Empress outright
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abdicated it was good as certain there'd be a civil war between their
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supporters.
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Not necessarily a long one, given that the loyalties of the Legions of
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Terror might just swing in his favour hard and early, but Wasteland wars
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were always nasty stuff.
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Another two rounds of the tables saw confirmed the recognition of Dread
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Empress Malicia -- even the Carrion Lord voted in favour, amusingly
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enough, which made the vote unanimous in favour with Magister Zoe
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Ixioni's assent in the name of the League -- and another for the Dead
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King. Ashur abstained on that one, as did the Black Knight, and Nestor
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Ikaroi of the Secretariat voted \emph{against} in the name of the
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League. Malicia was his sworn ally, however, and the Grand Alliance
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delegations had all been forewarned and agreed on common action, which
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meant that the majority in favour carried the vote. The King of Death
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had his seat and his vote, at least for now. Not that the motions had
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much power outside the strictures of the peace conference: they were a
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tool to manipulate the rules of this game through formality, not
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something that could be used to truly produce diplomatic results.
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Vivienne had voiced the votes for the Kingdom of Callow both times,
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Catherine remaining silent. She knew well what it was Cat was doing,
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giving her the duty to speak for their shared home in front of every
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great power on Calernia. It was as tacit an endorsement of her as a
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successor there could be without Vivienne being named a princess, which
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would be\ldots{} complicated to accomplish, and likely require her
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adoption into House Foundling. Setting aside the thoughts, Vivienne
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forced herself to sharpen her focus on the proceedings. Though the Dead
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King had yet to speak a word, little more than a grim sculpture of
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bones, the Empress had no shared such compulsions. With a pleasant,
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sonorous voice -- Vivienne wondered if the body had been picked for it
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-- she opened her part of the dance. The Carrion Lord, a mere landless
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rebel, had been allowed to address the hall while the rightful ruler of
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Praes had been denied the same right, she said, which was miscarriage of
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procedure.
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It was not an unexpected assault. Hasenbach had named it a likely
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avenue, since refusing the Empress would taint the appearance of fair
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proceedings and accepting would allow her to go on the offensive while
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bypassing the agreed-on order of affairs. Which would otherwise keep her
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contained until hours into the talks simply by speaking of very little
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Praes could weigh in on.
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``We recognize the words of Dread Empress Malicia of Praes,'' the First
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Prince said.
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Malicia's mangled puppet smoothly rose to her feet.
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``The Dread Empire cedes its speaking right to the Thalassocracy of
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Ashur,'' she smoothly said.
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\emph{Ah}, Vivienne thought, almost grimacing. And there went the first
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stumble in the plan. Tightening the vise on the opposition by hammering
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home how isolated the League and the Empire were one motion after
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another wouldn't work if Ashur withdrew from the Grand Alliance formally
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before the talks had even begun. Sitter Ahirom rose to his feet,
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acknowledging the First Prince's evenly spoken recognition of his right
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to speak with a nod.
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``I speak now the words of Magon Hadast, citizen of the second tier of
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the Baalite Hegemony, Sitter of the Eminent Committee,'' the man said.
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A heartbeat of silence passed.
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``As of this day, the Thalassocracy of Ashur declares its withdrawal
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from the Grand Alliance and all attendant treaties,'' Sitter Ahirom
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said.
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Few across the room were surprised, and those that were told much to
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Vivienne. The Dominion had been brought into this early and the
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Firstborn had only middling interest in matters unrelated to the war
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against the Dead King, but the lack of surprise did come as a surprise
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to Sitter Ahirom himself. It was as the First Prince had speculated,
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then: Ashur was good as blind on the continent, and clutching at any
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offered driftwood that would prevent it from drowning. More
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interestingly, there was a great deal of surprise among the League's
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delegation\emph{. Not Magister Ixioni, though}, Vivienne thought. Helike
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and Stygia were traditionally kept close alliance when the League was at
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war, as they fielded its finest armies and typically both benefited
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greatly from strife. A Tyrant's rule also meant that Below held the
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reins in both city-states, buoying Evil in the Free Cities for a span.
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Delos and Atalante had both had no idea. The general from Bellerophon
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still looked lost and afraid of asking questions, but the two
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Penthesians were calm. Better at hiding their thoughts, or in the know?
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``Penthes?'' Vivienne murmured.
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``Theodosian owns and informs them, I'd wager,'' the Black Knight softly
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said. ``Prodocius has an emperor's ambition and the wits of a well-bred
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trout while Honorion is afflicted by that peculiar condition where one
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comes to believe that gold makes up for any and all shortcomings. Scribe
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has theorized the Tyrant ensured they'd be the last two claimants
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because they are singularly inept at anything but banquets and
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squabbling.''
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``If he leans towards one we could back the other,'' Hakram suggested.
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``Tyrant's too canny for that,'' Cat grunted. ``He'll have them both
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convinced he's secretly helping them against the other.''
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``The Empire has influence there as well, through trade,'' the Black
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Knight said. ``Penthes is a dead end. Nicae might not be.''
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Basileus Leo Trakas looked like someone had slapped him across the face.
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He was a handsome one, Vivienne thought, though less so when his eyes
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were narrowed in surprised anger.
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``He doesn't know about the ships yet,'' Vivienne quietly said.
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``Otherwise he'd be storming out. Trakas only thinks he's about to get
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strong-armed into backing off Ashur by his own side.''
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``Agreed,'' Catherine said. ``He's not smooth enough to keep it in the
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pot if he gets knifed that hard and deep in the back.''
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``Then we approach him during the recess,'' Hakram said. ``We lack proof
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beyond the Tyrant's own words, which only a fool would take, but the
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groundwork can be laid.''
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``Hasenbach tried to use Nicae as a counterweight for Kairos and that
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went over about as well as pepper in a kennel,'' Cat reminded them.
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``If enough of the League's armies keep withdrawing to their territory,
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it no longer matters that Theodosian is dominant,'' the Black Knight
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noted. ``He'll no longer have the strength to collapse Procer or invade
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Callow, which effectively muzzles him.''
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Which would be ideal, as far as she was concerned, since acting against
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the madman outright was likely to see them burned. If he could instead
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be dragged back into the lesser squabbles of the League of Free Cities
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until the war against Keter was brought to an end it should be
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significantly less risky of a proposition. Which meant bending the
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individual city-states, and that would require significantly more
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pressure than the coalition had brought to bear so far.
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``We need to strike while they're still uncertain,'' Vivienne said.
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Catherine looked at her curiously.
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``We out it now, Cat,'' Vivienne said. ``It's out of the order, but then
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so was this. It ought to put them on the back foot again.''
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The Queen of Callow considered it for a moment, then nodded.
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``Hakram,'' she said, ``find me an in.''
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The orc's brow creased as he put his superb memory to work.
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``This isn't a motion, it's an address,'' the Adjutant said. ``Which
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means we can ask for right of reply on if what we speak of is
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associated. If the First Prince grant it, which I'd venture to assume.''
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Catherine's lips quirked into half a smile and she turned.
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``Do it.''
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Vivienne started in surprise, looking at the woman that was both her
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ruler and her friend.
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``This isn't a vote, Cat,'' she said. ``It's-''
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``I know what it is,'' Catherine said. ``It was your notion, and a good
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one. Besides, you're the one who'll reign under it. Speak the words.''
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Vivienne breathed out shallowly. But it was too late to flinch, to fear.
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It'd been too late since that night in Laure where she'd chosen to bet
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on the Squire. She rose to her feet.
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``The Kingdom of Callow request right of reply,'' Vivienne Dartwick
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said.
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Cordelia Hasenbach, tall and fair and with eyes like chips of ice,
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considered her for a moment.
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``We recognize the words of Lady Dartwick, heiress-designate to
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Callow,'' the First Prince said.
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``Pertaining the Grand Alliance, as addressed by Sitter Ahirom,''
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Vivienne said, ``we declare now before Gods and men that the Kingdom of
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Callow is a member and signatory.''
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