682 lines
32 KiB
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682 lines
32 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-39-transliteration}{%
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\section{Chapter 39: Transliteration}\label{chapter-39-transliteration}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A sinking ship knows no captain.''}
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-- Ashuran saying
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\end{quote}
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I wondered if Hasenbach was getting as tired of this as I was.
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Probably not. Ruling in Procer involved a lot more wrangling than it did
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in Callow, or at least the Callow I'd risen to rule -- one where most
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great nobles had been stripped of their lands, and the armies of all but
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the crown had been severely curtailed. Outside her own Rhenia, the First
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Prince of Procer's authority had rarely ran further than what she could
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sway others to grant her. Which must have made it all the more galling
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that, after years of staying one step ahead of her opponents at home and
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abroad, she was now getting cornered again and again by a bunch of
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yokels with swords. I supposed if I'd been fuller of myself than I was I
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might have started to believe that Hasenbach was losing her touch, or
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that I was a fine schemer indeed.
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I was not so deluded, thank the Gods. The First Prince was being forced
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to give ground again and again because the Principate was collapsing
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under her, not because she'd proved to be blind or a fool. The crushing
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pressures within her realm where simultaneously forcing her to take
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unwise stands -- like trying to claim the Red Axe -- while robbing her
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of the clout that a First Prince with Procer firmly behind her would be
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able to wield. It was a deathly downwards spiral I'd begun to glimpse,
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one where to keep her head above the water she had to risk ever taller
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waves and even one grave misstep might be enough to see her drown.
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Still, she was not the only one who had demands made of her. There were
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matters I could not compromise over.
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Trying to keep to that while preventing Procer from bursting open like
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an overripe fruit was why I'd sought Cordelia Hasenbach out for a
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private audience and insisted that the White Knight come along. Hanno's
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dedication to trials under the Terms being treated as genuine exercises
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of justice was laudable, if occasionally inconvenient, but even he knew
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that worrying too much about appearances when the hour of need was upon
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us could only be a recipe for disaster. And so the White Knight had
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agreed to discuss the upcoming trial of the Red Axe, if not her
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sentencing, and to try to find a compromise with the First Prince. He
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was a reasonable man; it'd not been hard to exact that promise from him.
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But I also knew that, like all Named, Hanno of Arwad would have lines
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that his very nature would not let him cross. Hasenbach and I,
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ultimately, were practical creatures. Our lines were born of practical
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concerns, either the feasibility of the Liesse Accords or the salvation
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of the Principate. The White Knight, on the other hand, was a principled
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man. The lines he would refuse to cross were moral ones, and while I
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could not find it in me to look down on that neither would I pretend
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that it did not make him unpredictable to deal with.
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``This is nostalgic,'' Hanno smilingly said, setting down his cup of
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tea. ``I've not had this brew since I was a boy.''
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Oh, good. Then if I got lucky I might never again have to force a smile
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after having a sip of this stuff. Even the Firstborn made better tea,
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and their version of it involved no leaves as well as more fluorescent
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snails than anyone should be comfortable with.
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``I have an appreciation for Ashuran leaves,'' the First Prince smiled
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back. ``Though I will confess this particular sort was tricky to
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obtain.''
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``I don't doubt it,'' Hanno snorted. ``Few Ashuran merchants would
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willingly sell copper tea. It's not a true leaf, you see. They make from
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the leftovers and low-quality batches of harvests that can be sold
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abroad.''
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``Even your copper tea would sell for more than its weight in gold, back
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home,'' I shrugged. ``Luxury is in the eye of the beholder.''
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While by the look on his face I suspected that Hanno would have
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genuinely enjoyed a conversation about this, it wasn't what we'd come
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for and so after a few more courtesies the cups went down -- mine only
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lightly touching my lips once more out of politeness, though I did not
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actually drink -- and we got to business.
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``Neither of us is blind to the damage the Red Axe's trial could wreak
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on the Principate,'' I calmly said. ``And no one wants the situation to
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get out of hand. We're looking into way to mitigate the issue.''
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I wouldn't back giving the heroine to the Highest Assembly to try, even
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the series of recent diplomatic reverses Procer had suffered weren't
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enough to get me to consider such a thing, but I'd meant it when I'd
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told Hanno that Hasenbach needed to be given \emph{something}. The
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question now was what she could safely be given, and while I had my own
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notion of what that compromise might look like it would be\ldots{}
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contentious. I wasn't sure either Procer or the heroes would go for it.
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Better to let Hasenbach out one of the contingency plans I did not doubt
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she had up her sleeve. The First Prince's glance at the White Knight was
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measuring, in the heartbeat of silence that followed.
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``The Terms cannot be twisted or turned aside,'' the dark-skinned knight
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said. ``That would be a severe breach of faith. Yet, as the Black Queen
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has said, I am aware of the difficulties this trial poses to Procer. I
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would not cause undue harm if there is a way to avoid it.''
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There, what she'd wanted: confirmation that this wasn't just me dragging
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Hanno in by the ear so that he might go through the motions of making
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nice with her. Not that she'd been inclined to think poorly of him, I
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believed. I'd never deeply discussed either of them with the other, but
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to my understanding there'd always been a degree of mutual respect
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there. Not closeness, though. The White Knight encouraged heroes working
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with the authorities, but never to the extent of becoming part of them.
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Even the little I knew about the Thalassocracy told me where he might
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have gained a taste for that distinction. As for Hasenbach, she was
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understandably wary of the armed Heavens-blessed demigods traipsing
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around her realm that considered themselves only loosely bound to its
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laws -- and so she must be wary of their leader as well, regardless of
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his general amiability.
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``The trouble in in the primacy of the Terms over our laws,'' Cordelia
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said, ``even when applying to individuals of Procer who committed crimes
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against other Procerans.''
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The Red Axe was from the southern outskirts of the Principate, it was
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true. The Wicked Enchanted had been Proceran as well, and Frederic still
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was. All three were also Named, though, which complicated things a great
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deal.
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``The matter of the attempted regicide, in particular, will be a
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contentious matter,'' Cordelia continued. ``If even rulers anointed by
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the House of Light can suffer assassination attempts without Procer
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being able to give answer, there are some who might argue that we have
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all been made subservient to the Chosen.''
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``The Highest Assembly approved of the treaties establishing this,'' the
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White Knight reminded her.
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``Those treaties were approved when it was believed that the Chosen
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would not resort to attempting the murder of princes,'' the First Prince
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flatly said. ``We have been\ldots{} disappointed, in this regard.''
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Harsh but fair, I thought.
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``Middle ground can be found, I expect,'' I intervened. ``The Terms were
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not made to last, and we did not expect they would stumble into such
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challenges. It'll require everyone to bend a little more than they'd
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like, but that's the nature of compromise. I'm sure you have
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suggestions, Your Highness, as to what my ally the fears of the Highest
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Assembly. I'd be interested to hear them.''
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I found her hard to read, in the moments that followed, as she studied
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us both. Hesitating, or gauging how far she'd be able to push this?
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``As the concerns come from the forced impotence of Proceran law, I
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would suggest that the Red Axe be made to stand trial before the Highest
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Assembly,'' she said.
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My brow rose. She wasn't a fool, so that couldn't be all of it.
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``The sentence passed would, undoubtedly, be death,'' Cordelia said.
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``Its application could be suspended, however, until she has also stood
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trial under the Terms.''
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Ah, there it was. If both Procer and the White Knight condemned the Red
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Axe to death, who was to say what sentence was being carried out when
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the blade was swung? If Hanno did the deed, or a Proceran executioner,
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then the balance would be made to swing either way. But there was a
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candidate to keep the weights even, as it were.
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``You'd make Prince Frederic do it,'' I quietly said. ``Since he
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straddles both worlds. That way everyone can go home with a win to tell
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their people about.''
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It'd eat up the man inside, though, I thought. He'd wanted to avoid
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taking her life. But while I liked Frederic Goethal, his peace of mind
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was not worth what it would cost.
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``A compromise I could live with,'' I said.
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Some of the more paranoid among my charges would smell a rat, but with
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the Red Axe dead at the hand of the same hero she'd tried to kill I
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shouldn't get too much pushback. There would be some who'd have wanted
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me to bleed the heroes dry over this, but they'd be few and not popular
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among our kind -- the likes of the Headhunter and the Red Knight were
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powerful, but usually without many allies.
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``What is being suggested,'' the White Knight coldly said, ``is not
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just.''
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My fingers clenched under the table. Hanno's face had gone hard as
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stone.
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``I will not promise a sentence or an executioner before a trial has
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been held,'' the White Knight said. ``This is not a compromise, it is a
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perversion of the oaths we all swore. It does not matter what the Red
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Axe has done: she has rights under the Terms, and among these is a fair
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trial.''
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A steady look was fixed onto the both of us.
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``What you are speaking of,'' he slowly said, ``is not a fair trial.''
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And that was that, wasn't it? As far as he was concerned that settled
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the matter. And for all that Hanno had gone cold, I thought, the look on
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Cordelia's face was no warmer.
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``Compromise requires both sides to give, Lord White,'' the First Prince
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of Procer said, frigidly polite.
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``There is no justice to be found in denying the rights of one to
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safeguard those of another,'' the Sword of Judgement evenly replied.
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``All that is accomplished is the shifting around of injustice.''
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``If a right is abused, then the abuser is no longer deserving of it,''
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the First Prince said. ``Else it becomes a tool of oppression.''
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A little rich coming from a princess of Procer, that, but most of the
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time I still liked that lot better than Above's so I'd let it slide. At
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nineteen the scene unfolding before me would have me giddy: the
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Principate and heroes, both bitter enemies of mine, were at each other's
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throat. But years had passed, and these days I had too much use for both
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to be glad of this.
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``A mechanism has been established to deal with such abuses,'' the White
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Knight bluntly said. ``It has yet to fail, in my eyes, and so your
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treatment of it strikes me as unwarranted.''
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He wasn't going to give an inch on this, I sensed. It just wasn't in his
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nature to give that inch over something like this, when he knew himself
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in the right and all those involved had taken the oaths with open eyes.
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And Gods, part of me agreed with him. The fucking Principate was quick
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to cry foul about the rights of its peoples being `trampled' these days,
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but that conscience had been nowhere in sight when it'd been Callowan
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freedoms on the line. And even now that half the continent had gathered
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to keep it from burning still it insisted on throwing tantrums over gift
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horses, never mind looking them in the mouth. Hanno was looking after
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his own, people whose calling and service he respected and honoured, and
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aside from all the greater considerations he simply wasn't going to dent
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his principles over something like princes being uneasy.
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The White Knight did not believe it his charge to soothe princes, and so
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he'd not sacrifice things that he \emph{did} consider his charge in
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order to do so. It was a fair way of looking at it, if you were a hero.
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I wasn't, though. I'd been one of Below's since age sixteen and more
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importantly these days I was a queen. So while the White Knight wasn't
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wrong, I did not believe that the First Prince was either. She wasn't
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throwing a fit over this for pleasure, or even for principle -- if
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Hasenbach's objections to this were personal in nature, she would have
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stowed them away by now. This wasn't a winning fight for her, and the
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fact that she was \emph{still picking it anyway} meant that she was
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afraid of what would ensue if she didn't. More afraid than of the
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consequences of the mess before my eyes, too, which was more than a
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little worrying. If the First Prince was coming out swinging this hard,
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then at a guess I'd say word about Frederic being bled had already
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leaked to the Assembly. There'd be pressure at her back to do something
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about this, and while I doubted that unseating her was in the cards
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there were other ways this could all go to the Hells.
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If southern principalities started ignoring her orders because they no
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longer believed her to be a worthy leader for Procer, the Grand Alliance
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was in trouble. Weakened as it was, the Principate was still the main
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source of coin and goods for the war effort and those sure as fuck
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weren't coming from the war-ravaged north. And while it might have been
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years since Black torched the heartlands, those lands had never truly
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been allowed to recover: continued conscription, high taxes and
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rationing meant some of the richest lands in Procer had never actually
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gotten back to their old prosperity. No, Hasenbach wasn't worrying about
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things like \emph{authority} and \emph{legitimacy} because she was some
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over-proud highborn twit. She was worried about those things because if
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she lost them then Procer might start coming apart at the seams.
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If she didn't come through for her princes, if she damaged their
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privileges and all the while made heavy demands of them, then why should
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they keep listening to her? Especially if she lacked the means to force
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them to.
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Sentimentality had me on Hanno's side, but sentiment had to be left a
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door in matters like these. The needs of the queen took the victory once
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more, as Akua might have said. And if these two weren't going to reach a
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compromise by themselves, if there was no pretty stainless solution to
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be had, then all that was left was the cheap tricks that'd been my trade
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since long before I put on a crown.
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``Procer could be allowed to dispose of the body as it wishes, at
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least,'' I said, and sighed when Hanno began to respond, ``In the
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eventuality that there is a body, yes, not to make assurances either
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way. But if there is a corpse, White Knight, can it not at least be
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ceded to the Highest Assembly?''
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``It would be a petty thing for a heroine's corpse to be parade like a
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trophy,'' the dark-skinned knight said, tight-lipped.
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``Petty's not unlawful,'' I said. ``So unless your feelings have become
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rules\ldots{}''
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His lips thinned even further. It'd been a hit below the belt, but then
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if the Gods Above had wanted me to fight clean they should have shelled
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out for another five inches at least.
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``In principle, I would have no objection,'' Hanno eventually replied.
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It would have been undiplomatic of Hasenbach to point out that this was
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such a paltry concession as to almost not be one at all, especially
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given that I'd secured it on her behalf, but from the cool serenity of
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her face I got the message anyway. She wasn't going to be appeased with
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a few metaphorical coppers flipped her way. If she didn't get meat to
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throw her princes, it would be on her they turned their fangs. I angled
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my face so that Hanno wouldn't see and cocked a brow at her.
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``It appears we have reached the end of what can be settled today,'' the
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First Prince calmly said. ``I thank you both for calling on me, but I
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believe there is nothing left to say on this matter.''
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``That seems to be correct,'' the White Knight said, tone regretful.
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Not enough to bend his neck, though, so what did regret matter?
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``While I have your ear, Your Highness, I had a few questions about the
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issues Mercantis,'' I idly said. ``If you're willing, it shouldn't take
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too long.''
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Hasenbach considered it for a moment.
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``I had anticipated a longer conversation,'' she said. ``I have the time
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to spare if you do.''
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Hanno cast me a searching look and I shrugged. He and I had already
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talked about Mercantis some, and he'd made a suggestion I was warming to
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-- sending the Painted Knife's band there to keep the merchants honest
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-- but Named arm-twisting was only a small part of the matter and he had
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little to do with the rest. It wasn't his wheelhouse, and if it grew to
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concern him I'd make it known.
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Not that I actually intended to talk about Mercantis.
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I gave him nothing to work with, so the White Knight made his courtesies
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and left. In the silence that followed his departure I glance at the cup
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of tea I'd barely sipped at, choosing my words as the First Prince's
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expectant gaze found me.
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``There's a way for you to get what you want,'' I said. ``Though I
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expect you won't like it.''
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Blue eyes found mine, unblinking.
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``Yet here I am,'' the First Prince of Procer calmly said,
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``listening.''
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---
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Murder of an ally. Attempted murder of an ally. Aid to an enemy of the
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Grand Alliance.
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The Red Axe would stand trial accused of those three breaches of the
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Terms, and that the equivalent of a treason charge was the least of the
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three meant the affair begged for a blood end. The Wicked Enchanter had
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been an unrepentant monster, but until he stepped out of line again he'd
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been under protection: his killing must be punished, and as the
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representative for the villains under the Terms there was only one
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punishment I was willing to accept. I still had the smoldering remnants
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of sympathy for the heroine on trial, but she'd known how this would end
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before she took her first step down this road.
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The Red Axe herself seemed utterly unworried when she was brought in.
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Unlike the Mirror Knight when he'd stood in the same place her hands
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were bound by shackles and she was chained to a steel ring set in the
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ground. Masego and Roland had personally traced the wards that would
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keep her out of the back half of the room should she get free, though it
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was a lot more likely that the crossbowmen and armed guards surrounding
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her would get to it first. It would have been counterproductive to gag
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her, I knew, but as I looked at her calmly expectant expression I found
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I itched to have it done anyway. There were few things more dangerous in
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life than someone with nothing left to lose.
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I'd expected some ceremony out of Hanno, given his years as the champion
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of the Choir of Judgement, but instead he was brisk and business-like.
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``The charges against the Red Axe have been made known to you,'' the
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White Knight said. ``Do any of you intend to lay further ones, or
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contest those I will pursue?''
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Denials all around. Mine was barely more than a mutter, my eyes
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remaining on the heroine.
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``Then I will proceed,'' Hanno calmly said.
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The Red Axe laughed.
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``Gods, but what a pretentious waste of time,'' she said, her Chantant
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lightly accented.
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The White Knight looked unmoved.
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``Do you understand the charges laid against you under the Terms?'' he
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asked.
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``To the Hells with your Terms,'' the Red Axe said. ``They're expedience
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made law and just as ugly as that sounds. I renounce them, and for you
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\emph{fine} people who think you have rights over me, I add this-''
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She spat on the stone, offering up a hard smile.
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``Are you requesting that the protections of the Terms be withdrawn from
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you?'' the First Prince calmly asked.
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Not surprising. Hasenbach would definitely try to get her hands on the
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heroine outright, if she could at this late hour, regardless of any deal
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she and I had made. What I'd offered was barely palatable, while this
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would smack to her of a clean win. Wouldn't work, of course. I wasn't a
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fucking idiot, so I'd told Hanno of my conversation with the Red Axe and
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made sure he spoke with her as well.
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``Whether she desires this now or not is irrelevant,'' the White Knight
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said. ``She agreed to the Terms as made understood to her by the Archer
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and had not renounced them when she committed the breaches for which she
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is now being charged.''
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``Your rules never meant a thing to me, Sword of -- sword of what, these
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days, I ask?'' the Red Axe said. ``Not Judgement, and nothing I see in
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this room makes for a good replacement.''
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``That your word means little does not mean you are exempt from holding
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it,'' Hanno replied without batting an eye.
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Cordelia glanced at me, but there wasn't a lot of hope on her face and I
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didn't add any with my own bland expression. Procer would get no help
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from me if she made a play for snatching now, and Lord Yannu did not
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speak a word to deny the White Knight's claim. Hasenbach let it go, and
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we moved on. The first hurdle had been passed.
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``Given the number of eyewitnesses to the killing of the Wicked
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Enchanter, I saw no need for spoken testimony,'' Hanno continued. ``I've
|
|
selected and now provide thirty different written accounts, which should
|
|
prove sufficient. If there are any doubts among the tribunal, there are
|
|
more that can be sent for.''
|
|
|
|
I'd already read some of those parchments and the facts were not in
|
|
doubt, so I offered the writing only a few looks before setting it
|
|
aside.
|
|
|
|
``I confess,'' the Red Axe said.
|
|
|
|
A moment of silence. Eyes went to the heroine, which only seemed to
|
|
encourage her.
|
|
|
|
``I confess I put down a monster,'' she said. `` That I killed a rapist,
|
|
a murder and something worse. I \emph{confess} I would have made it
|
|
slower if I could, that-''
|
|
|
|
``Guards, please silence the accused until she is called on to speak
|
|
again,'' Hanno said.
|
|
|
|
Spells wouldn't work on her, so it was a gag they had to use. She fought
|
|
them, and the sight sickened my stomach -- all those men in armour
|
|
around a girl, alone and unarmed and tied up. Named, I reminded myself.
|
|
One who'd done things that might yet kill thousands, in full knowledge
|
|
of the risks. The White Knight continued to make his case, as if never
|
|
interrupted. The Kingfisher Prince's personal testimony was a written
|
|
one, as he'd decline to stand before the tribunal, but witnesses among
|
|
my soldiers and the Levantines gave damning account of the attack on the
|
|
Prince of Brus. The Sinister Physician came in to speak as to how
|
|
dangerous the wound had been and was followed up by two priests who'd
|
|
handled the later parts of Frederic's recovery.
|
|
|
|
With attempted murder of an ally solidly grounded in proof, it was `aid
|
|
to an enemy' that was approached. Proof was difficult to establish, when
|
|
it came to the Bard, and while I recounted my conversation with the Red
|
|
Axe it wouldn't be enough to damn her. Fortunately for Hanno, once
|
|
relieved of her gag she was eager enough to handle that herself.
|
|
|
|
``You want to accuse me of working with the Wandering Bard,'' she said,
|
|
amused. ``It's a crime now, is it? I didn't. She worked with
|
|
\emph{me}.''
|
|
|
|
The Red Axe shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``I wasn't tricked, if that's the story you want to spin,'' she said.
|
|
``I knew what I wanted, and she wanted me to get it too. None of what
|
|
she told me was even a secret. It was just names and places, that's
|
|
all.''
|
|
|
|
``To be clear, you admit to collaboration with the Wandering Bard?''
|
|
Hanno asked.
|
|
|
|
``She talked and I listened,'' she said. ``Sometimes I talked too. Call
|
|
that whatever you will. Not like it'll make a difference in your little
|
|
puppet show, is it? You've already got what you need for blood.''
|
|
|
|
Lord Yannu let out a harsh bark of laughter. Well, she wasn't wrong. In
|
|
principle even just killing the Wicked Enchanter would be enough to get
|
|
her executed, much less the rest. With yet another confession on the
|
|
record, the trial was effectively at an end. Hanno asked us if we wanted
|
|
to deliberate, but there were no takers. Recommendations followed.
|
|
|
|
``Death,'' the Lord of Alava said.
|
|
|
|
``Death,'' the First Prince of Procer said.
|
|
|
|
``Death,'' I echoed.
|
|
|
|
The Red Axe mockingly laughed. She'd not been gagged, I supposed because
|
|
of discomfort at the idea of ordering this woman's death without letting
|
|
her speak in answer to it.
|
|
|
|
``Half the world clamoured for her death,'' she said. ``What an eulogy
|
|
that will make.''
|
|
|
|
She wanted, I felt, someone to answer her. To engage. This was the
|
|
culmination of her story, wasn't it? The moment where she was sent to
|
|
her death because of her principles, where defiant and dry-eyed she
|
|
cursed the wicked kings doing her wrong. But no one answered. Because to
|
|
the rest of us the Red Axe wasn't a righteous heroine about to shame us
|
|
for our misdeeds, she was the woman who'd endangered one of the treaties
|
|
keeping the Dead King from winning this war and sweeping over Calernia
|
|
in a tide of death. No one here was enjoying this, I thought, but
|
|
\emph{ashamed}? No.~We were a long way from that. So instead of a cruel
|
|
jest or a justification, as she would have gotten in a story, the Red
|
|
Axe got silence and then Hanno passing her sentence.
|
|
|
|
``Death,'' the White Knight echoed. ``By beheading, to be carried out by
|
|
my own hand tomorrow at Morning Bell. The accused will be granted a
|
|
night to make her peace with the Gods Above, but kept detained until
|
|
then.''
|
|
|
|
``Pathetic,'' the Red Axe said. ``You're all-''
|
|
|
|
Hanno called for her to be gagged again, and as soon as it was done
|
|
asked for the comments from the tribunal. Lord Yannu agreed, sounding
|
|
largely indifferent, but when it was my turn to speak I had more to say.
|
|
|
|
``I am satisfied with death,'' I said, ``but today's proceedings should
|
|
be put under seal instead of made known.''
|
|
|
|
``On what grounds?'' Hanno frowned.
|
|
|
|
``On the grounds that the details of this will make it known to every
|
|
Named that has issued with the Terms that they've got an ally they can
|
|
plot with,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``The Wandering Bard is to be declared an enemy of the Grand Alliance
|
|
regardless,'' the White Knight said. ``What is there to hide?''
|
|
|
|
``That the Bard is after the Terms themselves, instead of the ringleader
|
|
of a plot against the Arsenal,'' I said. ``If she just helped thrash the
|
|
Arsenal, no one will see her as an ally. If this was all a plot against
|
|
the Terms, though? That's a banner, and those always gather people.''
|
|
|
|
The White Knight cast a look at the other two members of the tribunal,
|
|
who did not seem to object. I could see him weigh the costs of refusal
|
|
here and then decided it wasn't worth it.
|
|
|
|
``Agreed,'' the White Knight said.
|
|
|
|
``I am satisfied,'' the First Prince calmly said.
|
|
|
|
The Red Axe, even gagged, was laughing convulsively. People did get more
|
|
perceptive, when standing in the shadow of their gallows. Had she
|
|
figured it all out, or just that Cordelia and I were acting in concert?
|
|
Didn't matter, I thought.
|
|
|
|
It was already too late.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
I'd not slept well, even with Indrani sharing my bed, and rose early.
|
|
|
|
I left Archer to sleep and slipped on my clothes, learning when I limped
|
|
to an early breakfast that it was just shortly past Early Bell -- there
|
|
were still about three hours left before the execution happened. I asked
|
|
for porridge, the bland but filling kind that remained a Legion staple
|
|
to this day, and silently sipped at an herbal infusion that'd soothe my
|
|
leg. It was an odd mood that'd taken hold of me, but I did not fight it.
|
|
It'd pass soon enough, I knew, and I owed it to the woman I was about to
|
|
see killed to at least look what I was doing in the eye. I ended up
|
|
wandering away afterwards, eventually coming up where the killing was to
|
|
be done. These were not, I thought, awe-inspiring grounds. More abattoir
|
|
than gallows: a stretch of naked stone, an executioner's block and a few
|
|
seats on raised platforms.
|
|
|
|
Yet for all the bare bone nature of the place I found it carried a sort
|
|
of cold, impersonal dread to it. Not unlike the Terms themselves, if one
|
|
chose to look at it that way. The Mantle of Woe pulled tight against me,
|
|
hood up, I tucked myself away in a shadowed nook and lit a pipe. A
|
|
stream of wakeleaf gently rose, and I allowed my thoughts to drift. I
|
|
wasn't sure how long I stayed like that, absorbed in my silence, but
|
|
when the sound of steel and leather boots came reached my ear I did not
|
|
need to guess who it was that'd come. There were too many guards for it
|
|
to be anyone but Cordelia Hasenbach. She approached me without escort
|
|
and I flicked her a look from beneath the hood.
|
|
|
|
She'd dressed in dark colours today, if not outright black. They did not
|
|
suit her well, but cosmetics and jewelry hid the fact decently enough.
|
|
She came to stand by my side, reflecting my silence with her own. I'd
|
|
worn no crown, and she only a simple circlet of white gold. My eyes were
|
|
on the block, and without turning I somehow knew so were hers.
|
|
|
|
``She is right about one thing, at least,'' Hasenbach murmured. ``It has
|
|
been an \emph{ugly} affair.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out smoke, letting it rise in curls. It was a calming sight,
|
|
familiar.
|
|
|
|
``I've made a lot of ugly choices, over the years,'' I said. ``I
|
|
believed them necessary, when I made them. More often than not they
|
|
truly were.''
|
|
|
|
``It is the exceptions that stay with you,'' the First Prince said. ``A
|
|
hundred victories will fade, but that sole stinging defeat will sink its
|
|
hooks.''
|
|
|
|
I smiled bitterly.
|
|
|
|
``Can't save everyone,'' I said. ``And if you try to, usually you don't
|
|
even get to save most.''
|
|
|
|
Nauk. Ratface. Farrier. Anne Kendall. There was always a price to trying
|
|
to make a change. And keeping it standing, when it got done? Oh, that
|
|
was even costlier.
|
|
|
|
``Duty is a bed of thorns,'' Cordelia quietly said, ``but someone must
|
|
lie in it.''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, there's not enough kindness left in me to flinch at this I don't
|
|
think,'' I mused. ``I was just wondering at how things change, over the
|
|
years.''
|
|
|
|
``How so?''
|
|
|
|
``The first two lives I ever took were those of a rapist,'' I said,
|
|
``and his accomplice.''
|
|
|
|
She said nothing.
|
|
|
|
``I wonder if I'm still the one holding the knife,'' I murmured, ``or if
|
|
another role does not suit me better, these days.''
|
|
|
|
There was a word, for those who protected the likes of the first man I'd
|
|
ever killed. \emph{Accomplice.}
|
|
|
|
The silence held until the room began to fill with the few dignitaries
|
|
who needed to be there. The Red Axe was brought in after the White
|
|
Knight had already stepped up to the block, a longsword at his hip. She
|
|
wore only a brown shift, walking barefoot, and though escorted to the
|
|
fore she went freely. Unafraid. The White Knight gestured for her to
|
|
kneel, but she refused.
|
|
|
|
``On my feet,'' the Red Axe said. ``To the end, on my feet.''
|
|
|
|
The White Knight slowly nodded. The heroine turned towards us, gaze
|
|
lingering on my hooded and smoking figure besides the First Prince's
|
|
dark-clad paleness.
|
|
|
|
``I go with all my accounts settled,'' the Red Axe said. ``And no
|
|
regrets.''
|
|
|
|
She did not close her eye, even when the blade went through her neck
|
|
with a flash of light. A clean cut, made that way by the searing Light
|
|
on the edge of the blade. She wouldn't have felt a thing. The head fell,
|
|
neck burnt on both ends, and the body toppled. Hanno caught her and laid
|
|
her down, unclasping his cloak and laying it over the corpse. His
|
|
expression was tight as he rose to his feet, eyes searching for
|
|
Hasenbach and finding her. His stride was quick.
|
|
|
|
``The corpse is now passed into the custody of the Principate, as was
|
|
asked,'' he stiffly said.
|
|
|
|
``We thank you for the courtesy,'' the First Prince replied.
|
|
|
|
He grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``What will you do with it?'' he asked.
|
|
|
|
``That is no longer your concern.''
|
|
|
|
Hasenbach's tone was not harsh, but neither was it one that would suffer
|
|
further questioning. The White Knight's eyes went to me, but I did not
|
|
meet them. I breathed in the smoke, spewed it out, and waited until he'd
|
|
left. The room slowly emptied, in the end leaving only the First Prince
|
|
and her guards along with me. Leaning on my staff I limped up to the
|
|
body veiled by the White Knight's cloak, Hasenbach keeping pace with me.
|
|
I laid down a hand on it and hummed. Yes, it could be done.
|
|
|
|
``Step back, if you don't want to leave the room,'' I said. ``It won't
|
|
be easy work raising her coherent enough to stand trial before the
|
|
Highest Assembly.''
|