619 lines
28 KiB
TeX
619 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-29-conviction}{%
|
|
\chapter{Conviction}\label{chapter-29-conviction}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``The advantage of fair laws is not inherent but rather in the
|
|
people's appreciation of them. It is therefore just as useful to offer
|
|
only the perception of fair laws, and easier to attain.''}{Extract from the treatise ``On Rule'', author unknown (widely
|
|
believed to be Prince Bastien of Arans)}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I'd avoided going to speak with the Red Axe.
|
|
|
|
I'd actually even gone further than that, avoiding sending anyone I
|
|
trusted to speak with her in my stead. She was in a heavily warded cell,
|
|
where she would benefit from the finest care the Arsenal could offer as
|
|
a full contingent of armed soldiers guarded the door day and night with
|
|
orders to let no one inside. It wasn't that I was afraid of speaking
|
|
with the woman, though I suspected I'd come out of that conversation
|
|
feeling like the monster that these days I so often was.
|
|
|
|
It was to prevent accusations, more or less. If she did
|
|
something\ldots{} strange during the trial and I'd been alone in a room
|
|
with her at some point, odds were it'd end up blamed on me. One of the
|
|
Woe or even just a Named I was on good terms with were likely to end up
|
|
facing the same sort of accusation if they went in my stead, so I'd been
|
|
cautious and ensured she was isolated instead. Aside for meals and
|
|
healing, the Red Axe saw no one.
|
|
|
|
Of course, the identity of the man now accompanying me meant that I'd be
|
|
able to afford taking this risk. Frederic Goethal was both one of
|
|
Above's and a prince of the blood, both things which would silence the
|
|
Mirror Knight if he tried to kick up a fuss. If anything, the political
|
|
inconvenience that was Prince Frederic refusing to ask for the Red Axe's
|
|
head on a pike would only lend him greater moral credence should he
|
|
vouch I'd been up to nothing. Why would the Prince of Brus enable by
|
|
plot what he might have easily obtained by law and patience?
|
|
|
|
In truth I could probably have arranged an interrogation earlier, but it
|
|
would likely have come at the price of Christophe de Pavanie or one of
|
|
his still sparse following sitting in attendance of the talk. No so
|
|
great a cost, on the surface, but the opposite on closer look. It'd be
|
|
implying the that Mirror Knight and his crew had the right to oversee my
|
|
activities as a high officer of the Truce and Terms.
|
|
|
|
I had no intention whatsoever of making that concession, not even in so
|
|
unspoken a manner.
|
|
|
|
Over the last few days, in between bouts of thinking that some viperous
|
|
tongues insisted might be brooding, I'd come to wonder if the trial
|
|
ahead of the Red Axe was not just another avenue for the Intercessor to
|
|
damage the Truce and Terms. I couldn't know how closely the heroine was
|
|
aligned with the Bard, or even what she was truly after, but it did not
|
|
take knowing either of those things to understand that the Rex Axe would
|
|
be put in a room with some of the most powerful people in the Grand
|
|
Alliance and allowed to speak her piece. I knew better than most how
|
|
dangerous words could be if they were the right ones, spoken into the
|
|
right ears. On the other hand, what else could I do but let this
|
|
proceed?
|
|
|
|
If I'd let the Sinister Physician quietly dispose of her the risk would
|
|
have been avoided, true, but only at the price of another, arguably
|
|
worse risk. Gods, but I hated fighting the Bard. It had all the manners
|
|
of unpleasantness of fighting Kairos and Akua to it, and then some
|
|
nastiness all her own. I needed more information, in the end, and I now
|
|
had a good opportunity to get it.
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Brus had sent for a coat before we headed out in the small
|
|
nameless section where the prison cells of the Arsenal stood,
|
|
conversation between us sparse as we moved. The intensity there'd been
|
|
between us, down there in the sands, had cooled the further we got from
|
|
them. I was not certain whether or not to be pleased by that, but the
|
|
conversation I knew lay ahead of me put out any remaining embers there
|
|
might have been anyway.
|
|
|
|
I was not unaware that yet another reason I'd had to avoid the Red Axe
|
|
was that I'd known the necessary would become harder once I had a face
|
|
and a story to match the Name. It should not be, I knew. I'd killed,
|
|
both in cold blood and in the heat of battle, and this heroine was
|
|
nothing to me. No one. But while the orphan girl who'd played in the
|
|
streets of Laure had grown into someone else, I'd not forgotten her.
|
|
|
|
Or that she'd taken her first steps down this road slitting open the
|
|
throat of a rapist, something I was now going to hang another woman for.
|
|
|
|
``It is my understanding that she travelled with Lady Archer for some
|
|
time, before coming to the Arsenal,'' Prince Frederic quietly said as we
|
|
walked.
|
|
|
|
``Archer was the one to find her, or close enough,'' I confirmed. ``Her
|
|
intention was to drop her off here at the Arsenal, where her talents
|
|
could be tested until the White Knight could decide on which front she
|
|
might best assist the war effort.''
|
|
|
|
I'd have been consulted as well before decisions were made, at which
|
|
point the Wicked Enchanter would have come up and we'd have ensured
|
|
those two would be as physically far from each other as possible.
|
|
Distance and well-informed officers had served us well in this regard so
|
|
far, and would have again if the pieces hadn't ended up aligning in just
|
|
the precise way to foster a disaster.
|
|
|
|
``Then you will be aware that there were\ldots{} circumstances,'' the
|
|
Prince of Brus delicately said.
|
|
|
|
``I knew what the Wicked Enchanter was when he was brought into the
|
|
Truce,'' I replied. ``Disgusting as his actions were, they were granted
|
|
amnesty.''
|
|
|
|
Didn't mean I didn't have him marked in the back of my head for when the
|
|
Truce and Terms ended, though. Under the Accords I owed the man nothing,
|
|
and if heroes wanted to bury him in steel and Light the moment he
|
|
resumed his old habits I would have raised a damned toast to the kill.
|
|
|
|
``I do not envy your office under the Terms,'' the fair-haired man
|
|
admitted. ``I am glad it is held, as I've seen what villains can bring
|
|
to bear for our side of the war, but I envy it not in the slightest. It
|
|
seems like a duty that would wear away at one's soul.''
|
|
|
|
My lips thinned. That'd cut a little too close to home for comfort.
|
|
|
|
``That's the thing about being taught by Praesi,'' I blandly said. ``You
|
|
learn that, for all the preaching, souls are just another commodity to
|
|
bargain with.''
|
|
|
|
That killed the conversation the rest of the way to the cell.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Red Axe -- I did not know her real name, leaving me only this to
|
|
refer to her by even in my own mind -- was looking rather healthy, for a
|
|
woman who'd been shot by almost two dozen crossbow bolts. Fired by my
|
|
legionaries looking to kill, too, not by sloppy amateurs. There were so
|
|
many bandages wrapped around her torso that even through her dull brown
|
|
prisoner's shift I could see them peek out. Though she was hardly in a
|
|
state to walk around and I'd been told she still spent most of her days
|
|
asleep, the heroine was not visibly feverish. There was a certain sickly
|
|
pallor to her otherwise tan skin though, I judged, and her breathing was
|
|
laboured. A heroic constitution and a swarm of priests had seen to an
|
|
impressive recovery, though and when we entered her pale brown eyes were
|
|
wide awake and unclouded.
|
|
|
|
``I'd get up if I could,'' the Red Axe greeted us in accented Chantant,
|
|
``but my legs will not allow.''
|
|
|
|
Even if they had, she was still shackled at her ankles. Cleverly done
|
|
work with a loose enough chain she'd be able to move around some but not
|
|
walk. A similar set was around her wrists, to be loosened only when she
|
|
was helped to bathe once a day. She had still had the muscles arms I
|
|
remembered from seeing her fresh to the infirmary, but they'd grown
|
|
thinner. Even healing with Light had costs, and she'd needed a great
|
|
deal of healing to pull through.
|
|
|
|
``Lady Red,'' the Kingfisher Prince greeted her, offering the slightest
|
|
of bows.
|
|
|
|
``Prince,'' the heroine replied, grimacing.
|
|
|
|
``If I might introduce-'' Prince Frederic began, but she interrupted him
|
|
with a tired gesture.
|
|
|
|
``That cloak speaks,'' the Red Axe said. ``Well met, Black Queen.''
|
|
|
|
I did not let my frown touch my face. I'd been studying her as she
|
|
spoke, but when she'd looked at me I'd not found any hostility. Was she
|
|
a natural talent at obscuring her thoughts? Given that she'd come from
|
|
the middle of nowhere, it seemed unlikely she would have been taught.
|
|
Not impossible, though. It seemed unlike the Intercessor to linger
|
|
around teaching anyone, but then I still knew depressingly little about
|
|
her methods when out of my sight. There was a simpler explanation, too,
|
|
but it struck me as unlikely.
|
|
|
|
``You're looking healthy,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Enough for the noose?'' the Red Axe chuckled.
|
|
|
|
Blunt, but then when you were down in the pit there was rarely a point
|
|
in pretending otherwise.
|
|
|
|
``The block's a lot more likely,'' I replied. ``But there's to be a
|
|
trial first.''
|
|
|
|
``A \emph{trial},'' the brown-haired heroine said, her distaste clear.
|
|
``Just get it over with, would you?''
|
|
|
|
``You have rights, Lady Red,'' the Prince of Brus reminded her.
|
|
|
|
``I also cut open your neck, Prince,'' the Red Axe said, tone calm.
|
|
``Don't come in here pretending that's all forgotten. I won't have any
|
|
of that.''
|
|
|
|
``I have not forgot a moment of it, I assure you,'' the Kingfisher
|
|
Prince replied, tone cool.
|
|
|
|
I noticed his hand twitch, on the side of his pale neck where the scar
|
|
could be seen.
|
|
|
|
``But it does not change that you have rights and protections under
|
|
Terms,'' Prince Frederic said.
|
|
|
|
Measuredly, the Red Axe turned to me.
|
|
|
|
``Can I renounce those, Black Queen?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not your representative under the Terms,'' I said. ``That's the
|
|
White Knight, who'll be here soon enough.''
|
|
|
|
``I remember the Archer's speeches,'' the heroine dismissed. ``You did
|
|
not answer my question.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out, studying her. She did not look angry or afraid, although
|
|
there was something to her expression\ldots{} \emph{Impatien}t, I
|
|
decided. \emph{She's impatient.} Yet I found none of the despair and
|
|
hopelessness I would have expected of someone actively trying to hurry
|
|
along their own death.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I said. ``Or I suppose it's more accurate to say that you could,
|
|
but it'd hardly matter. You agreed to the Terms before coming here and
|
|
committed breaches while a signatory. What follows will not change
|
|
whether or not you renounce anything.''
|
|
|
|
In principle an argument could be made that if I she signed a
|
|
renunciation of her own free will before witnesses I could follow up by
|
|
snapping her neck in the moment that followed without breaking the
|
|
Terms, but in practice that'd just be throwing oil on an already
|
|
crackling fire.
|
|
|
|
``The cogs of your bureaucracy are soaked in blood, Black Queen,'' the
|
|
Red Axe said, offering a hard smile.
|
|
|
|
And in her eyes then, for the first time, I found something like hate.
|
|
Not for me, which had been the part that tripped me up, but for the
|
|
rest. I'd done her a disservice, I thought, in thinking that she could
|
|
not hate the tower without also hating its architect. Something of that
|
|
must have shown on my face, as the brown-haired prisoner let out a
|
|
bitter chuckle.
|
|
|
|
``Sharp,'' the heroine said. ``Sharp enough to cut yourself, Black
|
|
Queen. Or everybody else.''
|
|
|
|
There was pain there, I thought, and hurt. But it didn't own her, it
|
|
didn't drive her. Whatever horror it was her Named had been forged out
|
|
of, it had made her hate a cold and measured thing.
|
|
|
|
``You didn't kill the Wicked Enchanter in a red rage,'' I stated. ``This
|
|
was deliberate, and you know exactly what it is you're doing.''
|
|
|
|
Thinking of her as a victim or an accomplice had been dead ends from the
|
|
start, I was beginning to realize. \emph{It is all objects in motion},
|
|
the Intercessor had told me. This wasn't the plot of an eldritch
|
|
abomination in a woman's shape, not really. The Red Axe hadn't been
|
|
\emph{manipulated} into this. She'd wanted this, perhaps before the ever
|
|
saw the Bard -- if she'd ever seen her at all.
|
|
|
|
``I don't think you're a monster, Black Queen,'' the Red Axe told me.
|
|
``A bad woman, maybe, but those aren't rare. I've seen a real monster,
|
|
the \emph{bleakness} at the heart of him, and I don't see it in you. I
|
|
don't think the Archer could love you like she does, either, if you were
|
|
like that.''
|
|
|
|
``It's the Terms that are your enemy,'' I quietly said.
|
|
|
|
``I don't think you're a monster,'' the heroine repeated. ``But your
|
|
Truce and Terms? They're the most monstrous thing I ever saw. You took
|
|
in every scrap of filth this world has to offer, knowing what they were,
|
|
and you're \emph{protecting} them.''
|
|
|
|
``Without the Damned, we would not be alive to have this conversation,''
|
|
the Prince of Brus said.
|
|
|
|
I started, having almost forgotten his presence, and saw that same
|
|
surprise on the prisoner's face. Frederic Goethal's silken coat had been
|
|
pulled close around him as he leaned against the wall, the only overt
|
|
sign of what I suspected to be discomfort.
|
|
|
|
``What was done to you\ldots{}'' the prince began, voice trailing off.
|
|
``There is no excusing that. But the Truce and Terms are not responsible
|
|
for that evil, and they \emph{are} responsible for a great many saved
|
|
lives.''
|
|
|
|
``What was done to me,'' the Red Axe snorted. ``Do you know, Black
|
|
Queen? What it is he's tiptoeing around?''
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I admitted.
|
|
|
|
I had suspicions, though. Rape and torture highest among them. What
|
|
sparse details we'd found of how the Wicked Enchanter had lived on the
|
|
lawless outskirts of Procer had been a sickening read. The dark-eyed
|
|
heroine glanced at me.
|
|
|
|
``Would it change anything, if you did?'' the Red Axe asked.
|
|
|
|
I could have lied. But I was going to see her killed, one way or
|
|
another, and so part of me felt like I owed her the truth.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I repeated.
|
|
|
|
To my surprise, she smiled. As if obscurely proud or pleased.
|
|
|
|
``You're a cold hand, aren't you?'' the heroine said. ``The kind ones,
|
|
like Prince here, they go all soft-touched the moment rape's even hinted
|
|
at.''
|
|
|
|
``You are a tragedy, Red Axe,'' I honestly said, ``but hundreds of those
|
|
come across my desk every day. Even a bleeding heart eventually bleeds
|
|
dry.''
|
|
|
|
And, truth be told, I'd started with a lot less blood in mine than most.
|
|
The jury was still out on whether or not that'd been for the best, in
|
|
the greater scheme of things.
|
|
|
|
``The Wicked Enchanter was a monster,'' the heroine said. ``The details
|
|
of it don't matter, save that what he got he deserved a hundred times
|
|
over.''
|
|
|
|
``If you'd decided to kill him the heartbeat the Truce was over, I would
|
|
have looked away and covered my ears,'' I said, meaning every word.
|
|
``But you didn't wait, and you took a swing at more than just the
|
|
Enchanter.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm not a child, Black Queen,'' the Red Axe said. ``You don't need to
|
|
take me by the hand and lead me down the path to where this is headed. I
|
|
knew before I ever raised my blade how this was all going to end.''
|
|
|
|
``This wasn't justice,'' Prince Frederic quietly said. ``It was just
|
|
blood, and many more lives might be lost because of it.''
|
|
|
|
``You're guiltier than she is,'' the Red Axe said. ``She's not supposed
|
|
to be better than this, Kingfisher Prince. You \emph{are}.''
|
|
|
|
``And you?'' the Prince of Brus replied. ``Are you not supposed to be
|
|
better than this as well, Chosen?''
|
|
|
|
``I give my life for what I believe,'' the heroine said. ``What more is
|
|
there left to squeeze out of me? I am not the one baring steel in the
|
|
defense of the indefensible.''
|
|
|
|
``It is defensible,'' I said. ``Just not to you.''
|
|
|
|
I was not bitter of that. How could I be? No, instead some part of me
|
|
wondered if this was what the Grey Pilgrim had felt like, that day he'd
|
|
looked at me and called me the culmination of old sins come back to
|
|
haunt Calernia. If I was the punishment of the apathy and pettiness of
|
|
the west when Callow fell, then was this woman not my own for the
|
|
practical brutality lying behind the ideals of the Truce and Terms? I
|
|
could not be angry or bitter, no, not when this was richly deserved.
|
|
|
|
``Don't-'' she began.
|
|
|
|
``I won't take you by the hand, like you insisted, so forgive my
|
|
bluntness,'' I calmly interrupted. ``If we don't extend the amnesty part
|
|
of the Truce to animals like the Wicked Enchanter, we lose Named. Those
|
|
who have skeletons in their closet, who'll wonder if maybe their sins
|
|
will be enough to get them the noose instead of the Truce should they
|
|
come out of the woodworks. And most of those will be of mine, but
|
|
there'll be some of your end of the Book too -- those on the fringe, who
|
|
learned to love striking at evil just a little too much. And even more
|
|
costly than the lost champions, it'd mean the reliable Named would be up
|
|
north, fighting the dead, while the radicals would be down south with no
|
|
one left to handle them.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out and began to resist the urge to spit to the side before
|
|
quelling that reflex and going through with it. It was not a pretty
|
|
habit, but then nothing about this was pretty. It was blood on cogs,
|
|
exactly like she'd accused.
|
|
|
|
``It's an ugly truth, and bare of morality, but in the end getting you a
|
|
semblance of justice would have simply cost the war effort \emph{too
|
|
much},'' I said. ``I'd apologize, but I knew there would be people like
|
|
you when I began to head down this road. I did it anyway.''
|
|
|
|
I couldn't fix the world, in the end. Even if I had the power to shape
|
|
it as I willed, I knew my own limitations well enough to be aware I'd
|
|
likely do as much harm as good. Yet the Truce and Terms, for all their
|
|
occasional dip into brutality, they \emph{worked}. We'd gathered nearly
|
|
seventy Named now, heroes and villains and those circumstance could cast
|
|
as either. Near seventy Named, pointed at the great enemy to the north.
|
|
Not even the First Crusade, when all of Calernia had risen to topple
|
|
Triumphant, had fielded so many of our kind. It had not been painless or
|
|
bloodless and certainly not without sweat, and neither I would not
|
|
pretend that the system was without flaws, but Merciless Gods it
|
|
\emph{worked}. If these were kinder times, I hoped I would have been
|
|
kinder as well, that what I'd built would not have been so harsh.
|
|
|
|
But there were not kind times, and I could not be more than I was. It
|
|
was either the Truce and Terms or rolling the dice on the annihilation
|
|
of life on Calernia.
|
|
|
|
``I don't want an apology,'' the Red Axe said. ``I want all these swords
|
|
and oaths to be defending something worth defending. You spawned a
|
|
monster that cares nothing for the past and looks hungrily at the
|
|
future, Black Queen. Maybe it was the best you could, for all your
|
|
famous cleverness.''
|
|
|
|
She laughed, the sound of it bleak to my ear.
|
|
|
|
``So think of me as the voice Creation uses to say that this is not
|
|
\emph{good enough},'' the prisoner said. ``Your Truce and Terms will
|
|
break, and you'll either do better or be cast aside.''
|
|
|
|
Just another hero, lighting a torch and declaring it wasn't enough
|
|
without ever offering another way. There was an echo of so many I'd
|
|
faced in that voice, in that castigation. The Lone Swordsman, willing to
|
|
make our home a wasteland so land as it was our own banner flying above
|
|
it. The Grey Pilgrim, willing to choose war over peace because it wasn't
|
|
the peace he'd wanted. The Saint of Swords, eyes hard as she decided to
|
|
risk the death of all Iserre rather than compromise. I'd heard this
|
|
refrain before, sung by different voices or with different words.
|
|
|
|
I'd won against this many a time, and I would again.
|
|
|
|
``We're not that special, you know,'' I said. ``Named. In the right
|
|
place at the right time we're able to do things that no one else could
|
|
do, it's true, but we don't matter as much as we like to think.''
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Brus breathed out sharply. He was Alamans, and
|
|
well-taught, so he grasped my meaning before the other.
|
|
|
|
``The Truce will hold,'' I said. ``The Terms will hold. If they were
|
|
hated, if we were facing anyone else, it might be that enough wounds
|
|
would kill them. But that's not the world we live in, Red Axe. They'll
|
|
hold, if only because there are simply too many people that want them
|
|
to.''
|
|
|
|
And I believed that, I genuinely did. Something fragile, without a
|
|
proper foundation or results to point at? A mess like the one ahead
|
|
would break it, sure as dawn, even if everyone was trying to keep things
|
|
together. But I had bartered away kindness for sturdiness, and so my
|
|
creation would withstand the storm. Some dangers were born of the same
|
|
strength that allowed you to beat them back, weren't they? Creation's
|
|
sense of humour had not grown any less vicious as I aged.
|
|
|
|
``You will try,'' the Red Axe said, and the calm certainty in her eyes
|
|
was troubling. ``You will fail.''
|
|
|
|
I met her eyes, for a moment, and wondered what to say. I would give no
|
|
apology, for any I might offer would be meaningless.
|
|
|
|
``It'll be quick,'' I said. ``That much, at least, I can promise.''
|
|
|
|
I left, after, sensing that neither of us had anything left to say.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Brus stayed in the cell after my departure and I was not
|
|
in a mood to wait for him. My leg was starting to pain me again, an
|
|
unhappy turn, so I ambled off towards the Alcazar and counted on my slow
|
|
gait being enough to ensure he'd catch up to me if he wanted to. He did
|
|
so, though after long enough I'd come to believe we would be parting
|
|
ways. I half-heartedly went through the usual courtesies after he joined
|
|
me.
|
|
|
|
``There was little change after your departure,'' the Kingfisher Prince
|
|
told me. ``She tired of speaking to me quickly.''
|
|
|
|
I grunted, noncommittal.
|
|
|
|
``It is a useful conversation to have had,'' I said. ``I thank you for
|
|
the opportunity.''
|
|
|
|
``I can take pleasure in having provided that, if not the outcome of the
|
|
journey,'' the fair-haired man said. ``Have the Red Axe's words informed
|
|
your opinion on other matters?''
|
|
|
|
A very polite way to ask if I was more open to taking Cordelia's offer
|
|
of pushing through the Accords in exchange for ceding jurisdiction over
|
|
this particular Named. Which actually seemed halfway possible, now,
|
|
considering the Red Axe had tried to renounce any rights she might have
|
|
under the Terms in front of a credible witness. It was a more than
|
|
decent excuse to throw her at Procer, were I so inclined, though I
|
|
suspected Hanno would see it otherwise. Which was why Hasenbach wanted
|
|
me on her side in the first place, when it came down to it. Officially
|
|
there were three crowned heads in the Grand Alliance: the First Prince
|
|
of Procer, the Holy Seljun of Levant and the Queen of Callow. If she got
|
|
me in on her side, not only was she securing Below's side of the Terms
|
|
but also ensuring that whoever ended up speaking for the Dominion in
|
|
this would be very reluctant to side against two thirds of the alliance.
|
|
|
|
``It has,'' I simply said.
|
|
|
|
He left it at that, as I'd thought he would. It'd be uncouth to try to
|
|
press me for a quick answer on so delicate a matter.
|
|
|
|
``So what part of that was it that you wanted me to see, in specific?''
|
|
I idly asked.
|
|
|
|
He did not look surprised, and though he did not deny what I'd said
|
|
neither did he look abashed.
|
|
|
|
``It might be argued, given her enmity to the Truce and Terms, that she
|
|
was never really a signatory,'' the Kingfisher Prince simply said.
|
|
|
|
Ah, clever man. If she'd been an enemy from the start, then she was not
|
|
under anyone's protection. Procer would be free to have at her. It was
|
|
still a relatively shaky excuse, to my eye, but before I'd met with the
|
|
Red Axe I probably would have dismissed it outright. He'd read that
|
|
correctly.
|
|
|
|
``To my knowledge, you never spoke with her in depth,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
I'd sent him to ensure her safety during the assault on the Arsenal but
|
|
fleeing clandestinely through corridors was not the time for the sort of
|
|
conversation that would have allowed him a solid read on her. I'd not
|
|
been made aware of any visit to her since, either, and considering my
|
|
orders to the guards I would have known within a quarter hour of such an
|
|
attempt at most.
|
|
|
|
``I had much time to think, while recuperating,'' Prince Frederic said.
|
|
``If she were Damned, I would have noticed. I have seen enough Named I
|
|
am certain of this. Yet she was not, and still attacked me. There was a
|
|
likely reason for that, given what I know of her past.''
|
|
|
|
Meaning he'd deduced her antipathy was towards the Terms before we ever
|
|
set foot in that room. Competence was attractive, I reluctantly admitted
|
|
to myself. Especially so in attractive people. My eyes narrowed as I fit
|
|
another set of details together.
|
|
|
|
``That's why you don't want to press charges under the Terms,'' I slowly
|
|
said. ``You don't believe she was actually trying to kill you.''
|
|
|
|
``In a sense,'' the prince said. ``Regardless of whether my death was
|
|
meant or not, or perhaps even hers, it was not Frederic Goethal she
|
|
struck. It might have been a signatory of the Terms or a prince of the
|
|
blood, but for all that she has she my blood I cannot truly consider her
|
|
an enemy.''
|
|
|
|
``All three of those people you mentioned happen to live in the same
|
|
body,'' I drily pointed out. ``I suppose they are all of a forgiving
|
|
temperament.''
|
|
|
|
``I am not a saint, Queen Catherine,'' Prince Frederic quietly said. ``I
|
|
am not pleased to have been attacked by someone I was risking life and
|
|
limb to save. Yet, knowing what I know of why this came to pass, I
|
|
cannot in good conscience seek her death for it. I am not blind to the
|
|
nature of some of those who have been protected by the Truce and Terms,
|
|
or the injustice matching the expedience of enlisting their service.''
|
|
|
|
``You're not an officer of the Terms,'' I said. ``Or one of their
|
|
architects. You bear no responsibility there.''
|
|
|
|
``I have chosen to uphold the Terms, to participate in them, and so bear
|
|
a personal responsibility,'' the prince replied, shaking his head.
|
|
|
|
It was torturous chain of logic, as far as I was concerned, but not
|
|
entirely senseless. A little to labyrinthine, though, for the amount of
|
|
passion he'd been speaking with all this time. I suspected that under
|
|
all the talk of conscience and responsibility, the truth was that
|
|
Frederic Goethal's heroic hindbrain believed the Red Axe was at least a
|
|
little right bout all this. That would make it an utterly repulsive
|
|
notion to him to ask for her death, even when it might be convenient.
|
|
Perhaps even \emph{more} because it'd be convenient, I mused. Where he'd
|
|
be standing, it was that sort of liberties taken with justice that would
|
|
have started this mess in the first place.
|
|
|
|
``I've already given my opinion of this,'' I said. ``I doubt you've
|
|
forgotten it.''
|
|
|
|
``It would not dare, Your Majesty,'' the blue-eyed man said, a tad
|
|
ruefully.
|
|
|
|
We'd gotten into the Alcazar as we talked without my even noticing,
|
|
nearer to the heart of the section than my rooms but not all that far.
|
|
That sudden realization had me closing my mouth, eyeing the pretty
|
|
prince from the side. It wouldn't even be particularly suspect, I
|
|
thought, to invite him into my rooms. Which were warded. Private. The
|
|
kind of place where I'd be able to take my time peeling him out of those
|
|
clothes and get at the much more interesting body beneath them. I'd not
|
|
said anything, but the Prince of Brus caught the corner of my gaze and
|
|
his steps stuttered for the barest fraction of a moment. Without a word
|
|
being spoken either side, my blood quickened again. It wasn't a very
|
|
good idea, I reminded myself
|
|
|
|
It might turn out to be a \emph{thoroughly enjoyable} idea, though.
|
|
|
|
I glanced at his face and found a conflict I suspected might not be too
|
|
different in nature from mine. There were quite a few temptations I
|
|
considered myself apt in dealing with, more than most at least, but this
|
|
sort of thing wasn't one of them. I saw movement form the corner of my
|
|
eye, dark robes and a long stride, and to my relief and dismay -- more
|
|
dismay than relief, honesty compelled me to admit -- I found Hierophant
|
|
headed towards us with intent too obvious to be mistaken.
|
|
|
|
``It appears I have other claims on my time,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``I can only look forward to our next meeting then, my queen,'' Prince
|
|
Frederic replied.
|
|
|
|
Without my being entirely sure how it happened, I found my hand being
|
|
kissed as smoldering blue eyes looked up at me. \emph{Fuck}, I thought
|
|
even as he retreated. All right, so I was probably going to end up
|
|
sleeping with Frederic Goethal. I just needed to be smart in going about
|
|
it, and maybe not do it too much. I could probably handle that. I wasn't
|
|
looking for anything serious and he was headed back to Twilight's Pass
|
|
before long anyway, so really you might even say I was being responsible
|
|
about this.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine?'' Masego said, interrupting my thoughts.
|
|
|
|
``Zeze?'' I replied.
|
|
|
|
``Is there a particular reason you are looking at this man?''
|
|
|
|
I pondered that for a moment.
|
|
|
|
``None you'd enjoy hearing about,'' I honestly replied. ``I take it
|
|
you're looking for me?''
|
|
|
|
It was only then I took a longer look at him, and noticed how visibly
|
|
exhausted he was. Physically, anyway. There was a fervour burning in him
|
|
I'd long learned to recognize as him reaching a particularly interesting
|
|
stretch if his research.
|
|
|
|
``I was,'' Masego said, then lowered his voice. ``I did it, Catherine.''
|
|
|
|
I cocked an eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
``Did what?''
|
|
|
|
``I found the crown of Autumn,'' Hierophant grinned.
|