669 lines
32 KiB
TeX
669 lines
32 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-31-pursuits}{%
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\chapter{Pursuits}\label{chapter-31-pursuits}}
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\epigraph{``The man who sleeps with virtue finds the bed has no room for a
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third.''}{Proceran saying}
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``\emph{Fuck},'' I said.
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Ever eloquent in times of trouble, that was me.
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``I thought that might be your reaction,'' Masego noted.
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I closed my eyes. Was there anything we could do about this? I wasn't
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exactly overjoyed at the prospect of the elves getting their paws on the
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crown of Spring, assuming they hadn't already. On the other hand, I
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couldn't think of anything the Grand Alliance needed \emph{less} right
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now than picking a fight with a power as strong as the Golden Bloom. I
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didn't know anywhere near enough to be sure what to think about this.
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What did they want the crown for, how important was it to them? A
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decision on that scale couldn't be made without at least a solid guess
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at the answers to those questions, and it wouldn't be made by me alone
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anyway.
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``Right,'' I said, opening my eyes. ``I need you to keep digging into
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this, Hierophant. It's higher priority than Quartered Seasons, as least
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for the next few days.''
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The ritual wouldn't be happening anytime soon anyway: I doubted the
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First Prince would accept even the slightest unnecessary risk to the
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countryside of Procer. Not when the timeline to stacking the odds in our
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favour as much as possible was perfectly acceptable from a strategic
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view.
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``There are limits to what I can accomplish,'' Masego said.
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``I want you to find out if they already have the Spring crown,'' I
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said. ``And at least check on the ritual sites, to guess at how much
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force they've actually deployed out there.''
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Likely on Proceran territory, too, not that elves tended to be
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particularly concerned with any borders save their own. But of I was
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going to have to break it to Cordelia Hasenbach that the Forever King
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had sent agents into the Principate, I'd prefer to at least like to have
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some estimates to offer her about how many of those there were.
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``The latter I can assure, if not the former,'' Zeze said, pushing back
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one of his elaborate braids. ``They're likely to resist my probing
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attempts, however.''
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The implied question there was, in essence, about how insistent he was
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allowed to be in the face of that resistance.
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``Don't harm anyone,'' I said. ``Try to avoid damage, if you can, and
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whatever you do avoid starting a fight. Other than that, you're free to
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use whatever means you want.''
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``It ought to be an interesting intellectual exercise, at least,''
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Masego mused. ``The nature of their defences is unique, which will force
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a degree of unorthodoxy to my approach.''
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``I'm sure you'll figure something out,'' I said, meaning every word.
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I cleared my throat, after, hesitant to speak what I wanted to say.
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``I don't need to tell you to stay safe, do I?'' I eventually asked.
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He smiled.
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``I'll take precautions, Catherine, there is no need to worry,'' Masego
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said.
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``We might have other ways to get to that information,'' I reminded him.
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``You, on the other hand, can't be replaced.''
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``I am fond of you as well, Cat,'' the blind man easily replied. ``Now
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do be off. I'll not have you hovering about as I work, your presence
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alone is enough to disturb all my precision instruments.''
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Probably true, though that didn't mean that he wasn't just itching to
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get me out of here just so he could get started on the latest
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challenging task I'd presented him.
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``Take care, Zeze,'' I quietly said.
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To my surprise he placed a hand on my shoulder, if only fleetingly.
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``And you as well,'' Masego seriously said. ``Hakram is wounded but you
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are not alone. We are here if you need us.''
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I breathed out, since I was a grown woman and getting moist eyes over
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something this simple would be a little shameful. I left before another
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burst of that disarming earnestness could scrape me even more raw,
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returning to the cold halls of the Arsenal and the ever-increasing
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amount of troubles awaiting me.
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---
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When I went to relieve Indrani from her watch over Hakram's bedside it
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was past Noon Bell, so I returned her earlier kindness and brought a
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meal with me.
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Pork with garlic sauce, a loaf of brown bread and a large saucer of some
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strange mix of oil, vinegar and olives. They were all Arlesite staples,
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the mixture in the saucer meant for the bread to be dipped in, and I'd
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grabbed a pair of apples to round the meal out. Archer was carefully
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carving an arrow when I entered, eyes on the wood and the knife in her
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hand carefully precise. Back in Callow this sort of work tended to be
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done out of logs with an eye to making many and quickly, but Indrani was
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rather more discerning with her own arrows: she picked the branches
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herself, when she could, and saw to their carving personally.
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Considering the rarity of some of the woods she used, that was only to
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be expected. She tended to treat mass-made arrows with the same disdain
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Masego reserved for massed Legion sorcery, and for much the same
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reasons.
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``I get to be served by a queen,'' Indrani bragged, even as I began
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unpacking the meal. ``How many people can boast that, I wonder?''
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Out of petty spite, I left her half of the meal on the table and only
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arranged mine on a plate. I offered her a pretty smile.
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``Not you, for one,'' I sweetly said, and sat down with plate.
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Huh, I'd been skeptical about the oil and vinegar but it was actually
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pretty good. Made the brown bread better than butter would have, for
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sure, and while I wouldn't trust Procerans to make a halfway decent stew
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they were admittedly good at roasts like the pork one.
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``You're a terrible friend,'' Indrani complained, rising to her feet.
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``You taught me well,'' I agreed.
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She helped herself to her meal with a snort, the two of us settling
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comfortably in our seats. We were both hungry enough that conversation
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waited until we'd polished off our meals, though even as I tore into the
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pork I found my eyes drifting to Hakram's unconscious body. I missed him
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even more sharply now that I needed advice. Him and Akua, I was forced
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to admit, as I'd come to rely on the two of them quite a bit in Hainaut.
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Bringing Akua Sahelian into the Arsenal would have been ill-advised,
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though, and not just because it'd strip the Hainaut front of its sole
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high calibre spellcaster -- it'd been as much the number of heroes
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awaiting here and the rulers I'd be meeting as the strategic
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considerations that'd guided my decision.
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``You look glum again,'' Indrani said, licking the garlic sauce off her
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fingers.
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``Quartered Seasons had a major breakthrough,'' I admitted. ``But it's
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also looking very likely that the elves are trying for a fae crown.''
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She let out a lot whistle.
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``A nasty people, the elves,'' Archer opined. ``They never came after
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Ranger while I was in Refuge, but about a decade earlier a few of the
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Emerald Swords tried to ambush her in Bayeux.''
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The Emerald Swords, huh? Hadn't ever really given those any thought, to
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be honest. Their strength was quite literally legend, though there were
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rumoured to be no more than ten. Each was supposed to be worth a small
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army, the Forever King's blunt instruments in eradicating what he could
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not stand. They supposedly rarely left the Golden Bloom, like most
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elves.
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``I don't know what they want the crown for, but it worries me,'' I
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admitted.
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``Also irks you something fierce, I'd wager,'' Indrani smiled. ``They're
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scavenging power they had no hand in laying low.''
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I did not answer, looking away. She wasn't wrong. That the Forever King
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thought he could sit out the war against the Dead King and use the chaos
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to go grabbing mantles of power while we were busy fighting for
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Calernia's survival was not endearing the man to me. If the elves had
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played a role in the end of the old Courts of Arcadia I would have kept
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my mouth shut, but they were just being opportunistic vultures.
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``We can't afford to push the Golden Bloom too far,'' I reluctantly
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said. ``They could make keeping what we still hold in Hainaut a
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nightmare with little effort and if they send out the Emerald Swords
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we'd have to pull our best fighting Named from the fronts to be able to
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handle them.''
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``I figure the prick out in the Bloom thinks the same, Cat,'' Indrani
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said. ``Remember, the Dead King made their king's son into a Revenant
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that you put down at Third Liesse. There's no love there, and the elves
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have to know that if the screw with the Alliance too much they're
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helping along `Ol Bones.''
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``They're elves, Indrani,'' I said. ``Their take on foreign policy is
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shooting even the \emph{birds} that come within a mile of their forest.
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I'm not saying they're idiots, but I'm honestly not convinced the
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Forever King wouldn't be in favour of a few million uppity humans being
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eaten before the Hidden Horror is driven back.''
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``They haven't brought their lands back into Creation, so maybe you're
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right,'' Archer said. ``Mind you, there's at least one upside to that.''
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My brow rose questioningly. I couldn't really see one, to be honest. The
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Grand Alliance had neither the leverage nor the strength to spare to do
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anything about this, while just letting it happen seemed like a mistake.
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``Might be Duchess Kegan won't be so eager for Daoine to go independent,
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when she hears about this,'' Indrani said. ``Elves were bad enough on
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their own, but elves with a godhead? I don't care how large the Watch
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gets, it'll be like fielding as shield wall of goblins against a pack of
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ogres.''
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I mulled on that a moment, even as I chewed on the bread. The Deoraithe
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were masters of defensive and irregular warfare, but as a rule they
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tended to be weaker on the offence. Restraint and their isolationist
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streak had still earned them an impressive military reputation, but the
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era where a duchy's army could stand up to those of the greater powers
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of Calernia was coming to an end. The Conquest had proved that massed
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mages and siege engines combined with heavy infantry could crush armies
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in the mould of the Old Kingdom's, and the rest of Calernia hadn't lain
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asleep in the decades that followed. Procer had fielded large units of
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priests and mages with its field armies during the Tenth Crusade, a
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significant departure from their old way of making war, and the years of
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fighting against Keter were further refining their methods.
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Even the Dominion was starting to change its doctrine, using its limited
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numbers of Lanterns and Binders to crack open enemy lines much in the
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same way that the Legions of Terror used scorpions and goblin munitions.
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That was the death knell of Daoine's military relevance, whether Duchess
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Kegan realized it or not. Putting together the Army of Callow had taught
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me how damned expensive an army of that kind was to raise and keep in
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fighting fit, and it simply wasn't a financial burden that the Duchy of
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Daoine's revenues was capable of supporting. The Watch were devils on
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the field, and arguably some of the finest foot on Calernia, but you
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couldn't win a war with them. House Iarsmai's historical military
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prudence was, at least in part, flowing from that realization. The issue
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was that, when everybody's military doctrine was done with its growing
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pains in twenty years, the Watch wouldn't even allow Daoine to win
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\emph{battles}. Throw in that the enemy whose destruction was at the
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heart of their culture might raise its ruler to a form of lesser
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godhood, and Indrani could very well be correct.
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The Grand Duchy of Daoine might just find the world outside a lot colder
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than expected, after leaving the Kingdom of Callow's protective embrace.
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``If we can keep Daoine in the fold I won't complain,'' I said. ``Though
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that should be Vivienne's situation to handle, in the end.''
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If we weren't all dead, by then I was likely to have abdicated. Besides,
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if Vivienne could begin her reign with the diplomatic feather in her cap
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of having kept the Deoraithe part of the kingdom she'd have an easier
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run of things going forward. I'd taught the last remains of Callowan
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nobility the dangers of trying to go against a popular queen backed by a
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powerful royal army.
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``She seems to have a handle on things so far,'' Indrani shrugged. ``And
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if we win against the Hidden Horror, it'll be a long time before the
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shine of that wears off. Hells, we might actually get a few decades of
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peace.''
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I was not nearly so optimistic. Too many parts of Calernia had only
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heard of the Dead King without ever catching sight of his armies or his
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monsters. The League of Free Cities hadn't even bothered to stop warring
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against itself as thousands of soldiers from an large coalition died to
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hold the defences to the north, and Praes was knee-deep in a civil war
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being prosecuted at what I could only call a \emph{languid} pace. The
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rulers who'd seen the worst of the war would come out of it reluctant to
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war against those who'd been their comrades in the face of annihilation,
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but that'd only go so far. One of my hopes was that the construction of
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Cardinal would sap interest in resuming old skirmishes, given the many
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opportunities it represented, and that the city-state's territory would
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serve to settle at least some of the people whose lives had been upended
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by the wars.
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``We'll see,'' I replied. ``Even the peace years ought to be quite a
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ride, after a war like this one.''
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The afternoon passed slowly, after that, as the two of us sat and
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talked. Several messengers came to find me over the following bell, as
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I'd made it clear that the infirmary would be where I stayed, but there
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was nothing truly urgent to see to. Some concerns about the current
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tonnage of water that my rank obligated the stewards to inform me about,
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then a bold request for funding by a Proceran mage that I sent to Roland
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after skimming and finding the idea worth investigation. The closest
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thing to a crisis came an hour before Evening Bell, when I was informed
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that someone had been caught trying to enter one of the restricted zones
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of the Arsenal. It turned out to be a young couple trying to sneak off
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for a tryst, and I was informed they were very apologetic when they
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learned they'd triggered an alarm ward in their attempt to find a dark
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corner.
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Their pays were docked, and in a fit of mercy I spared the two men the
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necessity of having to explain themselves to me in person. I sent
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written note warning that a repetition of the mistake would see them
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suspected of espionage, which should have them thinking twice about
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where they sneaking off.
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``You're enjoying this,'' Indrani accused, afterwards.
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My lips twitched treacherous.
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``It's been a long time since I was asked to weigh in on things
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so\ldots{}'' I trailed off.
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``Easy?'' she suggested.
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``Straightforward,'' I corrected. ``The lower stakes are a relief.''
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The knowledge that the worse I courted if I made a mistake was passing
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embarrassment instead of the usual lives lost by the hundred. I enjoyed
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the calm all the more for the knowledge it was soon to come to an end.
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While the Arsenal might be its own little hermit kingdom, isolated from
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much that went on beyond its walls, the broader world was coming towards
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it. Tomorrow would bring the First Prince and the White Knight, and with
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them a great many troubles that for now still seemed on the horizon. The
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Painted Knife was nearing, too, and the envoys of the Titanomachy. Any
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of those visits would have been an event, but all of them in swift
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succession promised to be more of a circus. While I lost myself in
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thought, Indrani groaned and rose to her feet.
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``Headed somewhere?'' I asked.
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``Having supper with Masego,'' she said. ``You're welcome to come along
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but I'll be carving and he'll be reading.''
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``When you put it like that, how could I resist,'' I said, rolling my
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eyes. ``Go on, have fun.''
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It left a strange taste in my mouth to say that. It wasn't jealousy,
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it'd essentially be the same as getting jealous Vivienne was having
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dinner with Hakram, but it was\ldots{} odd. The ease she'd said that
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with, the way she'd not needed to check he'd be there or even just
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inclined to have dinner with her -- all those things spoke of a habit.
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It wasn't the first time they were doing it, and they'd been doing it
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for long enough they considered it a given it'd happen. It was oddly
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domestic, given who they were. I waved out Indrani, and idly wondered if
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perhaps I was a little jealous after all. Not of either of them, but
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perhaps of what they had. It'd been a long time since I'd had that level
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of intimacy with someone.
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Not since Kilian.
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I wasn't sure if I wanted that, and I knew I simply didn't have the
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\emph{time} to afford something like it these days. Yet the easy way
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that Indrani had displayed a sort of intimacy I'd have not believed her
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capable of when we first met had me uneasy. My friends were changing and
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making lives for themselves while I swung my sword at the world trying
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to make it a little more like I wanted. My eyes moved to Hakram's, his
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chest rising and falling in steady rhythm as the spell took care of
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keeping his lungs going. Sometimes the changes weren't for the best. A
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knock on the door -- too respectful to be Archer's -- caught my
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attention and I invited in the messenger. A report from the captain of
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the garrison, I noted with a raised brow, and one that bore his official
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seal.
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I cracked it open and as I scanned the lines I had to forcefully keep my
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fingers from clenching. The Mirror Knight had tried to enter the Red
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Axe's cell, insisting even when the guards refused to let him in. It'd
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come close to violence before he walked away. I folded the parchment,
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ignoring the messenger's nervous gaze. Someone had informed Christophe
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de Pavanie that I'd gone to speak with the Red Axe with Prince Frederic,
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I decided. This was not a coincidence. It also meant the Mirror Knight
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had friends within these walls that were willing to stretch the bounds
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of propriety to help him. I put away the parchment and dismissed the
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messenger without sending an answer to the report. I'd been warned of
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the incident, and since it'd not come to violence for now there was
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little I could do.
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Not, that wasn't true. There were more than a few things I \emph{could}
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do, but there was nothing I \emph{should} do. At this point,
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overreaching would be dangerous. Restraint now could be used later to
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make the point to the White Knight that I'd tried patience only to find
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it ever more stringently tested.
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Restless at the inaction, I rose to my feet and after patting Hakram's
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shoulder took to the halls. I had no precise destination in mind, though
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that parchment was burning a hole in pocket. I'd not been the only one
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to go to speak with the Red Axe, I considered. Maybe I should mention
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this to the Prince of Brus as well. I'd already been headed vaguely in
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the direction of the Alcazar, anyway. Halfway there I forced myself to
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admit that I wasn't going there to tell him about that report, or at
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least not \emph{only} that. It'd do me no good to pretend otherwise.
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There were risks, although it wouldn't be difficult to weave an illusion
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around myself that'd ensure I wasn't seen going there. And if I was
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going to do this, which the way my teeth were worrying at my lip were
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telling me I was, then \emph{now} would be the time. Before Hasenbach
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got here and the Arsenal was swarmed with guards and watching eyes.
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I felt myself reach for the Night, beginning to weave an illusion, and
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admitted to myself I'd already made my choice.
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I made sure to be seen returning to my rooms before backtracking under
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veil of Night, remembering the way to the Prince of Brus' quarters well
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enough from the last time I'd visited. If I'd been a few years younger I
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might have hesitated before knocking on the door, but in that sense
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Indrani had been good for me. A few moments passed and I felt a little
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like a fool. He might not be there at all, given that it was not so
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late. Perhaps it might be better if I left. Then the door was cracked
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open and Frederic Goethal curiously looked out, blue eyes slightly
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widening in surprise as he saw me. His blond locks were slightly
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dishevelled, and above the belt he wore only a loosely buttoned white
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cotton shirt that did nothing to hide the kind of muscles that came only
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from a warrior's life.
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``May I come in?'' I asked, doing nothing at all to hide the way I was
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looking at him.
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Frederic of Brus's eyes darkened with something that I was rather
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looking forward to seeing unleashed.
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``Please do,'' he replied.
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The door closed hurriedly behind me and I came closer, noting he was
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just tall enough I had to lean up to kiss him. His hand found my hip,
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but it was my lips that found his in a soft, tentative kiss as I tiptoed
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upwards. A brief thing, and I withdrew to find his eyes still closed.
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``You'll do,'' I decided, pushing him back against the wall.
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There was nothing tentative at all about what followed.
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---
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I woke up not long past Midnight Bell, pleasurably spent and sweaty.
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Frederic, still deliciously naked under the twisted-up sheets, was still
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asleep at my side. It'd be a mistake to spend the night, given the risk
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of being seen, so reluctantly I wriggled out of his embrace and sat up
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on the bed. It was enough to wake him and he stretched out in a way that
|
|
pleasantly captured my interest for a few moments. Getting my hands on
|
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his body had done nothing to damper my appreciation for it. Much the
|
|
opposite, as it happened.
|
|
|
|
``Restless or leaving?'' he asked, voice still husky from sleep.
|
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|
``Leaving,'' I said. ``As soon as I can find my clothes, anyway.''
|
|
|
|
Where they'd ended up had not been a priority around the time I was
|
|
taking them off.
|
|
|
|
``How soon you dispose of me,'' Frederic teased. ``Did I disappoint?''
|
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|
|
``I was vocal enough with my opinion you shouldn't need to fish for
|
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compliments,'' I drily said.
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|
|
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``One enjoys hearing those anyway,'' he grinned.
|
|
|
|
It'd been a while since I'd been with a man, but I'd definitely enjoyed
|
|
returning to that brand of diversion. Thinking of it was enough to stir
|
|
my interest again.
|
|
|
|
``Considering you're Alamans, I expect I won't have to mention that this
|
|
is best kept under wraps,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
He looked rather amused.
|
|
|
|
``This is hardly my first tryst, though it has certainly been a\ldots{}
|
|
vividly memorable one,'' Frederic said, sitting up in the bed as well.
|
|
``I understand that some passions are meant to remain discreet. I'll not
|
|
moon after you like a green boy either, if that is your worry.''
|
|
|
|
``I'd tolerate a bit of mooning,'' I grinned. ``It'd be rather
|
|
flattering. But only a bit.''
|
|
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|
``I'll see what I can arrange,'' he quietly laughed.
|
|
|
|
It really was shame it'd be genuinely terrible politics for even the
|
|
suspicion of an affair between us to fall on either, I mused. I'd have
|
|
thoroughly enjoyed more than one visit to this bed. Safer to cut this
|
|
after one night, though, I knew. I'd taken risks enough already. On the
|
|
other hand, I mused as I tossed aside the sheets and pushed him back
|
|
against the headboard and got on top of him, the night wasn't quite over
|
|
yet.
|
|
|
|
``One more for the road,'' I suggested.
|
|
|
|
The gasp that followed was not one of disagreement.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The following day, the First Prince and her escort arrived several hours
|
|
before the White Knight and still Hanno set foot in the Arsenal before
|
|
Cordelia Hasenbach.
|
|
|
|
With the wards back in order scrying relays to Creation had been
|
|
established again, so the Procerans had known in advance that we'd had
|
|
not only a fae incursion but several demons running loose not so long
|
|
ago. Considering that the First Prince would be a great deal easier to
|
|
kill than Hanno and the that magnitude of the political crisis that'd
|
|
followed would be\ldots{} significant, I'd not been offended when her
|
|
personal guards had not taken me to my word when I'd told them the
|
|
Arsenal was secure. A company of mages and soldiers had swept through
|
|
the attainted areas with a fine comb, though I doubted that any mundane
|
|
mage out of the Principate would able to catch something that the likes
|
|
of Masego or Roland hadn't.
|
|
|
|
While I debated heading to the Arcadian waystation where the First
|
|
Prince was awaiting the word to go on ahead from her people, I
|
|
ultimately decided against it. Hasenbach liked her ceremony, and I might
|
|
as well ensure I had her in as pleasant a mood as I could before the
|
|
negotiations started. There was precious little of what I wanted to
|
|
discuss with her that could be spoken about in such a public place,
|
|
anyway. To my disappointment I learned that Vivienne would only be
|
|
arriving tomorrow, having been slowed on the march by sudden rains
|
|
that'd flooded the roads, but I'd lived without seeing her for several
|
|
months already. A day more or less wouldn't make much of a difference.
|
|
|
|
Besides, I kept busy: while security was an issue for Hasenbach the
|
|
White Knight breezed right past her after a few greetings and proceeded
|
|
straight into the Arsenal. I dragged Archer with me to watch my back,
|
|
leaving as a lookout as I limped my way down a long set of stairs. The
|
|
White Knight came out of the translocation ritual in the same wide room
|
|
where the Mirror Knight had nearly drawn on me less than a week ago, a
|
|
single mage in Arsenal livery at his side. Hanno looked tired, eyes
|
|
pulled tight, and was leading his horse by the reins. He'd ridden hard,
|
|
I decided, after hearing about the attack. Even odds he'd even ridden
|
|
through the night on the last stretch, for him to be visibly tired: it
|
|
wasn't something that came easy, in Named of his calibre.
|
|
|
|
``Black Queen,'' he greeted me.
|
|
|
|
``White Knight,'' I replied. ``I'm pleased you came quickly.''
|
|
|
|
``I can only wish I'd been there when the attack happened,'' Hanno
|
|
frankly said. ``None of the affairs that kept me from travelling with
|
|
you were even near important enough, seen in retrospective.''
|
|
|
|
``Hindsight's no cure for bad luck,'' I shrugged.
|
|
|
|
A sharp whistle sounded from the heights above, a sign from Archer we
|
|
were about to have company. Indrani wouldn't have bothered for guards or
|
|
diplomats, which meant Named.
|
|
|
|
``I'd wager that's my latest headache trudging towards us,'' I said. ``I
|
|
tried my hand at handling it and failed, White Knight, so it'll be yours
|
|
to deal with.''
|
|
|
|
Hanno's brow rose.
|
|
|
|
``I thank you for your assistance,'' he said, turning to offer the mage
|
|
a smile.
|
|
|
|
She blushed, much to my amusement, and replied by espousing the virtues
|
|
of duty before scurrying away. However nicely phrased, it'd very much
|
|
been a dismissal. I eyed him speculatively. Heroes tended to be popular
|
|
with women -- and men, when so inclined -- but I'd never know him to
|
|
keep company. I didn't believe him to be like Masego, disinclined
|
|
towards the act, but neither did I believe him so discreet he would have
|
|
been able to keep a bedmate quiet.
|
|
|
|
``I received some interesting missives from the First Prince, when I
|
|
passed by a scrying relay yesterday,'' Hanno said. ``Including a subtle
|
|
but rather firm request that I take Christophe of Pavanie `in hand'.
|
|
I've rarely known you to be in such swift accord with Cordelia
|
|
Hasenbach, Catherine.''
|
|
|
|
Well now, wasn't \emph{that} interesting? Frederic hadn't been
|
|
exaggerating when he'd said that the First Prince saw the Mirror Knight
|
|
as a potential threat because of his closeness -- and occasional
|
|
nakedness -- with the House of Langevin. If she was willing to start
|
|
putting pressure on the White Knight to intervene before he'd even
|
|
gotten to the Arsenal, then she was serious about curbing dear
|
|
Christophe. While I'd only extend so much trust to Cordelia over much of
|
|
anything, I was rather pleased at the notion that for once she might be
|
|
entirely on my side -- if largely for her own reasons.
|
|
|
|
``He still has the sword, and now he's making demands,'' I grunted.
|
|
|
|
``I've never known him to be prone to overstepping, only clumsy in
|
|
expressing himself,'' the White Knight calmly said. ``As for the
|
|
Severance, while it should be temporarily returned to the Arsenal I can
|
|
see no better wielder for it.''
|
|
|
|
I could think of several, including the very man speaking to me. Those
|
|
two had shared a front in Cleves, I recalled, before the Salian Peace
|
|
and Callow joining the Grand Alliance. There might be a degree of trust
|
|
there, the sort earned in battle. It didn't worry me overmuch, in truth,
|
|
considering that Hanno was remarkably clear-eyed when it came to most
|
|
things. Still, a warning was in order.
|
|
|
|
``Be careful with him,'' I said. ``I don't think you'll find him all
|
|
that pliable.''
|
|
|
|
``Pliable is something a lord wants in a vassal,'' Hanno said. ``I am
|
|
not one, nor he the other. All I need of him is reason and a willing
|
|
ear, neither of which he's ever failed to offer.''
|
|
|
|
Our little chat was interrupted by armoured boots on stone as the Mirror
|
|
Knight, in full armour and with the Severance at his hip, briskly began
|
|
to make his way down the stairs. Looking rather uncomfortable and
|
|
noticeably unarmed, the Blade of Mercy followed behind him. Christophe
|
|
de Pavanie's green gaze was distinctly unfriendly as he took in my
|
|
presence, though it stopped short of a glare and he began to pointedly
|
|
ignore my presence. The boy at his side looked away from me when I
|
|
glanced.
|
|
|
|
``White Knight,'' the Mirror Knight began the moment his boots reached
|
|
the bottom of the stairs. ``Your presence gladdens me.''
|
|
|
|
A long moment of silence followed when Hanno did not reply. The White
|
|
Knight eventually cocked his head to the side.
|
|
|
|
``I had assumed,'' Hanno slowly said, ``that you were not done in your
|
|
greetings. Was I incorrect?''
|
|
|
|
Huh. I threw him an appreciative glance for that even as Christophe's
|
|
cheeks reddened.
|
|
|
|
``Wouldn't be the first lack of manners from him,'' I idly said. ``I
|
|
doubt it'll be the last. We'll speak later, White Knight.''
|
|
|
|
``Until later then, Queen Catherine,'' Hanno replied with a slight bow.
|
|
|
|
I began to limp away, without further ado, and though the Mirror Knight
|
|
began to say something that might have been a belated greeting I did not
|
|
turn to hear it or bother to lend an ear. I was almost hoping he tried
|
|
to pull something of the sort in front of Proceran diplomats, who'd be
|
|
genuinely appalled at the sight. They were known to be polite to even
|
|
people they despised, after all. Archer was awaiting at the top of the
|
|
stairs, leaning against a wall. She'd kept the room below in sight the
|
|
whole time, taking her duty of watching my back just as seriously in
|
|
this place as she had in the tunnels of the Everdark. Different dangers
|
|
here, perhaps, but barely fewer.
|
|
|
|
``So?'' I asked as she pushed off.
|
|
|
|
``They were hurrying,'' Indrani said. ``So they weren't just coming to
|
|
greet Shiny Boots, I'd bet.''
|
|
|
|
That soured the pleasant mood the night's exertions had left me in, even
|
|
after this little interlude. They'd hurried because they'd heard I
|
|
myself was there to receive Hanno, then. For them to have been
|
|
forewarned, it meant they had more friends in the Arsenal than I'd hoped
|
|
they would have. Not necessarily Named, as the Mirror Knight's slaying
|
|
of no less than seven demons had earned him a great deal of admiration
|
|
with soldiers and mages from the rank and file, but I wouldn't dismiss
|
|
the notion outright either.
|
|
|
|
``With Hasenbach joining us tonight the number of soldiers in here will
|
|
swell,'' I said. ``We'll be able to spare some for more private duties.
|
|
Reach out to Lieutenant Inger, Archer. I require some eyes.''
|
|
|
|
With the First Prince's arrival, I finally had a pretext to meddle with
|
|
the garrison without raising an eyebrow -- given that Hasenbach would
|
|
have a soldier escort of her own, it'd raise no eyebrows if I arranged
|
|
one for myself out of garrison troops. I didn't intend to use mine
|
|
guarding doors, though. I wanted to know who the Mirror Knight would
|
|
speak with, and when. It would be imprudent to begin acting on anything
|
|
before making sure how much support he had, exactly.
|
|
|
|
``I'll take care of it,'' Indrani said, pushing off the wall. ``While
|
|
you were down there a messenger came by for you, though. I took the
|
|
message for you.''
|
|
|
|
She fished out of her coat a small folded parchment, handing it over.
|
|
|
|
``And what's inside?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
Neither of us bothered to pretend she wouldn't have opened that without
|
|
the slightest hint of hesitation.
|
|
|
|
``The First Prince of Procer is inviting you to dinner,'' Indrani said,
|
|
waggling her eyebrows lasciviously.
|
|
|
|
Considering I could no longer claim to have never slept with Proceran
|
|
royalty, answering that insinuation with even mock indignation would
|
|
have, uh, weaker foundation than I might be used to.
|
|
|
|
``Well,'' I said, ``I suppose I'm about due to have an exquisite meal
|
|
spoiled by politics.''
|