697 lines
32 KiB
TeX
697 lines
32 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-9-acceleration}{%
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\chapter{Acceleration}\label{chapter-9-acceleration}}
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\epigraph{``As sage in Nicae is a fool in Stygia.''}{Free Cities saying}
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Afternoon Bell came and went before Hanno made his way into my tent. The
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bundle of reports that inevitably accompanied contact with Salia had
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eaten up even more of my time than I'd anticipated it would. Vivienne
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had been enthusiastic in her account of the progress in the talks over
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the Accords, writing that giving ground over whether or not scrying a
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foreign country could be considered an act of aggression -- which both
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Procer very much wanted it to be, considering its massive deficiencies
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in both city-warding and scrying rituals compared to Callow and Levant
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-- had allowed her to get concessions over what we'd termed `civil
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diabolism', the summoning and binding of devils for purposes other than
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war. The rest had been more disparate a pack of news than a cohesive,
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though no less useful for it.
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Archer had apparently been seen in the Proceran heartlands with a sixth
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member to her band, which meant a fresh Named had been added to our
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roster and would be in touch soon. The First Prince had passed along a
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note on the state of the Grand Alliance treasury -- which remained
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surprisingly good, all things considered -- but also cautioned that the
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Principality of Brabant's harvests seemed headed for catastrophe. She
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went on to write me that feeding this territory, and its massive numbers
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of refugees, would put us squarely back in the red before winter came.
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Pickler had sent a refinement on the rotating siege harpoon ballistae
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schematics she'd made up in Twilight's Pass. She also mentioned in a
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separate letter, sounding somewhat flattered, that Prince Otto
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Reitzenberg had extended a formal invitation for her to found and settle
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a tribe in Lycaonese lands after the war.
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It was a grave misreading of my Sapper-General's interest in leadership
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duties so I wasn't worried about poaching, but I doubted this would be
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the last of it. Even the Iron Prince had expressed interest in goblin
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engineering and, considering that Hannoven was yet in the hands of the
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Dead King, his people had a great deal of rebuilding ahead of them.
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Still, maybe a strongly worded letter to Otto Redcrown might serve as a
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helpful reminder that trying to recruit from my sapper corps was, at the
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very least, a slight to the crown of Callow. Moving on to less grounded
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matters, the rumours gathered in the south and east by the Jacks
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remained wild as ever.
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The dead were said to walk the streets of Nicae, General Basilia had
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supposedly eaten the heart of a holy oracle and could now see the
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future. A band of pale spectres was haunting the Green Stretch, all the
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while Dread Empress Sepulchral had turned into a black-scaled dragon and
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ravaged the outskirts of Wolof's territory. That last one might in truth
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be the reappearance of General Nekheb of the Tenth Legion, though I'd
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also heard it said they were nesting among the ruins of the Red Flower
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Vales so I was less than sure. Somewhat amusingly, it was also quite a
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popular tale that I'd apaparently brought down the sky on Refuge so that
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I could steal its Named away into my service.
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More important than the wild stories, though was the hastily tacked-on
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addition from Vivienne that Duchess Kegan had passed forward Dread
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Empress Sepulchral's request to open formal diplomatic talks with the
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Grand Alliance. So far the diplomacy there had been informal and half a
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secret, and I'd gladly left it to my successor and Hasenbach. This,
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though, would require my personal attention. Joy. At least we might get
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enough leverage from that I might be able to wheedle out whether
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Sepulchral was a genuine claimant or just a horse for Black to ride. I'd
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better bring Akua into this as well, though that wasn't unlike asking a
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wolf about their opinion of the hunt. Still, even years away from the
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Wasteland she had a better grasp of the way functioned there than anyone
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else under my command.
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Aisha's family was old and well-connected, after all, but ultimately
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minor nobility. The Sahelians lived and breathed intrigued at the very
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highest levels of Praes, and Akua hadn't just been any one of the lot:
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she'd been the heiress to Wolof, groomed for either rule of the High
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Seat or the claiming the Tower itself. Short of kidnapping an actual
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High Lord there was just no beating that. I was considering who else to
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bring into this -- Hakram, naturally, but it might be worth bringing in
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some of the high-ranking officers I'd inherited from the Legions of
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Terror as well -- when one of my guards popped in to inform me Hanno had
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arrived. I thank the man and rose to my feet, limping my way to the
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commode even as the White Knight entered.
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He looked at me then sighed.
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``Let it be brandy, at least,'' Hanno haggled.
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I tapped the top of the commode, jostling a lock, and the door to left
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compartment popped open. I snatched out a bottle of Creusens brandy and
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two small silver cups. I'd been prepared. Amusingly enough it was easier
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to get him to drink liquor than wine, and he drank quick -- if only to
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get it over with. He waited until my nonchalant gesture to take a seat,
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though I'd long told him not to bother anymore.
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``Well bargained, White Knight,'' I solemnly said.
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``You only ever say that when I've been had, Black Queen,'' he drily
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replied.
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I limped back to the table, using his momentary distraction as he felt
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out one of Indrani's latest carvings to take a closer look at him. Even
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after two years of facing one brutal horror after another, the Sword of
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Judgement had little changed in appearance. His fuzzy hair was so
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closely cropped as to seem almost shaved, leaving the eye to linger
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instead on a plain but well-formed face. He was built like someone who
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worked for a living, which I'd always found appealing, and the
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long-sleeved grey tunic he tended to wear when out of armour had earned
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a few more stitches since I last saw it but still framed those muscled
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arms rather nicely. He wasn't a looker, not the way Ratface had been or
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Akua was, but he wasn't without his charms either. Not that I'd ever
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seriously consider going there, Crows, though apparently Tariq still
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suspected we were somehow secretly engaging in torrid trysts.
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You'd think that after trying to mentor me into the grave the man would
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have a better appreciation of how much I had no intention of coming
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anywhere close to something that could, even vaguely while in dim light,
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pass for a tragic love story. Dismissing the thought I idly noted that
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he'd brought a small leather satchel -- papers, maybe? He shouldn't need
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to, his memory was unusually sharp. It was a side-effect of his aspect
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of Recall, he'd told me, which I'd found fascinating. How many aspects
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had little quirks like this one, barely noticeable boons tucked away in
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the shade of the more prominent use? Looking back, after getting
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Struggle as the Squire I'd gotten rather good at assessing the skill and
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power of my opponents compared to me. How much of that had been my
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gaining experience, and how much an ancillary benefit? It was an
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interesting bit to consider, if at this point largely academic.
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``Is that the Saint of Swords that the Archer depicted herself
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fighting?'' Hanno asked.
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I set the two silver cups on the table and went to work on the bottle's
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cork.
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``Battle of the Camps, it was,'' I agreed. ``They had a scrap while
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Masego and I were dreaming.''
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``Impressive,'' Hanno said even as I finally got the cork out with a
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pop. ``There were not many capable of facing Laurence de Montfort's
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sword up close and live to tell the tale.''
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Indrani had privately admitted to me that she'd waited until the Saint
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was tired out from the battle and it'd still been a damned close thing,
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but I wouldn't disagree with Hanno's assessment even knowing that.
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Archer's talent in close quarters was only slightly helped by her Name,
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while the Saint had been sharpening her skills in this regard for
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decades. Considering how much of a terror the woman had been in her old
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age, I often thought we'd been damned lucky not to fight her in her
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prime. I poured out two cups of brandy, quirking a brow at the
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dark-skinned man.
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``Wouldn't have you been able to check with Recall, anyway?'' I asked.
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He grimaced.
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``The fresher the death and the stronger the personality the more
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it\ldots{} lingers after use,'' the White Knight admitted. ``I would not
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call on the Saint of Sword's life without great need.''
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``Lots of her tricks came from her domain, anyway,'' I mused. ``Which
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you can't mimic, as far as I know.''
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He shot me an amused look, well used by now to the way I went about
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digging up everything I could about his abilities. Well, it was no
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mystery I'd not been raised by angels. He touched his fingers to the
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brandy cup, brow rising.
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``Two,'' he said.
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``Five,'' I replied without missing a beat.
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``Three,'' he compromised.
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Ah, an opening.
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``Twelve,'' I boldly tried.
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``Four and I'll not tell Tariq you tried to get me drunk,'' he
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suggested.
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Oh Gods was I not in the market for another hesitant, indirect
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conversation about not `casting doubts on the nature of the Truce and
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Terms through unwise indulgence'. On the other hand, apparently the
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Witch of the Woods had heard about those and thought the whole thing was
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fucking hilarious -- she kept making fun of Hanno in that nonverbal
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Gigantes language they used with each other, with all the poses and
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shifts. He had a stake in this as well, I figured.
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``Five and I'll stop implying in front of Secretary Nestor that your
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tunic's grey because you don't wash it,'' I retorted.
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As something said by the Black Queen about the White Knight, it went
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into the Annals every time. Every single time.
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``Four and I'll share the Workshop gossip I received with you,'' Hanno
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offered.
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\emph{You shit}, I thought, not without fondness. He would definitely
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have shared that before, but he'd hold it back now for sure just so that
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when we next negotiated he'd have this to point back to.
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``Fine,'' I mercifully allowed. ``Four.''
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I set down the bottle on the table and took my cup, offering a toast.
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``May you live to bury your enemies,'' I said.
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``Fair winds and slow rivals,'' Hanno replied.
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We clinked our cups and drank deep, setting down in unison. It took the
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edge off enough I barely felt the sting when I seated myself across from
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him.
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``Dare I ask what's in the bag?'' I probed.
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``It is not meant to be a mystery,'' he said, leaning down to take the
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satchel before setting it in front of me. ``It is a gift, Catherine.
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Your twenty-third nameday happened while I was away, no?''
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I blinked in surprise.
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``Oh,'' I said. ``Yes. Thank you? I'm an orphan, so I don't really have
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one of those -- just the foundling day late in the spring.''
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It also didn't explain why he'd given me a gift, though I wasn't
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complaining.
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``From your polite confusion, I take it nameday gift-giving is not a
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Callowan tradition,'' Hanno noted.
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``Not really,'' I admitted. ``For nobles sometimes, I think, but for
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most people gifts are given at the solstices and when you reach
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fifteen.''
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The dark-skinned man cocked his head to the side, curious.
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``Fifteen?'' he asked.
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``Age of enrollment,'' I told him. ``Used to be, anyway. It was kept for
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private noble armies under the Empire but I kicked it up to seventeen
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all around when I took the throne.''
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Keeping it at fifteen would have helped fill the ranks after our losses
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more quickly but, as both Ratface and Governess-General Kendal had
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pointed out back then, if we kept pressing the young into service
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there'd be no one left to practice trades and tend to the fields. A
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large army was no help when it was busy starving.
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``How interesting,'' Hanno said, sounding genuine. ``Ashurans are
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expected to give yearly nameday gifts to those they are tied to --
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family, friends or close collaborators. All within the same tier,
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naturally. For a citizen to court favour from a higher tier or display
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favour to a lower one would be frowned upon.''
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The Thalassocracy of Ashur sounded like a deeply unpleasant place to
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live in, as usual. Weren't there families with citizens of different
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tiers in them? Still, the implications there were a little flattering: I
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was being called both an equal and close collaborator.
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``Thank you,'' I said again, and took the satchel this time.
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It was easy to unmake the bronze buckles, and within I found in neat
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little cloth packets what must have been at least half a years' worth of
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wakeleaf.
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``You know, when I told you to keep some of the Delosi coin I didn't
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mean for you to blow it all on enabling my worst habit,'' I drily said.
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It'd been, though, a rather touching gesture.
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``I have also been considering buying another tunic,'' the White Knight
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calmly replied. ``I've been told it passes as unclean to the unskilled
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eye.''
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I swallowed a grin and clasped his wrist in appreciation. He smoothly
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returned the gesture.
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``So when should I be looking to return a gift in kind?'' I asked.
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``Two days past winter solstice,'' he smiled.
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Ought to bring him to twenty-nine, that. As I recalled he had more or
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less five years on me, not that it showed: he had one of those faces
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which would look much the same age until he started greying. I set down
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the satchel to the side.
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``So,'' I said. ``Business?''
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``To business,'' he agreed.
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I poured him another cup, then myself, and we knocked them back without
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a toast. I gestured for him to begin as soon as the burn had faded from
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my throat.
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``The Titanomachy reached out to us through Levant,'' Hanno began.
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``They are sending an envoy north.''
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I sucked in a surprised breath. The Gigantes were notoriously
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isolationist, and though they had longstanding ties to the Dominion it'd
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been my understanding those were limited to exchanges of gifts and the
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occasional favour. They didn't even trade with humans in the traditional
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sense, as far as I knew.
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``You don't sound all that thrilled,'' I noted.
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His body gave what might have seemed like a twitch at first glance but
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I'd learned to recognize as him beginning to use that silent language he
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used with the Witch before stopping himself.
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``It will be a complicated matter to handle,'' he admitted. ``I am told
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it is Ykines Silver-on-Clouds that was sent.''
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``Which is,'' I slowly said, ``\ldots{} bad?''
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``When I left the Titanomachy, Ykines was \emph{skope} for Hushed
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Absence,'' Hanno told me. ``It is\ldots{} hard to describe in human
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terms. A \emph{skope} is one charged with a message, speaking for
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others, but it is not exactly a position of authority. It does denote
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respect, however, and the Hushed Absence is the chorus that most prizes
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retiring from the affairs of Calernia.''
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``So they sent us a lesser noble from the isolationist faction at court
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as the envoy,'' I tried.
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``That is untrue in every single specific yet broadly accurate in
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essence,'' the White Knight said, sounding impressed. ``You have to
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understand, Catherine, that since Triumphant and the Seven Slayings the
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Gigantes have only ever spoken of ties outside their borders in terms of
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loss.''
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``The Seven Slayings,'' I repeated curiously. ``That's the Humbling of
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Titans, right?''
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``I would not recommend using that name around any of their kind,''
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Hanno advised. ``The Slayings soured most of their kind on humans,
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though the tendency had been there for ages before.''
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``I never did get why they're still so viscerally furious about the Hum-
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the Slayings,'' I said. ``Procer struck by surprise, sure, but that's
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hardly a first for them. Their armies still got savaged when they got
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deeper in, and all the Principate got to show for those deaths was a
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modest stripe of land added to southern Valencis.''
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They'd also gotten the Titanomachy to unofficially back down from its
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defence pacts with the Levantine petty kingdoms, which had allowed
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Procer to eventually keep pushing into Levant after its conquest of
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Vaccei. Yet the amount of losses taken during the Humbling had
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supposedly kicked back that conquest by at least a decade, so in a sense
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the Gigantes \emph{had} fulfilled their treaty obligations.
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``It is not the treachery itself but what was committed through it,''
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the brown-eyed man said. ``When the Principate called for talks, it was
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some of the greatest left among the Gigantes who went. Three of the last
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elder spellsingers, the \emph{amphore} for the Sublime Auspice chorus
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and two candidates for the Name of Stone Shaper.''
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My brow rose.
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``Choruses are court factions,'' I guessed.
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``Gigantes are not social in the way humans are,'' Hanno admitted. ``You
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would find their cities to be empty things, and there'd be no court to
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be found. A chorus is more akin to an ideology, though even within a
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chorus there will be differing songs. The Hushed Absence, for example,
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will call to both those who advocate for isolation and those who curtail
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wonder-making by all Gigantes. Yet some will speak to one over the other
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or speak of both these in relative moderation. A \emph{skope} will be
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messenger for one of the shades of belief, should it gain enough
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adherents within the chorus.''
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``So what does the Sublime Auspice sing about?'' I asked.
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``Guidance of younger peoples and intervention beyond the borders,'' the
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White Knight said. ``In the past they were also the foremost slavers
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among the Titan Lords.''
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I grimaced. Proceran history wasn't something I'd studied in great
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depth, especially not when it came to the south -- which had barely ever
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crossed Callow's path before the Principate was founded -- but I had
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learned some broad strokes back at the orphanage. \emph{Arlesites are
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passionate and romantic people, fond of poetry and duels}, Douglas
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Robinson's much maligned yet still widely used `Peoples of East and
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West' described them. \emph{Their name comes from the ancient Arlesen
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Confederacy, which rebelled against the slaving giants.} There were
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stories to be found there, to be sure, but I'd always had a hundred
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other things to attend to and never had the Titanomachy seemed likely to
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become relevant to my affairs. It wasn't the first time I'd been wrong
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and was unlikely to be the last.
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``They never recovered from losing their \emph{amphore} to human Named
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while under truce banner,'' Hanno continued. ``And though the killing of
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the candidates was a grave insult in the eyes of the Gigantes -- not
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unlike killing a Fairfax prince would be to your people -- it was the
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death of the spellsingers that incited outright hatred. The magnitude of
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that loss for them as a people is not easily put into words, so I will
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simply say it was worth great grief and grief often turns to matching
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enmity.''
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My brow rose.
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``Named did that?'' I asked. ``I'd heard it was just assassins.''
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``All were Arlesite heroes save for the White Knight of the time, who
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was of the Cantalii,'' Hanno said. ``Most of those Names are dead and
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gone now. Of the twelve assassins to strike only the Drake Knight
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survived, and not even that potent blood allowed him to grow back the
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arm he lost.''
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He had that distant look on his face as he spoke, the one that told me
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he was drawing on memories he'd obtained through Recall.
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``So you're saying that since they're sending us the isolationist
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\emph{skope} as an envoy, we shouldn't get our hopes up about the
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Titanomachy entering the war,'' I said, drawing him back to the here and
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now.
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``To an extent,'' he replied, brow creased. ``From what I can remember,
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Ykines was of the Hushed over the Absent -- that is to say, his
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isolationism came as consequence of his desire to restrict
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wonder-making. It might be he is meant to haggle down contributions, not
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obstruct involvement.''
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``I've seen the wardstones the Blood use, Hanno,'' I said, hands
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tightening with want. ``They have no fucking idea of how those even work
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and they're still better in most regards than anything my people can
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make. Hells, even if they don't want to enter the war I'd take a hundred
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of them joining the ranks of the Arsenal and still lick their boots
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clean in thanks.''
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Metaphorically speaking, anyway. Considering their probable boot size,
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it seemed like a bit of hassle to get done otherwise.
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``That is the complication, Catherine,'' he admitted. ``In some ways,
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entering the war might be more popular. What I tell you now, I would
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have your oath no to repeat.''
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I let out a whistle. That was rare. He wasn't one to ask oaths without a
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reason, and I perhaps still a little charmed even now that the Sword of
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Judgement considered my oaths to have worth, so I gave it without
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argument.
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``Gigantes are not ageless in the way of the elves or the drow,'' Hanno
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said.
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|
To this day I was still uncertain as to whether he actually knew that
|
|
Winter had done away with the mortal lifespan of the Firstborn or he'd
|
|
simply, like most, assumed that drow were effectively immortal if not
|
|
taken by strife or sickness.
|
|
|
|
``They gather power unto themselves by bathing in the light of moon and
|
|
star in sacred places, by songs and patience, and this power lends them
|
|
vitality,'' the White Knight said. ``To be a spellsinger is to be born
|
|
with the gift of power, to come to weave a second soul and through it be
|
|
able to pluck at the chords of Creation. These are rare, and prized, as
|
|
for most Gigantes to make a wonder is to craft with the very stuff of
|
|
what keeps them alive.''
|
|
|
|
My eyes narrowed.
|
|
|
|
``The Seven Slayings,'' I said. ``They came after that tussle with
|
|
Triumphant that's said to have made the Titan's Pond out of what used to
|
|
be plains. How much of their lives did they spend to take her on?''
|
|
|
|
I'd always counted it passing odd, that a people capable of playing
|
|
rough with the greatest monster to ever come out of the Wasteland had
|
|
taken hits from an infant Principate without any great retaliation save
|
|
for the building of the Red Snake Wall much later, after the Dominion
|
|
freed itself. It made a little more sense now, especially if heroes were
|
|
thrown into the mix. I knew better than most how dangerous those could
|
|
be when properly motivated. Sisters bless, these days I'd come to
|
|
\emph{rely} on it.
|
|
|
|
``A fifth of their people died outright,'' Hanno frankly said.
|
|
``Centuries of accumulated power were spent in an hour, and many left
|
|
themselves only enough to live until they could fill themselves again --
|
|
yet, even now, a great many of the Gigantes are but a decade away from
|
|
death should they not observe the old rituals.''
|
|
|
|
``So they're not going to want to spend themselves close to the grave to
|
|
save Proceran lives,'' I grimaced. ``Harsh. The spellsingers, though, if
|
|
they're born with the Gift wouldn't they be effectively immortal?''
|
|
|
|
``In a sense,'' Hanno conceded. ``Yet most of them are young, by the
|
|
reckoning of the Gigantes, and so have spent but a century or two
|
|
accumulating power after forging their second soul -- through both
|
|
celestial rituals and their own gift folded onto itself, true, but even
|
|
so it remains a delicate and time-consuming process. The trouble, here,
|
|
is that the Titanomachy's greatest wonders all require the stewardship
|
|
of spellsingers to some extent.''
|
|
|
|
Of course they did, because those would have been made before good ol'
|
|
Triumphant swaggered in, butchered most of their spellsingers and
|
|
emptied out the vitality-power reserves of a significant chunk of their
|
|
population. Much like the Firstborn after Sve Noc first bargained for
|
|
survival, they must have felt like rats scuttling in the ruins of their
|
|
own empire, forced to choose between their lives and seeing their
|
|
greatest works fall apart. Shit, no wonder they hated the Principate
|
|
like poison: to them it must have felt like Procer savagely kicked them
|
|
when they were down and just starting to consider how to get back up
|
|
from the last kick.
|
|
|
|
``So if they're with us they're not keeping their own cities functional,
|
|
which is going to be less than popular at home,'' I sighed. ``That's
|
|
great. If they're that tied up, Hanno, why even bother sending an
|
|
envoy?''
|
|
|
|
``Because inconvenience and hatred of Procer does not mean they are
|
|
willing to surrender Calernia to Keter's grasp without having lifted a
|
|
finger to fight the encroaching doom,'' the White Knight said. ``I
|
|
imagine that our failure to drive back the Dead King has them justly
|
|
worried, given the scope of the efforts employed by the Great Alliance.
|
|
I fully expect the Titanomachy will try to gift us old wonders instead
|
|
of agreeing to craft new ones, and strictly limit the numbers they sent
|
|
north. Yet even that much would be godsent, let's not pretend
|
|
otherwise.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{It'll be fear that got them moving too}, I mused, now that the
|
|
initial disappointment had passed. Procer alone and surrounded by foes,
|
|
the way it'd been before the Grand Alliance steadied, that'd be
|
|
acceptable to them. But Procer as the heart of a great continental
|
|
alliance that included even their old allies the Levantines? They
|
|
couldn't let that happen without keeping an eye on it\emph{.} I imagined
|
|
the great developments of the last few years would have attracted the
|
|
attention as well. It was one thing to play the hermit kingdom when your
|
|
magic was beyond the wildest dreams of your neighbours, but what
|
|
happened if the Arsenal put Procer on even footing in even just
|
|
\emph{some} regards? A Principate with a few war-making artefacts like
|
|
that under its belt might not be so inclined to let it go when the
|
|
Gigantes killed its people on sight near the border.
|
|
|
|
And given that the Twilight Ways were without precedent, I imagined a
|
|
lot of their defensive wards would need reworking to adapt to their
|
|
existence. That had to be keeping them up at night. While they might be
|
|
able to access the Ways on their own, they'd need deep study before they
|
|
could feel safely walled up again -- and the quickest way to achieve
|
|
that was sending people to the Arsenal to look through what we'd already
|
|
found out. No, there were decent reasons for them to reach out even
|
|
though Hanno had already succeeded at weaning me off the hope that the
|
|
Titans would come in at this late hour and turn the tide of the war.
|
|
Hells, if nothing else just seeing how fragile the situation on the
|
|
fronts was might motivate them to send more than crumbs our way.
|
|
|
|
``I'll take what we can get,'' I fervently agreed. ``I'm guessing this
|
|
was kicked up to you because we can't use Cordelia as our diplomatic
|
|
workhorse this once?''
|
|
|
|
``It would be unwise to ask the First Prince of Procer to meet Ykines
|
|
Silver-on-Clouds on behalf of the Grand Alliance,'' he mildly agreed.
|
|
``The Holy Seljun noted that Antigone and I were both mentioned by name,
|
|
as even to the Hushed Absence we are known.''
|
|
|
|
``Might have to be you, if they want a familiar face. Haven't heard of
|
|
the Witch in a month,'' I said. ``Not since she went up to have that
|
|
gander in northern Cleves.''
|
|
|
|
``From there she struck at the Enemy,'' Hanno informed me. ``I expect
|
|
you'll be getting the message from Princess Rozala late tonight.
|
|
Antigone put together a band of five and intercepted a turtle-ship
|
|
before it could land.''
|
|
|
|
A savage grin split my lips. The Dead King marched his skeletons at the
|
|
bottom of the Tomb and the Grave regularly, but it wasn't without
|
|
effects on the equipment of his soldiers: you couldn't keep chain mail
|
|
or a sword underwater for a month without it rusting. For the fodder
|
|
that was all fine and good, but when Neshamah went to the trouble of
|
|
arming a few thousand Binds in good steel he didn't then proceed to
|
|
scrap it by sending them on an underwater march. For those he used ship
|
|
transports, in his own horrible manner: massive turtle-barges made of
|
|
bone and wood with a hollow shell protecting his elites from the
|
|
elements. As tended to be the way with him, the turtle-ships were made
|
|
to move by a necromantic flesh construct that was more lizard than
|
|
turtle and boasted both massive claws and bags of liquid poison it could
|
|
spew out in a stream.
|
|
|
|
``Godsdamn,'' I whistled. ``Now that's something to brag about. They
|
|
sunk it? I thought he'd hardened the shells to magic after Akua ripped
|
|
one open last summer.''
|
|
|
|
``It had the cold iron linings,'' Hanno confirmed. ``Antigone made the
|
|
tactical decision to use her available assets according to methods that
|
|
had previously proved successful.''
|
|
|
|
A beat passed and I cocked an unimpressed eyebrow at the hero.
|
|
|
|
``She threw the Mirror Knight real hard at it,'' I deadpanned.
|
|
|
|
The slightest twitch of the hero's lips was the most openly he allowed
|
|
himself to be amused.
|
|
|
|
``I honestly can't remember a time where that didn't work,'' I pondered
|
|
out loud. ``Maybe she's onto something.''
|
|
|
|
The Mirror Knight was, admittedly, the closest thing to unkillable I'd
|
|
ever seen even amongst the distinctly hard to kill company that was
|
|
heroes. During the Dead King's winter offensive, he'd lasted alone
|
|
against three Revenants for an hour at Duchesne until Ishaq and I
|
|
arrived. Though he'd put none of them down it was still utterly absurd
|
|
that they'd not managed to put a serious wound on him either.
|
|
Regardless, it was impressive he had a hard enough head that it had sent
|
|
a few thousand of Neshamah's finest troops at the bottom of the Tomb. I
|
|
poured us each another cup of brandy and offered another toast.
|
|
|
|
``To the Mirror Knight living to be thrown another day,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``To success against the Enemy, whatever the shape of it,'' Hanno said,
|
|
almost reproachfully.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't fooled, he found the whole thing just as hilarious as I did.
|
|
The drinks went down, and the cups hit the table. A grimmer look passed
|
|
across his face, afterwards, which immediately had my hackles rising.
|
|
|
|
``They did more than simply break a turtle-ship,'' the White Knight
|
|
said. ``When out there they found a hollow where the scrying disruptions
|
|
didn't reach. They got a glimpse of northern Hainaut, before Keter
|
|
adjusted to block them.''
|
|
|
|
``Tell me,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``The Hidden Horror is making a bridge across the tributary river to the
|
|
Tomb,'' he told me, tone calm. ``We'll be facing a full-on offensive
|
|
within six months, and the numbers\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
I grimaced at his hesitation.
|
|
|
|
``How bad?''
|
|
|
|
``At least two hundred thousand of his finest foot is preparing to
|
|
cross,'' Hanno replied. ``He's building from both shores and building in
|
|
stone -- if we don't break it while unfinished, it will be warded and
|
|
enchanted so thoroughly as to be near indestructible.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Fuck}, I feelingly thought. On parchment a bridge wasn't much of
|
|
an issue, considering Keter could walk its troops at the bottom of the
|
|
lakes and ferry them across with turtle-ships, but in practice it might
|
|
be a deathblow to our hopes of retaking Hainaut. The Tomb and the river
|
|
limited how quickly the Hidden Horror could send his soldiers from the
|
|
Kingdom of the Dead, especially considering the strong current of the
|
|
tributary, and the turtle-ships were vulnerable to heroic raids. A
|
|
bridge, though, meant he could just keep pouring troops into Hainaut day
|
|
and night: and that wasn't a metaphor, it wasn't like the dead
|
|
\emph{tired}. So far we'd been keeping our edge against the massively
|
|
larger numbers through superior troop quality: even a Proceran conscript
|
|
could handle a few mindless zombies alone, or a pair of skeletons if
|
|
their arms and armour were rusted through. Once we got full battalions
|
|
of Binds to deal with, though, we'd be facing a well-armed and fully
|
|
intelligent army.
|
|
|
|
If we gave them room to manoeuvre, let the Dead King deploy his full
|
|
array of tricks against us, then this was the death knell of the Grand
|
|
Alliance.
|
|
|
|
``Do you have dimensions for the bridge?'' I said. ``A notion of the
|
|
timeline on its completion?''
|
|
|
|
``Antigone used one of the Repentant Magister's artefacts to capture an
|
|
illusory image,'' he said. ``And sent it south to me by a trusted
|
|
hand.''
|
|
|
|
Who did he -- ah, and that would be why the Valiant Champion was in my
|
|
camp. The three of them were supposed to be close.
|
|
|
|
``Shit,'' I cursed. ``We need to bring this to the Alliance's high
|
|
command as soon as possible. This changes our schedule for the offensive
|
|
into northern Hainaut, at the very least. If we can grab it back fast
|
|
enough we could put this entire mess to rest, or at least take the
|
|
southern end of the bridge and defend it.''
|
|
|
|
``Antigone went east to blunt another offensive against the western
|
|
coast of Cleves,'' Hanno said. ``Which means I will have to move south
|
|
to speak with the Gigantes envoy myself.''
|
|
|
|
``We're due a proper council anyway,'' I pointed out. ``And a visit to
|
|
the Arsenal couldn't hurt. Hells, the Painted Knife is due back soon as
|
|
well, the way I hear it, and I'm curious to hear what she has to say.''
|
|
|
|
``We gather it all at the Arsenal, then,'' Hanno agreed. ``It ought not
|
|
to be impossible, given the facilities there.''
|
|
|
|
``It can be done in the other senses as well,'' I grunted. ``We have the
|
|
pull to ensure it.''
|
|
|
|
Though the mood had grown more somber, I poured out another two cups.
|
|
Hanno's eyebrow rose questioningly.
|
|
|
|
``Surrendering the last cup so soon?'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``Well, if we're to have the conversation I suspect we're about to have
|
|
we might as well finish the drinks first,'' I said. ``Argument does tend
|
|
to spoil the taste.''
|
|
|
|
``Ah,'' Hanno exhaled.
|
|
|
|
He took the cup in hand and we drank. Because he was a polite sort, he
|
|
waited a few heartbeats before speaking.
|
|
|
|
``You have lashed out at two heroes in two days, Black Queen,'' the
|
|
White Knight said. ``I would know why, and what happened to the Named
|
|
you meant to bring back to camp.''
|