659 lines
31 KiB
TeX
659 lines
31 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-8-stanchion}{%
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\chapter{Stanchion}\label{chapter-8-stanchion}}
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\epigraph{``Friendship is as a garden: taking years to flourish, unmade by a
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season's negligence.''}{Proceran saying}
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Neat rows of legionaries in polished armour stood in resounding silence
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as Zombie passed in front of them at a trot.
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The three hundred men and women making up the assault formation that'd
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performed so well against the zombies yesterday -- for all that the
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small victory had since been drowned out by bitterer defeats -- had
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already been praised by their commander, Tribune Algernon Beesbury, and
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even been commended by Adjutant earlier. Hakram had also taken care to
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speak with the rank and file, asking what about the assault formation
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they felt had functioned properly and not, then passed along their
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answers put to ink to consider. I'd taken a glance, and while I'd read
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it properly later my glimpse had mostly told me the legionaries were
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satisfied in most respects, save that they were clamouring for more
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hammers. The raven beaks, as they were called, tended to be better at
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putting down dead than the halberds even if they lacked the flexibility
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of the other polearms. Reconsidering the proportions of each might be in
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order, though if thinned by too much the halberds would lose much of
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their effectiveness.
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I gazed at the legionaries as I rode past them, most of the helmeted
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faces unfamiliar to me even after holding command in Hainaut for so
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long. Perhaps I ought not to be surprised, as most of these soldiers
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came from General Hune's command and I did tend to stay with the Third
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Army rather than the Second. Its soldiers and officers were not as
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familiar to me, as much a single woman could ever be said to be familiar
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with an army. A few faces among these I'd seen before, if not put a name
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to, but it was some time before I pulled the reins to end Zombie's
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stride. The leathery grey-green skin I was glimpsing through the
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lieutenant's open helm stirred my memory, as did the vivid red scar
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cutting across the face of the orc.
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``I know you,'' I mused. ``Second Liesse?''
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``Yes, Warlord,'' she grinned, showing teeth. ``I was only a legionary,
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then. Fresh to the Fifteenth.''
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I tapped a finger below my eye, mirroring the jagged bend of the red
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line under hers.
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``Seasoned now,'' I replied approvingly. ``That was made by wight teeth
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or I'll eat my hand, Lieutenant\ldots{}''
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``Gunborg,'' she proudly said, ``of the Howling Wolves Clan.''
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Hakram's clan, that, and Marshal Grem One Eye's as well. She must have
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been in one of the last batches of recruits we got from the Steppes
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before the Empress stripped the Fifteenth of its recruitment rights.
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``One of them slipped in below my shield and bit me, Warlord,''
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Lieutenant Gunborg said, then grinned nastily. ``But I bit
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\emph{back}.''
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I couldn't help but grin in answer. There was something about that
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iron-cast martial pride that served as the backbone of the Clans that'd
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always rung true with me. There were parts of what came with being an
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orc that I'd never truly be able to understand, but the pride? I'd
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partaken of it eagerly, as a young girl. It'd done more to bind me to
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the Dread Empire than any conversation I'd ever had to Malicia.
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``Looks like you got the better end of that trade, lieutenant,'' I
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laughed. ``But polish your shieldwork a bit, would you? When I see you
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make captain, I'd prefer you not to be missing any bits.''
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``You have my oath, Warlord,'' she solemnly assured me.
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With a last chuckle I set Zombie back to her walk, passing the rest of
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the full first rank without seeing another old comrade. At the end of
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the line Tribune Beesbury was waiting, a young dark-haired man with
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surprisingly gentle brown eyes. With the pretty curls and the delicate
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face, he looked more like a poet than an officer of my armies. Until one
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got a look at the callouses on his hands, anyway: those didn't come from
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quillwork.
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``Tribune Beesbury,'' I said, pitching my voice so it could be heard as
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far as the back. ``I appointed you to lead these assault companies while
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knowing little of you, because you were warmly recommended to me by
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General Hune and endorsed by Hakram Deadhand.''
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I let a moment pass.
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``You have lived up to every word spoken in your praise,'' I said.
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Though he had good mastery of his face, for one his age, he was no
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courtier. The flush of pleasure and brightened eyes let me know of his
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thoughts even as he tried to keep them from showing.
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``You do me honour, Your Majesty,'' Tribune Beesbury replied.
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I shook my head.
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``You do us all honour,'' I said, voice rising as I turned to the
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assembled legionaries. ``Assault formations like yours were untested,
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until yesterday, but you fought with prowess that cannot be denied.
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\emph{Not a single fatality!}''
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I roared out the last sentence and got a roar back in return. It was not
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as great a victory as I was making it sound, in truth, since zombies
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were the least of the dead and numbers had only been slightly larger on
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Keter's side. There'd been a score wounded, and without the House
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Insurgent there would have been two dead, but the performance had still
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been \emph{very} promising. Enough that I was willing to invest time and
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coin into training legionaries in this method of making war even if was
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not backed by another ruler in the effort. I raised a hand and the
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cacophony went down, leaving me free to speak again.
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``As a reward for your conduct in yesterday's skirmish, I've ordered ale
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and meat rations be opened to all of you for supper,'' I called out.
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``You sent the dead back to their graves, legionaries -- fill your
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bellies tonight, and dream of doing it again!''
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Cheers filled the air again, even louder than last time, and my name was
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even called out by some. It wasn't my finest bit of speaking, truth be
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told, but I'd given so many of these speeches lately I couldn't even
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remember how many this made. They couldn't all be fresh and stirring.
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Besides, ale and meat would get people cheering even if they'd come with
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a sermon instead of the praise I'd freely doled out. A celebration, even
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a small one, ought to lift some of the pall of uncertainty that'd fallen
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over the camp since yesterday. Hanno had caught the Enemy in time, so
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spirits had not taken too hard a hit, but the revelation of the
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existence of shapeshifting ghouls had everyone distrustful and uneasy. I
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had a word with the senior officers of the formation, committing names
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and faces to memory, but did not linger long. Razin and Aquiline ought
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to have been sent for by now, unless Hakram had lost his touch, so I
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passed Zombie's reins to a legionary and limped back to my tent.
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The first hint that something was off came in the shape of a full line
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of legionaries whose pauldrons bore a distinctive scorched mark in the
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shape of a skeletal hand. Adjutant's personal command, those, grown from
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a single tenth when I was still the Squire to a full cohort of two
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hundred now. The sight of them around camp was hardly unusual, but that
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twenty would be standing almost skittishly around my tent most
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definitely was. The lieutenant in charge saluted when I approached and I
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hobbled up to him, about to ask the reason for this reinforced guard
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when my tent's entrance curtain was parted open. Hakram strolled out,
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leathery face offering up only forced calm.
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``There has been a misunderstanding, Catherine,'' Adjutant said. ``If
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you'd only give me a few moments I'll-''
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My pulse quickened. Not from danger, but from something else I couldn't
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quite parse yet. I'd been meant to sit with the Blood, hadn't I? There
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were only so many people from their corner of the world that my second
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be struggling to prevent my talking with.
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``Hakram,'' I blandly interrupted. ``Who's in the tent?''
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His face fell into an apologetic grimace, head angling to the side in an
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unconscious display of apology. Without another word I passed by him,
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staff forcing aside the curtain, and I felt my fingers clench in a
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spasm. Around the table Indrani was still carving me, four people were
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seated. Lord Razin Tanja and Lady Aquiline Osena were those who'd
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requested audience of me, but the other two were uninvited guests. The
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Barrow Sword's presence I had no real issue with. Ishaq might insist on
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continuing to wear the ancient bronze scale suit for reasons dubious to
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me, but the equally bronze sword he'd stolen from an old barrow along
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with the armour was a vicious piece of work especially well-suited to
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dealing with Revenants. The way he was rather easy on the eyes -- though
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I remained skeptical of beards, even well-groomed ones -- and had been a
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solid partisan of mine since we'd established the pecking order meant I
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tended to be well-inclined towards him.
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Oh, he was still a ruthless and largely amoral bastard who'd once tried
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to kill me just for the perks it'd earn him among his people. Yet,
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compared to some of the villains I had to deal with, he was agreeably
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straightforward in his intentions. It was the last of the four that had
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my lips thinning in barely mastered anger. The Valiant Champions' name
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was, I'd been told, Rafaella. I'd never used it before, and did not
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intend to ever start. Short and stocky with a long braid going down her
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back, the Champion was the savage sort of cheerful that I might have
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appreciated in someone who hadn't \emph{fucking skinned Captain and worn
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her fur as a cape}. My eyes flicked towards the tanned `heroine', who
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gazed back without either fear or embarrassment.
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``Walk out of this tent,'' I ordered in Chantant, tone eerily calm.
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Hakram entered behind me and I could almost feel him wincing as Lady
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Aquiline opened her mouth.
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``Queen Catherine, she is here at our-''
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I'd coddled those kids too much, hadn't I? I must have been for them to
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be so fucking \emph{unafraid}. Night flooded my veins, singing back
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eagerly to the call of my boiling anger. The sprite-lanterns hanging
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from the strips of cloth crisscrossing my tent's ceiling shone bright in
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the deepening shadows that swallowed everything between them, the
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enchanted braziers flickering as if touched by wind. A small ball of air
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formed above my palm, spinning, and Aquiline Osena gasped at the absence
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of the breath I'd just taken from her. My eyes never left the Champion.
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``Walk,'' I softly repeated, ``out of this tent.''
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She did not want to. Anyone with eyes could have seen that. I'd not been
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deft or delicate in my dismissal, and for a woman as proud as she it
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would rankle to have to obey. But she was in my tent, and an uninvited
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guest, so with a scowl the Valiant Champion got to her feet. She strode
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out, heading to my right since to my left Adjutant was silently
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standing. As she passed me, I spoke up again.
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``Don't forget my warning,'' I murmured without looking at her. ``If you
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ever wear that cloak again, even far from this camp, \emph{I'll know}.''
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She left the tent without giving reply, showing she was not entirely a
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fool. The Barrow Sword's soft, pleased laughter escorted her out. I
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loosened my grip on my anger, the shadows that'd swallowed up the tent
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fading, and crushed the ball of breath within my fist. Lady Aquiline
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gasped out, her voice returned to her. Razin eyed me with open anger,
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hands falling to his sword, and whatever ire might have been found in
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his gaze was matched twice over by what lay in Aquiline's.
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``You struck at-'' she began.
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``Bring Named into my tent uninvited again, Osena,'' I softly
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interrupted, ``and you'll have to crawl on your belly to wherever
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Tariq's hiding for healing, your severed feet hanging around neck. Do
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you understand me?''
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They both looked at me with fear and surprise. I'd been too soft on the
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pair of them, I thought, and now familiarity had bred contempt. They
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were in dire need of a reminder of who exactly they were dealing with.
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``I asked,'' I hissed out, ``\emph{do you understand me}?''
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The Lady of Tartessos' tanned face paled, as much from humiliation as
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fear.
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``I understand, Queen Catherine,'' she replied through gritted teeth.
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But the point hadn't quite sunk in, I mused. Maybe being made to stand
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for the rest of the audience would do them some good, or --
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``Catherine,'' Hakram murmured in Kharsum. ``There is discipline, and
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there is insult. Only one is warranted.''
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I breathed out shallowly. He was right, of course he was right. There
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was no point to further turning the knife in the wound save that vicious
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little twinge of satisfaction it'd give me. And that was no reason to do
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anything at all. I let the sudden fury that'd seized me flow out and
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limped around the table, going towards the head. Hakram pulled out my
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seat for me and I sat with my staff propped up against my shoulder,
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eyeing the lot of them a tad more calmly.
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``Ishaq,'' I said, turning my steady stare to the Barrow Sword. ``You,
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at least, ought to have known better than to bring Named uninvited into
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the quarters of a villain.''
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``I was unaware until the last moment,'' the bearded warrior replied,
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grinning crookedly. ``Could have warned them, true, but then I wouldn't
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have gotten to see \emph{that}.''
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He gestured a calloused hand the direction the Champion had left.
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Considering the Barrow Sword and Levantine heroes fought like cats and
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dogs whenever they were in the each other's vicinity, I had no trouble
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whatsoever believing he'd kept silent just to see me expel the other
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woman from my tent. I grunted, unamused, and turned my gaze back to the
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two Dominion aristocrats. They were both glaring at the villain, though
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that rolled off like water from a duck's back.
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``You asked for an audience,'' I said, tone still clipped. ``You have
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it. Speak.''
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``We come today to speak of the Barrow Sword,'' Lord Razin said, not
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bothering to hide his irritation towards the man in question. ``Who has,
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once more, petitioned the Majilis and the Holy Seljun for his deeds to
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be recorded by the rolls.''
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The rolls were one of those peculiarities in the way the Dominion of
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Levant treated its Named. While there were highborn among the Levantines
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who were aristocrats purely because of their ancestry, they were
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ultimately all descended from Named and to their people that was the
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very source of being highborn. Coming into a Name would see one
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immediately raised to nobility, though like everywhere else on Calernia
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there were nobles and then there were \emph{nobles}. There wasn't a lot
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of difference between someone like the Painted Knife and, say, a
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Callowan landed knight or a baronet. Often merchants were wealthier in
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everything but largely decorative privileges.
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Bestowed, as they called their Named, were always either associated to
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one of the already existing lineages or, when unprecedented, entered in
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the rolls as the founder of their own line of the Blood. The rolls
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themselves, aside from serving as records of such lineages in `Blood and
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Bestowal', held records of all the great deeds of Levantine Named. Those
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who were not villains, anyway, at least in theory. I personally believed
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that a few villains had slipped through the cracks by virtue of not
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openly keeping to Below or being tied to an originally heroic lineage in
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some way. It might even go deeper than that: some of the things I'd read
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had been done by the Vengeful Brigand, one of their founding heroes, had
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been genuinely nasty in a way not often seen out of the Wasteland.
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The issue here, though, was that Ishaq was \emph{openly} a villain.
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While undeniably Bestowed, he was effectively demanding he be made a
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noble by a country keeping to Above, one where men like him were
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expected to be the proving grounds of more honourable lines and nothing
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else. In other times he'd be laughed out of the room or ignored, should
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he not instead find the Grey Pilgrim politely knocking at his door one
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evening, but times were changing. The Liesse Accords stipulated that
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being a villain was not inherently a crime and, though the members of
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the Grand Alliance hand not yet signed the Accords, the Truce and the
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Terms were widely seen as prelude and trial to their implementation.
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It had been Cordelia Hasenbach's own notion to keep the two separate so
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that mistakes in one would not taint the other before it was
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implemented. I suspected I might have come to resent how damnably clever
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that woman was, if it weren't so damnably useful.
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``Interesting,'' I mildly said. ``Yet also a matter for the Dominion of
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Levant to resolve.''
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I mostly liked the Barrow Sword but I wasn't going to meddle in the
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brutal debacle that was Levantine politics on his behalf, much less to
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try to force the raising of a villain to nobility. The backlash to such
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an act from, well, most everyone was likely to be spectacular.
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``We came to request a clarification about the Truce and the Terms,''
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Lady Aquiline said, visibly still fuming. ``And how they would apply
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against a decree of the Majilis.''
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``The Majilis voted unanimously for the Dominion to sign onto the Truce
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and Terms,'' I pointed out, frowning. ``There is no conflict to be
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had.''
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``There's the trouble, Black Queen. I have been given amnesty for
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grave-robbing by the Terms, and my Bestowal is not itself an offence
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against the laws of Levant,'' the Barrow Sword smiled. ``So by the
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ancient laws of the Dominion, I must be added to the rolls as the
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founder of the Barrow's Blood.''
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``Those laws were written with the understand that Below's servants
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would be hunted by the righteous without protection,'' Aquiline flatly
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said.
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I sucked in a breath.
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``The Terms bend the meaning of your laws so that you no longer have
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grounds to refuse him,'' Adjutant said, voicing my realization.
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The two of the Blood nodded, while the villain leaned back in his seat
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with a smirk. Hence the \emph{clarification} that was being requested
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here. They wanted me, as speaker for the villain Named of the Grand
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Alliance, to make it clear that the Terms couldn't force their hand.
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``The Holy Seljun has expressed his intention to call the Majilis to
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session and change the laws to reflect the will of the Heavens,'' Lord
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Razin said. ``When informed of this, the Barrow Sword-''
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``The Barrow Sword told them he'd have to lodge a complaint with his
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representative under the Terms should the Majilis, seated halfway across
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the continent, try to fuck him up the ass while he's fighting in the
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thick of the melee against the Dead King,'' Ishaq said, tone hardening.
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\emph{Fuck}, I grimly thought. So that was why they'd come to me even
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thought this was a Dominion matter: I'd sworn oaths under the Terms to
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defend the Barrow Sword and settle complaints on his behalf. It was a
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thorny little predicament they were bringing to me, too. On one hand, if
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I twisted arms for Ishaq over this then the Black Queen was intervening
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in the Dominion's own affairs. That was the kind of overstep that
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shattered coalitions. On the other hand, if I just looked away and did
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nothing then I was telling villains that I'd throw them under the horse
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the moment living up to my oaths became slightly inconvenient. That, and
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afterwards what Levantine villain would want to lend their power to the
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war if back home they were being forbidden by law the rights and
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privileges of other Named? Even those already fighting would think twice
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about keeping their oaths, if the Dominion scorned them so openly. That
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was the trouble, with making continent-spanning treaties: afterwards you
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had to deal with a continent's worth of trouble.
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``To clarify,'' Hakram intervened, ``no such complaint has been made,
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and no law was changed?''
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``No,'' the Barrow Sword smilingly agreed.
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``The Majilis has not yet been called,'' Lord Razin said. ``Before the
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matter is to be debated, we meant to seek the insight of the Black Queen
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on this matter.''
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Meaning they wanted to know how hard I'd come out swinging for Ishaq
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before they made a decision that couldn't be easily walked back.
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``I've also requested that a record of my deeds in Hainaut be sent to
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the Blood for consideration,'' the Barrow Sword added.
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That much, at least, I had no qualms promising. Whatever the rest I'd
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not deny the man acknowledgement of the fierceness he'd fought against
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Keter with.
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``That will have been put to ink and bear personal seal by dawn
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tomorrow,'' I said, flicking a meaningful glance at Hakram.
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He'd be the one to write it, after all. From the rueful look in his eyes
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he'd understood my meaning perfectly.
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``The Valiant Champion was meant to speak on this matter for Bestowed of
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the Dominion,'' Lady Aquiline told me, defiantly. ``Before she was so
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unreasonably sent away.''
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``If Levantine heroes are to have a say in this dispute, that is a
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Dominion matter,'' I coldly replied. ``Under the Terms, my interlocutor
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is the White Knight. I owe not an inch beyond that.''
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``How pettily you complain of another's trophy, while wearing many
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yourself,'' the Lady of Tartessos mocked.
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Razin threw her an anguished look but said nothing. Trophies? Oh, I did
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wear those. Banners on my back and once, only once, I'd snatched the
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soul of a fallen foe who'd butchered an entire city in her folly. What
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I'd not done was mutilate the corpse of a fallen foe, made a \emph{wolf
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fur cloak} of the woman who'd first taught me how to use a shield and --
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I breathed out. Sabah, Sabah had deserved better. Of all the Calamities,
|
|
she'd deserved better.
|
|
|
|
``You get one warning, Osena,'' I quietly said. ``Test me on this again
|
|
and you will not enjoy what follows.''
|
|
|
|
I met her gaze, the dark eyes so defiant, and did not blink. They'd been
|
|
allowed too much leash, these two, and I'd be glad to see the back of
|
|
them when next I met Tariq. But until then, they'd learn meekness again
|
|
even if it had to be beaten back into their bones. Razin said something
|
|
in one of the Levantine languages, tone flat, and only then did Aquiline
|
|
of the Slayer's Blood look away.
|
|
|
|
``Your audience is at an end,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Razin, often the deftest of the two when it came to matters like this,
|
|
simply inclined his head.
|
|
|
|
``We can resume the discussion when a record of deeds has been written
|
|
and the White Knight's insight has been sought,'' the Lord of Malaga
|
|
replied.
|
|
|
|
In the same sentence establishing that nothing had been settled and that
|
|
under the Terms they had someone to bring into this as well if I came
|
|
out too hard on the Barrow Sword's side. He was turning into a decent
|
|
hand at that, I mused. Being surrounded by people who usually dwarfed
|
|
him in power and influence had taught him something of subtlety,
|
|
smoothed away some his rawness.
|
|
|
|
``A good day to you, Lord Razin, Lady Aquiline,'' Hakram gravelled,
|
|
standing at my side.
|
|
|
|
I blandly smiled and said nothing, letting them speak their own
|
|
courtesies before leaving. The Barrow Sword made to do the same but I
|
|
discreetly shook my head. I took a long look at Ishaq Deathless when her
|
|
sat back down, allowing the silence to linger. With that tanned skin,
|
|
strong brow and a thick -- if well-maintained -- beard he was a fine
|
|
instance of what I'd been told was classic Alavan looks. He was
|
|
broad-shouldered as an orc and not much taller than me, with for sole
|
|
warpaint two long streaks of ash grey just below pale brown eyes. I'd
|
|
seen him in a shirt, where the muscles under that armour had been
|
|
well-moulded instead of tucked away, and I was honest enough with myself
|
|
to admit I might have taken him to bed once or twice by now if he'd not
|
|
been under my command and so brazenly ambitious. From his occasional
|
|
lingering look I doubted it would have been all that difficult to talk
|
|
him into it either.
|
|
|
|
``Your people have this saying, you told me,'' I said. ``Kick a barrow,
|
|
die stupid?''
|
|
|
|
He looked highly amused.
|
|
|
|
``Kick a barrow, die a fool,'' the dark-haired villain replied,
|
|
half-grinning.
|
|
|
|
``That's the one,'' I agreeably said, then narrowed my eyes. ``Ishaq,
|
|
don't go around kicking barrows when we're in the middle of a war for
|
|
the right to keep breathing.''
|
|
|
|
``You swore oaths, Black Queen,'' he reminded me, carefully.
|
|
|
|
``The Truce and Terms are a vessel to help gather Named to fight the
|
|
Dead King,'' I said. ``If the ambitions one of those Named threaten that
|
|
cause, the Terms have failed in that purpose.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm not asking them for land, or for right of rule,'' the Barrow Sword
|
|
protested. ``I ask that my deeds not fall into obscurity simply because
|
|
I do not kneel at the altar of the Ashen Gods.''
|
|
|
|
``And I think that's fair,'' I told him. ``I really do.''
|
|
|
|
All else aside, if a villain was rendering a service to Grand Alliance
|
|
they were due the same recognition a hero would get for those deeds. Of
|
|
course, fair only went so far in this world.
|
|
|
|
``So because I've grown passing fond of you, Ishaq,'' I continued, tone
|
|
casual, ``I'll tell you right now: if I have to choose between you and
|
|
eighty thousand Dominion soldiers, you are going die tragically fighting
|
|
Keter.''
|
|
|
|
I'd not raised my voice in the slightest, yet the hardened killer almost
|
|
flinched. I smiled amicably at him.
|
|
|
|
``Ambition is a virtue, when tempered by restraint,'' I said. ``We
|
|
understand each other, yes?''
|
|
|
|
``We do, Black Queen,'' the Barrow Sword soberly replied.
|
|
|
|
Vinegar had been served, so the other hand must offer honey.
|
|
|
|
``Good,'' I nodded. ``Then I'll have the record of your laudable efforts
|
|
in Hainaut written up and lean on the White Knight to have it confirmed
|
|
independently by heroes. If it still looks like they're being
|
|
unreasonable, I'll personally take this to the Grey Pilgrim.''
|
|
|
|
His expression brightened, and I could only think of the way Wasteland
|
|
villains would eat the poor bastard alive. Ishaq wasn't stupid by any
|
|
means, he was just\ldots{} uncomplicated. He took what he could,
|
|
retreated in the face of superior force and saw absolutely nothing wrong
|
|
in either thing. There was a soothing clarity to that way of living I
|
|
sometimes envied.
|
|
|
|
``Then I take my leave, Black Queen,'' the Barrow Sword smiled. ``I
|
|
thank you for your time.''
|
|
|
|
``Keep putting down Revenants and my door's always open,'' I smiled
|
|
back. ``Fair days, Ishaq.''
|
|
|
|
``Fair nights, Black Queen,'' the villain replied.
|
|
|
|
I waited until he'd left before letting out a long sigh. I slumped back
|
|
into my seat and closed my eyes.
|
|
|
|
``So?'' I asked Hakram.
|
|
|
|
``You went too hard on Aquiline,'' Adjutant assessed. ``I know why you
|
|
did, but now she'll feel she's been dishonoured until she gets some sort
|
|
of victory over you. We both know that your patience is going to run out
|
|
on that.''
|
|
|
|
It would, which meant I'd probably have to serve her up a meaningless
|
|
win over something to soother her wounded pride. Considering I was less
|
|
than well-inclined towards Aquiline Osena at the moment, that prospect
|
|
did not fill me with enthusiasm. What had she done, to deserve this from
|
|
me?
|
|
|
|
``It's not the same, Hakram,'' I said. ``The Mantle, and that
|
|
abomination the Champion wore.''
|
|
|
|
A beat of silence.
|
|
|
|
``Levantine take trophies,'' the orc said. ``Especially from famous
|
|
foes. It is part of who they are as a people. I expect if she could have
|
|
taken armour instead of fur, she would have.''
|
|
|
|
I opened my eyes, stirred to anger once more.
|
|
|
|
``But she didn't,'' I hissed back. ``And you know that's entirely-''
|
|
|
|
He sat at my side, around the corner of the table. The chair did not
|
|
creak under his weight, as Cordelia Hasenbach was not one to forget such
|
|
details.
|
|
|
|
``I know, Catherine,'' the orc told me. ``Of course I know. But I also
|
|
understand that to \emph{them} there is no difference, and so your anger
|
|
seems frivolous to their eyes.''
|
|
|
|
``Praesi highborn murder each other at the drop of a hat, Stygians
|
|
practice slavery,'' I flatly replied. ``Am I to pretend their ways are
|
|
just some quaint local custom as well?''
|
|
|
|
``My people eat corpses, and sometimes the living,'' Hakram frankly
|
|
said. ``Goblins take oaths about as seriously as porridge. I would be
|
|
bitterly disappointed if you only took us in because those things have
|
|
yet to prick you too sharply.''
|
|
|
|
That actually stung to hear, and I drew back in surprise.
|
|
|
|
``That's different,'' I said, ``it's not\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``It's not one of the two Calamities you've loved,'' Adjutant kindly
|
|
finished for me. ``It's not the woman who taught you to keep your shield
|
|
up when you swing a sword, worn on some stranger's back.''
|
|
|
|
A long moment of silence passed as I struggled with my words.
|
|
|
|
``It's not wrong, to be furious about that,'' I quietly replied.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' he agreed, ``it isn't. You can carry that grudge until you die,
|
|
should you want to, and you'll not be wrong.''
|
|
|
|
``But the Black Queen can't?'' I bitterly asked. ``I don't agree with
|
|
that, Hakram. Akua said something once, about wants of the woman and the
|
|
needs of the queen, but no one cuts it that clean. The Praesi have
|
|
tried, and it's sickened them perhaps beyond mending. I'll have no part
|
|
of it.''
|
|
|
|
Adjutant set against the oak the hand of bone he'd earned in my service,
|
|
along with near every other wound that rent his body. It was, I thought,
|
|
a statement powerful enough that it need not be spoken at all to be
|
|
heard.
|
|
|
|
``I am not Akua Sahelian,'' Hakram said, tone almost chiding. ``I swore
|
|
myself to Catherine Foundling, not a Name or a crown. I've no interest
|
|
in splitting my oath between your and your shadow, seen by Wasteland
|
|
eyes. But I will say, Warlord, that the moment you let hate choose your
|
|
path for you at last fetters were clasped around your wrist.''
|
|
|
|
He bared long fangs, sharp and pale as bone.
|
|
|
|
``If you cannot tolerate the way of the world, change it,'' Hakram
|
|
Deadhand said, sounding even now like he did not doubt for a moment that
|
|
I could. ``If you will not take up those arms, though, do not keep
|
|
clutching them in your grasp. Creation has no patience for the
|
|
half-hearted.''
|
|
|
|
I leaned forward, elbows on the table as I passed tired hands through my
|
|
hair.
|
|
|
|
``I'm tired, Hakram,'' I admitted, looking down at the half-polished
|
|
wood. ``I'm tired and I slipped up and just\ldots{} the moment I did,
|
|
the \emph{single fucking moment}, a kid died. Just like that. And I'd
|
|
like to think I'm not the kind of monster that would wish a
|
|
fourteen-year-old kid would die just because another one did,
|
|
but\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
The tall orc leaned his head against mine, softly, and said nothing. It
|
|
was one of the kindest things anyone had ever done for me.
|
|
|
|
``I understand him, now,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
And though the anger was not on my tongue, it was even worse than that.
|
|
It'd settled in my bones, in the marrow of them, and now it was a part
|
|
of me. One that would never leave.
|
|
|
|
``Who?'' Hakram softly asked.
|
|
|
|
``Black,'' I murmured. ``Why even knowing he was wrong he still wanted
|
|
to win. To beat them. A single breath blown on the balance of Creation,
|
|
so that for just a moment you could look at it and say: this is fair.
|
|
This is equal. And know that it wasn't but you \emph{made} it that
|
|
way.''
|
|
|
|
``There's nothing at the end of that road, Catherine,'' Adjutant said.
|
|
|
|
``I know,'' I said. ``Gods, I know. But every time I see their kid
|
|
survives and ours dies, every time I see they get to walk around in the
|
|
skin mother of three and we're in the wrong for \emph{daring} to be
|
|
offended by that? I understand him a little better.''
|
|
|
|
In the end, though Black had wanted to even the scales by pushing down
|
|
on Good. And that wasn't a victory, not really, but for all his pale
|
|
skin and cold steel mind there was something about my father that was
|
|
utterly Praesi: the Wasteland only ever knew victory by triumph over
|
|
others. The other way, the hard way, was pushing up the other scale. And
|
|
I would walk that road, that was the choice I'd made. But, I thought as
|
|
my forehead pressed against the cool oak and Hakram's hand lay on my
|
|
shoulder, before my feet began moving again I could\ldots{} wait a
|
|
while. Catch my breath. I closed my eyes, alone in my tent with the
|
|
person I loved most in this world, and it was the closest I'd felt to
|
|
peace in years.
|
|
|
|
It would pass, I knew. So I enjoyed it, for the little while it lasted.
|