567 lines
28 KiB
TeX
567 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-34-quickening}{%
|
|
\section{Chapter 34: Quickening}\label{chapter-34-quickening}}
|
|
|
|
*``If you wantqperor Malevolent I, the Unhallowed
|
|
|
|
I'd become unfortunately familiar with a certain feeling over the years
|
|
that was hard to describe, at least in Lower Miezan.
|
|
|
|
It was that mixture of relief and wincing that came from looking at a
|
|
debacle but knowing at least it wasn't a catastrophe. Like if you came
|
|
back one evening to find your barn was on fire, but at leas the
|
|
livestock wasn't in it. I'd told Akua this, once, after one too many
|
|
times looking at the near wipe of a forward patrol that'd still caught a
|
|
probe from Keter before it could do damage, and she'd answered with
|
|
amusement that there was in fact an expression in Mthethwa for it.
|
|
\emph{Kutofa ushidi}, which more or less translated to `victory in
|
|
failure'. It was a recurring theme in Praesi plays, particularly their
|
|
comedies, with the traditional protagonist of those being Dread Emperor
|
|
Baneful -- who'd never actually been emperor, only one of the claimants
|
|
during the War of Thirteen Tyrants and One. He was notable mostly for
|
|
somehow having managed to hang on until nearly the end with only a
|
|
string of mitigated defeats to his name.
|
|
|
|
Akua could actually quote some passages from one of the more famous
|
|
plays, \emph{The Long Road to Ater,} and it'd been as endearing as it
|
|
had been surreal to hear her chortle about Baneful accidentally
|
|
poisoning his cousin instead of his husband -- only to later find out
|
|
that she'd been about to betray him. He had, Akua had gleefully
|
|
explained, avoided his own assassination but only at the price of a feud
|
|
with his distinctly unimpressed warlock brother-in-law, who promptly
|
|
cursed him. Any play with that much murder in it would probably have
|
|
been a tragedy instead, in Callow. Except if it were foreigners doing
|
|
the dying. Which was why I had rather mixed feelings, looking at the
|
|
mutilated White Knight and the bloodied, unconscious body of the Mirror
|
|
Knight. The Severance had been returned to the sheath and was now in
|
|
Hanno's hands, but there was less of those than there used to be.
|
|
|
|
Three fingers lost on his right hand, though at least he'd kept the
|
|
thumb and index. He'd still be able to write with it even as he waited
|
|
for a prosthetic, though I did believe he was ambidextrous regardless.
|
|
|
|
``You might say that,'' the White Knight serenely replied.
|
|
|
|
Not quite so serene he was able to hide how he was trying not to put too
|
|
much weight on his knees, gingerly shifting his footing. Though the
|
|
cracked stone floor and the lack of cuts spoke to an overwhelming
|
|
victory by Hanno of Arwad, I suspected it'd been a closer thing than it
|
|
seemed. How many bones had he cracked just by hitting the other man? If
|
|
the Mirror Knight had not fallen unconscious, it would have been the
|
|
beginning of a downwards slide for the Sword of Judgement: I knew for a
|
|
fact that his healing was shoddy, and not without adverse effects. Mind
|
|
you, I thought as I pulled at my pipe and eyed Christophe de Pavanie's
|
|
blatantly broken nose, he'd still won. And without using a blade, by the
|
|
looks of it, which was impressive. \emph{You were making a statement}, I
|
|
thought, studying him openly\emph{. That you can handle him on your own,
|
|
and so there is no need for anyone to step in.}
|
|
|
|
It was about three fingers too late for that.
|
|
|
|
Indrani, who'd been at my back this whole time, let out a low whistle.
|
|
|
|
``Nice scrap,'' she praised. ``But you missed a spot.''
|
|
|
|
The way she trailed a finger across her throat while looking at the
|
|
Mirror Knight made it clear what she meant by that. I didn't correct
|
|
her, or indeed say anything at all, simply watching Hanno. I'd be a
|
|
grave misstep for me to have even the slightest and most indirect of
|
|
hands in the death of Christophe de Pavanie, as even the appearance of
|
|
my involvement with the killing of a heroic opponent of mine would blow
|
|
up in my face like a crate of sharpers. If the White Knight was the one
|
|
who took his head, though, that was a different story. While an argument
|
|
could be made that the Mirror Knight was simply too useful and powerful
|
|
a Named to execute, I was lukewarm to the prospect of keeping the man
|
|
alive. Part of that was that he was a very direct threat to me, but
|
|
there was also the fact that he'd just fucking cut up the representative
|
|
for the heroes under the Terms.
|
|
|
|
The White Knight hadn't said anything, but after days at Hakram's
|
|
bedside I was painfully familiar with what cuts made by the Severance
|
|
looked like.
|
|
|
|
``The Mirror Knight breached the Terms,'' Hanno said, ignoring Indrani
|
|
outright and looking straight at me. ``But he has been subdued without
|
|
lasting harm being done. I will now take him into custody, if you have
|
|
no objection.''
|
|
|
|
I spewed out a stream of smoke, watching it spin and writhe before me. I
|
|
didn't want -- and couldn't afford -- my hands on any of this, but I
|
|
balked at simply leaving the Mirror Knight in a cell without further
|
|
supervision than what Hanno might judge fit to provide. On the other
|
|
hand, what were my alternatives? I couldn't put him under a guard of my
|
|
own without it looking like a villain had taken a hero prisoner and I
|
|
sure as Hells wasn't going to leave him loose in the Arsenal. Besides,
|
|
the White Knight might have asked if I had objections but he wasn't
|
|
simply going to do whatever I asked. He'd listen to any grievances I had
|
|
and try to address them, but Hanno wasn't going to roll over something
|
|
like this and I had little appetite for picking a fight. I still tapped
|
|
the side of my own hand, where the dark-skinned hero was now missing
|
|
fingers.
|
|
|
|
``That requires consequences,'' I warned. ``And do not expect to find
|
|
much mercy in me.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Or Hasenbach, for that matter}, I thought. The First Prince would
|
|
have taken it a greater victory to bring the Mirror Knight to her way of
|
|
seeing things than to quell him, until now, but this little episode
|
|
would change things. The baggage he'd be bringing with him when going
|
|
under her wing would begin outweighing his uses, to such a canny
|
|
princess' eyes: anything he did after becoming an ally would reflect on
|
|
her, and her position was too delicate to be able to afford much
|
|
bumbling. Considering I spoke for Callow as well as Below's lot and the
|
|
Dominion had little reason to be fond of the Mirror Knight, that boded
|
|
ill for the man in question. Hanno would be the one to pass the
|
|
sentence, in the end, but the White Knight no more operated in a vacuum
|
|
than I did.
|
|
|
|
Hanno did not blink in the face of my stare, unmoved.
|
|
|
|
``The Terms will be upheld,'' the White Knight answered. ``I will not
|
|
let intentions excuse actions.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{But}, I thought, for though his eyes were calm they had hardened.
|
|
|
|
``But make no mistake, Catherine,'' the Sword of Judgement continued.
|
|
``I will not sacrifice a good man for the sake of convenience. The Terms
|
|
constrain, but they also protect.''
|
|
|
|
``At three fingers the chance taken on a fool, you'll run out of one
|
|
long before the other,'' Archer sardonically said.
|
|
|
|
Well, she wasn't wrong. I breathed in a mouthful of wakeleaf, savouring
|
|
the burn I'd not allowed myself to indulge in when sharing a room with
|
|
the First Prince out of politeness. Through flickering lights, rows of
|
|
soldiers on both sides awaiting only my command to bare steel, I watched
|
|
the White Knight. Even without armour, even without either of the swords
|
|
on him having left their scabbards, he felt dangerous. Not like a blade
|
|
at my throat, for there was not a speck of hostility in his stance, but
|
|
like a sharp stone under water. It didn't look like much until you tried
|
|
to step on it, and by the time you felt the pain it was already too
|
|
late. I'd trust him, I decided, at least for tonight. He had yet to
|
|
disappoint me, and I'd not break that streak by forcing a fight that was
|
|
not necessary. I hoped it would never be. But if it ever were, I would
|
|
pick my grounds better than this.
|
|
|
|
I spat out the smoke, making my choice.
|
|
|
|
``I won't war over what \emph{might} be,'' I said. ``Take him, Hanno.
|
|
But don't forget how many eyes are on you, either.''
|
|
|
|
He inclined his head the slightest bit, not in concession but in
|
|
acknowledgement.
|
|
|
|
``Have the Severance back in its room before night's over,'' I said, and
|
|
it was not a suggestion.
|
|
|
|
On that I left him to his bloodied and bloody fool, Archer offering a
|
|
singsong and almost taunting \emph{good night}, and limped back to the
|
|
ranks of my legionaries. They closed behind me seamlessly and I took
|
|
aside the commanding officer long enough to order a line be sent to
|
|
escort the White Knight as he carried the other Named to his holding
|
|
cell. Some Proceran soldiers, I saw, were missing.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia would be getting a report soon enough, and tomorrow would bring
|
|
consequences for all.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I woke up around what would have been dawn, were we still in Creation.
|
|
|
|
For all the weight of what had taken place yesterday -- as much my
|
|
conversations with the First Prince as the Mirror Knight's beating and
|
|
imprisonment -- I found relatively little to do when I woke. I broke my
|
|
fast quickly and retreated to Hakram's room in the infirmary to see to
|
|
what few affairs I had. I penned a recommendation to the First Army's
|
|
general staff for Lieutenant Inger to be promoted to captain, for her
|
|
exemplary service when commanding against a demon, knowing it'd likely
|
|
end up on Juniper's desk. The First Army had been gutted to fill all
|
|
sorts of needs, from garrisoning the Arsenal to organizing training
|
|
camps and providing escorts for supply trains, which my marshal had been
|
|
less than pleased by. It'd still been the natural pick, even she had
|
|
admitted that, considering that Juniper still couldn't work for more
|
|
than a few hours a day without having\ldots{} episodes.
|
|
|
|
Malicia had a lot to answer for. Tariq had seen to my old friend
|
|
personally and assured me that eventually the damage that'd been done to
|
|
her mind by the Empress' planted controls would mend itself, but that it
|
|
would take time. The Hellhound still got more done in a slice of a day
|
|
than most people did with a full one, and had violently resisted the
|
|
notion of resting more fully even though it'd accelerate her recovery,
|
|
but these days she was forced to rely on her general staff too much for
|
|
the First to be a functional battlefield command. I could have named
|
|
someone else to serve as general under her and lead on the field, but
|
|
why offer that insult when I had need of soldiers for all sorts of
|
|
detached duties? At this point even if tomorrow she was healed her
|
|
soldiers would still be more useful in their current assignments, so
|
|
it'd change nothing. Mind you, if we were to assault northern Hainaut
|
|
come summer I'd want her to be part of the planning so she might have to
|
|
leave her staff behind for a bit. Aisha would be politely furious at me
|
|
for making her travel, but there was no helping it.
|
|
|
|
I saw to some minor correspondence after that, the sort that seemed to
|
|
accrue like dust wherever I stayed for more than a day, and wrote a
|
|
formal request for the Arsenal to begin working on prosthetics for
|
|
Adjutant. I'd already gone to the Named directly and found both the
|
|
Blind Maker and the Hunted Magician highly amenable -- the latter in
|
|
particular, since he wanted to buy his way back into my good graces --
|
|
but it would be easier to shake loose rare substances if this was made
|
|
formal. As Queen of Callow I had no problem paying for any of this from
|
|
my treasury, but a lot of the more precious materials in the Arsenal
|
|
were bought through the Grand Alliance instead of anyone's personal
|
|
agents. It was half past Morning Bell that Archer strolled in to tell me
|
|
of the day's first arrival, which I'd been expecting for some time:
|
|
Vivienne was, at last, about to get here.
|
|
|
|
To my surprise, Masego had roused himself to welcome her in person as
|
|
well. The three of us set out together, which drew eyes enough as we
|
|
made our way through the halls. The Woe had something of a reputation.
|
|
|
|
``I'm glad you made time for this,'' I told Zeze. ``It's been a while
|
|
since you've seen her, right?''
|
|
|
|
``We scried a fortnight ago,'' Masego contradicted.
|
|
|
|
He was, I supposed, technically correct. He usually was, especially so
|
|
when it was most annoying for everyone else.
|
|
|
|
``In person, I mean,'' I specified.
|
|
|
|
I'd not seen Vivienne in person for\ldots{} a little over a year, now?
|
|
There'd been that conference in the Brabantine heartlands last winter,
|
|
when I'd gone down in person to hasten along the negotiations over how
|
|
the refugees were to be settled -- the new Prince of Lyonis had been
|
|
pushing for forced conscription of all those of fighting age, which
|
|
would have been a disaster -- when she'd sent word the process was being
|
|
stalled. In all fairness, the Procerans hadn't even been the most
|
|
obstructive people in that conference. That honour had belonged to the
|
|
delegates for the Dominion, who'd been trying to argue that the mass of
|
|
displaced were an issue of the Principate alone and not worth discussion
|
|
by the Grand Alliance at all.
|
|
|
|
We'd been in the same small city, Malben, for about a week before I
|
|
returned north to prepare for the offensive. We'd spent a few hours
|
|
together on several evenings, aside from the time duty ensured we'd
|
|
spend side by side, but in truth we'd simply been too damned busy to
|
|
spend much time together. She just as much as I, which not that many
|
|
people could claim. I'd effectively dropped all Callowan affairs and
|
|
foreign diplomacy into Vivienne's lap, and while she'd taken to both
|
|
admirably in tidier times both those duties would have warranted
|
|
different appointments by sheer virtue of the work they represented.
|
|
There was a reason that her personal staff had swelled by more than a
|
|
dozen times over but I'd never once balked at signing onto the costs
|
|
involved.
|
|
|
|
``Under those terms, it has been seventeen months,'' Hierophant replied.
|
|
``Not since her official visit to the Arsenal.''
|
|
|
|
``She actually likes the place, unlike some,'' Indrani said, glancing at
|
|
me sideways. ``Mind you, that might just be the Thief in her salivating
|
|
at so much nifty stuff being kept in the same place.''
|
|
|
|
``Vivienne would not steal from the Arsenal,'' Masego firmly said.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Aw}, I thought, looking at him fondly. The faith there was a
|
|
little touching.
|
|
|
|
``Given the authority Catherine has granted her, it would only count as
|
|
a requisition,'' Hierophant told us.
|
|
|
|
A little less touching now, admittedly. Indrani snickered.
|
|
|
|
``Don't Procerans have a saying about thieves and crowns?'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``Petty thieves hang, the great wear crowns,'' I quoted in Chantant.
|
|
|
|
Archer grinned at me.
|
|
|
|
``Give it a few years,'' she said, ``and we'll proving that true.''
|
|
|
|
I snorted, mildly amused. I'd never made a mystery of my intention to
|
|
abdicate in favour of Vivienne after the war, at least not among the Woe
|
|
-- though it wasn't common knowledge outside them, to this day. It'd
|
|
been with a mixture of pleasure and irritation that I'd realized that
|
|
few of them actually cared. Archer was largely indifferent to crowns,
|
|
and I suspected she fully intended on continuing send up bills to the
|
|
royal palace even after it became Viv's, while Masego had actually been
|
|
\emph{pleased}. It'd give me more time to help him with a few things,
|
|
he'd been happy to tell me. We'd never made a proper study of Night, and
|
|
since I'd have no use for all that power I wielded he did have a few
|
|
projects that could use the fuel\ldots{} At least it'd not been too
|
|
difficult to talk him into setting up shop at Cardinal when it was
|
|
raised, which as a side-benefit ensured Indrani would have a permanent
|
|
anchor there no matter where the wind ended up taking her.
|
|
|
|
``I'm still glad you made time,'' I told Zeze. ``Unlike \emph{some}
|
|
here, you're actually busy.''
|
|
|
|
``Don't be so hard on yourself, Cat,'' Indrani blithely said, ``I'm sure
|
|
that whole queen thing will pay off eventually.''
|
|
|
|
``It pays for \emph{you}, sullen wench,'' I grunted back. ``Though I'm
|
|
beginning to question the wisdom of that.''
|
|
|
|
``I've never bought a drop of anything with Grand Alliance gold,'' she
|
|
righteously assured me.
|
|
|
|
I raised an eyebrow. Did she really expect I'd fall for that?
|
|
|
|
``How about silver?'' I pointedly asked.
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat of silence passed.
|
|
|
|
``Zeze's only here because he accidentally broke his spheres bothering
|
|
elves,'' Archer said, shamelessly selling him out without even a speck
|
|
of hesitation.
|
|
|
|
I mouthed at her she was not yet out of the woods, then turned a cocked
|
|
brow to Masego.
|
|
|
|
``I made the spheres,'' Hierophant told me, a tad smugly. ``And the
|
|
spell that broke them. Therefore I did, in a sense, make time.''
|
|
|
|
Huh. I'd be damned. Compared to his usual brand of sneakiness, that was
|
|
positively devious. I was inclined to blame Roland for this. The Rogue
|
|
Sorcerer was pretty tricky sort, for a man who went around in a leather
|
|
coat shooting fire at people.
|
|
|
|
``You're spending too much time with Alamans,'' I told him.
|
|
|
|
``The only thing you should listen to them about is the kissing,''
|
|
Indrani agreed.
|
|
|
|
I shot her an amused look. Having recently basked in the luxury of
|
|
displays of affections from her partner, it looked like she wasn't
|
|
willing lose the goods quite to soon. The braided mage cocked his head
|
|
to the side.
|
|
|
|
``But it was from two of you I learned to dissemble,'' Masego said,
|
|
looking puzzled.
|
|
|
|
I swallowed a startled noise that was as appalled as it had been amused,
|
|
because he'd been completely earnest about that. It was truly his most
|
|
dangerous magic, I thought, that damned disarming earnestness.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine's a bad influence,'' Indrani told him. ``The Grey Pilgrim
|
|
said so that once, and that's basically just like angels saying it.''
|
|
|
|
``Hear that?'' I said, and allowed for a moment of silence. ``That's the
|
|
sound of your discretionary funds getting audited, Archer.''
|
|
|
|
Naturally, she called me a brutal tyrant and the three of us managed to
|
|
keep bickering all the way to the plaza where Vivienne would be
|
|
translating in. Gods, but it was good to be home. It wasn't the same
|
|
with just Indrani or Hakram, though they tried. We'd simply gone through
|
|
too many crucibles as a band of five for it to ever feel truly complete
|
|
without all of the Woe there. Not that we would be, even when Vivienne
|
|
got here. Adjutant had yet to wake. With that thought dampening what had
|
|
been a rising mood, I found myself limping down the same bloody set of
|
|
stairs for what felt like the hundredth time. Wasn't there another
|
|
access point without quite so many of those?
|
|
|
|
``It should all be slopes,'' I muttered under my breath. ``Nice, gentle
|
|
slopes.''
|
|
|
|
The murderholes, siege engines and well-armed soldiers could stay,
|
|
though. Those were always a good investment, in my experience. Indrani
|
|
pretended she hadn't heard me, hiding her smile in her scarf, and the
|
|
three of us settled at the bottom to wait for Vivienne. It would have
|
|
been convenient for her to arrive immediately, but instead it took long
|
|
enough we ended up playing dice on the floor to make the wait tolerable.
|
|
Masego cheated with sorcery borrowed from one of the silver trinkets in
|
|
his braids, but that was fine: they were Indrani's dice anyway, so they
|
|
were loaded, and I'd yet to throw them without first weaving an illusion
|
|
guaranteeing me the numbers I wanted.
|
|
|
|
Lady Vivienne Dartwick, heiress-designate to the crown of the Kingdom of
|
|
Callow, arrived to the sadly not unprecedented sight of the Archer
|
|
threatening to rise in rebellion if I didn't stop abusing my powers to
|
|
make her roll snake eyes -- only to then roll another pair, as Masego
|
|
was evidently finding her anger quite amusing and wasn't above using an
|
|
aspect for petty indulgence.
|
|
|
|
``This is Grand Alliance property, you filthy gambling vagrants,''
|
|
Vivienne called out. ``I'll have you tossed out.''
|
|
|
|
The four mages that'd made the translation with her looked terrified, at
|
|
least until I began laughing.
|
|
|
|
``She's cheating, too,'' Indrani complained. ``It is a sad day indeed
|
|
for the House of Foundling, that its head would resort to such sordid
|
|
treachery.''
|
|
|
|
``We were all cheating,'' Masego happily said, ``you were simply the
|
|
worst at it.''
|
|
|
|
An offended squawk was his answer and I left them to it, instead turning
|
|
to have a better look at my friend. I was struck, once more, with how
|
|
little she now resembled the woman I'd first met in Summerholm all those
|
|
years ago. In principle not much had changed: her hair was still dark
|
|
brown, her eyes that pleasant blue-grey tone and her slender frame had
|
|
yet to thicken. The hair was even longer than when I'd last seen her,
|
|
and as was her habit kept in a milkmaid braid that evoked a crown, but
|
|
it was the little details that made all the difference. She'd aged, not
|
|
by much but enough that her face had grown mature. And though she was
|
|
visibly tired, even in her blue riding dress and trousers there was a
|
|
lightness to her that was the burning opposite of the anger she'd
|
|
carried with her everywhere during her eyes as the Thief.
|
|
|
|
Losing her Name had been good for her in a lot of ways.
|
|
|
|
I limped up to her, leaning on my staff, and she met me halfway. I
|
|
pulled her in close for a hug, enjoying how she was one of the few
|
|
people close enough to me in height it felt like there was little
|
|
difference there. Her grip was firm when she returned the embrace, and I
|
|
noted with approval she'd kept in shape. Just because she'd traded the
|
|
respectable form of theft that was burglary on rooftops for the
|
|
organized form of theft that was taxation from a palace was no reason to
|
|
let herself go. Mind you, Vivienne had always been whip-lean in a way
|
|
that was from breeding as much as an active nightlife of skulking
|
|
through alleys.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine,'' she smiled, after drawing back. ``It's good to see you.''
|
|
|
|
It'd been a while since I'd last felt pangs of attraction towards
|
|
Vivienne, but now and then when she smiled like that I remembered why
|
|
I'd felt them. It was a done thing, but not unsweet to look back on for
|
|
all that it'd been entirely one-sided.
|
|
|
|
``And you,'' I replied. ``Would that you could have gotten here sooner.
|
|
I heard something about rains?''
|
|
|
|
She nodded.
|
|
|
|
``They flooded the roads,'' Vivienne said. ``There were levees but they
|
|
broke -- no plot there, simply gone unrepaired for too long.''
|
|
|
|
I grimaced. I doubted it'd be the only place where something like that
|
|
had happened. Considering the dark picture that Hasenbach and Frederic
|
|
had painted for me on the state of the Principate, I suspected that a
|
|
truly staggering amount of maintenance work must have gone undone
|
|
because there were more pressing needs to fill.
|
|
|
|
``We'll have our fill of plotting in here anyway, I think,'' I sighed.
|
|
``Things had been moving quickly enough in here that I suspect even you
|
|
won't have heard all of it.''
|
|
|
|
The Jacks had people in the Arsenal, naturally, as did the Circle of
|
|
Thorns. The Dominion did not have designated spies so much as captains
|
|
sending regular reports, which was perhaps not too surprising -- it was
|
|
a lot less centralized than either Callow or Procer, and if I'd learned
|
|
anything about spies since becoming queen it was that they cost a
|
|
\emph{lot} of fucking money. A lot more than, say, one of the major
|
|
Levantine lords would be able to afford tossing into such an enterprise
|
|
if they didn't want to fall behind their neighbours when it came to
|
|
fielding soldiers. The Old Kingdom hadn't been all that different, even
|
|
though the Fairfaxes hadn't been the largely symbolic leaders the Isbili
|
|
still were. Nowadays we could afford the Jacks in part because nobility
|
|
wasn't there to drain the pot anymore, so to speak. Callow hadn't gotten
|
|
much richer, but a lot of more of its gold ended up in the royal
|
|
treasury than before.
|
|
|
|
``I've no difficulty believing that,'' Vivienne grimly replied.
|
|
|
|
We parted ways entirely just in time for Indrani to squeeze in between
|
|
us, throwing out her arms around our shoulders.
|
|
|
|
``Vivi,'' she grinned. ``Long time no see.''
|
|
|
|
The former thief snorted.
|
|
|
|
``Last time you gave me that grin it was after emptying my liquor
|
|
cabinet,'' Vivienne said. ``Though I'll admit it was a nice touch to
|
|
fill the bottles back up with water.''
|
|
|
|
``A lot harder than you'd think, too,'' Archer cheerfully said.
|
|
``Especially considering how drunk I got from drinking all your
|
|
liquor.''
|
|
|
|
Masego's long fingers were laid on Indrani's shoulders and he gently
|
|
moved her aside, freeing Vivienne at the price of leaving me stuck with
|
|
a pouting Archer. Hierophant offered her a smile and, as `Drani and I
|
|
watched expectantly, bent down to kiss Vivienne's cheeks one after the
|
|
other. She froze, not answering even when Masego welcomed her to the
|
|
Arsenal. The flabbergasted look on my fellow Callowan's face had been
|
|
well worth the wait, I decided. She threw Indrani a confused and almost
|
|
pleading look, which Archer answered with her usual shit-eating grin.
|
|
She turned towards me after, perhaps expecting a greater degree of
|
|
helpfulness coming from there.
|
|
|
|
``Zeze's been rubbing elbows with Alamans,'' I sagely said.
|
|
|
|
Which explained the kissing, at least, though the initiative to start
|
|
doing it was all him.
|
|
|
|
``People keep repeating variations on that sentence,'' Masego said,
|
|
sounding peeved. ``As if it were some sort of conversational panacea.
|
|
Shall I obtain such an elbow and carry it around so that I can behave
|
|
outlandishly without facing questions?''
|
|
|
|
``There's probably a few still lying around the Graveyard,'' Indrani
|
|
mused. ``Couldn't be that hard to get our hands on one.''
|
|
|
|
``I see that in some ways remarkably little has changed,'' Vivienne
|
|
drily said, catching my eye.
|
|
|
|
I shrugged, offering her a small grin. If her days were anything like
|
|
mine, and they most likely were, then this\ldots{} lightness must be a
|
|
balm on the soul. After hours of deciding life and death for thousands,
|
|
of making ugly compromises and closing your eye to small evils, there
|
|
was nothing quite like ribbing and idle talk with people you loved to
|
|
remind yourself you were alive. A person, too, not just a collection of
|
|
necessary decisions given a frame to inhabit. The four mages that'd
|
|
translated with Vivienne had given us a wide berth, accurately guessing
|
|
that the reunion of four of the Woe wasn't something to just stand
|
|
around listening to, but she left us for a bit to thank them and request
|
|
that she be informed when her personal affairs arrived. She'd come with
|
|
several wagons, apparently, and only pulled ahead of them and her
|
|
entourage when it came to crossing into the Arsenal itself. Zeze and
|
|
Indrani took the lead in going up the stairs, leaving us behind in a
|
|
conversation that was unlikely to be of much interest to either.
|
|
|
|
``We've got lots around the corner,'' I told her as we began our way up.
|
|
``And it'll be coming at us quick.''
|
|
|
|
``The trials, for one,'' Vivienne agreed.
|
|
|
|
She'd know about two, the Red Axe and the Hunted Magician, but there
|
|
might be a third on the horizon she wouldn't have heard about. Whether
|
|
the Mirror Knight would end up before a tribunal or not I couldn't be
|
|
sure, but I suspected he would. Hanno would want the Grand Alliance to
|
|
have the opportunity to speak, if not sentence.
|
|
|
|
``The war council, too, which will start when Lord Marave gets here,'' I
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
She nodded.
|
|
|
|
``I take it the First Prince has spoken to you on the subject of the
|
|
Mercantis troubles as well?'' my heiress asked.
|
|
|
|
``She did. Their envoys due here in a few days, Hasenbach and I are to
|
|
dazzle and scare them so they continue coughing up coin,'' I replied.
|
|
``You heard about the Gigantes?''
|
|
|
|
``The Arsenal seemed like the natural location to entertain their envoy,
|
|
this Ykines,'' she confirmed. ``Considering they requested the White
|
|
Knight personally it was almost a given it would have to happen now,
|
|
before the two of you return to the front.''
|
|
|
|
``I've limited hopes there, but even their scraps would be damnably
|
|
useful,'' I said. ``Talked about them with the White Knight, he has good
|
|
insight. Hard to say when they'll get there, but I'm betting after the
|
|
trials.''
|
|
|
|
``Quite a few weeks,'' Vivienne drily said. ``And to think we used to
|
|
have the occasional restful month, you and I, where there was no
|
|
especially urgent fire to put out.''
|
|
|
|
``A lot more ground to cover these days,'' I mused, ``and a lot more
|
|
fires with it. There's also a last thing, now that I think of it, which
|
|
ought to be soon-''
|
|
|
|
Behind us sorcery roiled as another translation into the Arsenal began.
|
|
Ah, of course Creation would deign indulge me \emph{now}. A moment later
|
|
the Painted Knife and her band of five passed through the gate, bringing
|
|
with them a secret the Dead King believed would chill our blood.
|
|
|
|
Well, I supposed it'd make something to chat about over lunch.
|