568 lines
29 KiB
TeX
568 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-ebb}{%
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\section{Interlude: Ebb}\label{interlude-ebb}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The highest form of victory is not mere triumph over another,
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but to use such a triumph as the foundation of your own. This way
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superiority is demonstrated not only over one defeated but also one
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victorious, proving your own cunning to be beyond both.''}
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-- Extract from `The Behaviours of Civil Conduct', by High Lady Mchumba
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Sahelian
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\end{quote}
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There were some who called Mauricius indolent but he preferred think of
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himself as patient.
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The expensive chilled wine -- genuine Baalite red, not the imitation the
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Ashuran brewed on this side of the sea -- before him slowly warmed, the
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coating of frost on the goblet slowly dripping down onto the table. He
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had yet to touch it. His eyes remained on the lights of the city
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instead, on the warm glow that set jewels to the dark and the
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heartbreakingly beautiful mosaics of the Irenian Plaza displayed below
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the hidden balcony. It was a common tale in Mercantis that Aeolian
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himself, the famous Tormented Painter, had died moments after putting
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the last touches of colour on the work. Mauricius knew the truth behind
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the unspoken boast, for he'd cared to learn it.
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Aeolian had been eighty-three and dying when he'd begun the work,
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debt-ridden to the extent that he'd been willing to spend even his last
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days on the mosaics if it meant his children would not inherit the
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crushing burden of his lifetime of indulgences. Yet the City of Bought
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and Sold preferred the shorter tale, the one that claimed to own a work
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so beautiful it had taken the life of a Named to make it. It made the
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mosaics no fairer to behold, Mauricius thought. They were, regardless, a
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wonder of this world: moving with hour and sun, a living story of
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interwoven sorcery and skill. But buying the life of a Named spoke of
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power, and for the merchant lords of this city there was nothing more
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intoxicating than that.
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Mauricius ought to know, as the eldest of the living merchant lords.
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Behind him, past the sculpted marble arch bearing a discreet muting
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enchantment, the shadowy silhouette of a waiting attendant stood still.
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The service in Sub Rosa was second to none, even in this island where
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every delight could be bought, though the truth was that Mauricius had
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taken a balcony tonight largely for the view. Few people even knew that
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this place existed, hidden behind wards and secrecy as it was, and most
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believed the Irenian Plaza to be entirely surrounded by the three
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edifices that were the heart of the Consortium's power in this material
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world.
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The Forty-Stole Court, the Guild Exchange and the Princely Palace.
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Power, wealth and influence -- all nestled closely together like chicks
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gathering for warmth. Knowing what was to happen tonight, Mauricius had
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thought it fitting that he should be close to the beating heart of
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Mercantis. Two men were to die tonight, after all. The merchant lord
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slid a finger along the rim of his goblet, watching as beads of
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condensation slid down the sinuous length of silver. Even now, in manses
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across the city, his fellows would be scheming behind closed doors. Dear
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Livia's return from this \emph{Arsenal} bearing the answer of the Grand
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Alliance had thrown the Consortium into disorder.
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Several of the most influential among them had voiced a belief it was
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treason for Ambassador Livia Murena to have agreed to such unfavourable
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terms when half the City knew that the Principate was so deeply in their
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debt it couldn't even see daylight. It was said that there'd been foul
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play. Given that Livia had not let her wife out of her sight since
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returning to the city, Mauricius believed there might be a thread of
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truth there. Not that the opposition cared. The Consortium buried
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bleeding hearts long before they might rise to a position where their
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words might matter, but there were some who objected to fleecing the
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Grand Alliance on more practical grounds.
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If the Dead King won, they first said, we would rue our schemes. That
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found little purchase, for this was not the first crusade to struggle
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against the undead. Always these ended in bloody sacrifice and the
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resumption of the ancient stalemate, as the aftermath decided which
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among the living nations had been the winners and the losers of this
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particular iteration. Yet when it had been argued that in the aftermath
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of the Grand Alliance's victory a burning gaze might be turned to
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Mercantis, more had bought into the argument. Cordelia Hasenbach was a
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civilized woman, and her anger could have been appeased should it prove
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lasting, but it was not so with her allies.
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The Dominion was a pack of savages that killed each other on a whim, and
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Callow was a cauldron of long hatreds. There was a reason that the
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Consortium had never tried to seize Callowan lands, though it had often
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had the strength to do so and feasibly keep them. The scheme of taking
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Dormer and adding it to the holdings of the City had long been
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discussed, but never once undertaken. The lesson had been learned well
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from the Brief War, when Atalante had tried to annex part of the
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Callowan south after buying passage for its war fleet from the
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Consortium. Jehan the Wise had butchered the invaders, which had not
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been unexpected, but he'd then began to raise ships for a retaliatory
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attack on Mercantis itself. Which had been.
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Embassies of the Merchant Princess Clarissa had made it known that the
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City was not involved in the invasion beyond having sold passage through
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its waters, but the Callowans hadn't \emph{cared}. When Daoine ships
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bearing soldiers of the Watch began docking in Dormer, Clarissa had
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realized that the Callowans would go through with an invasion even if
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they were likely to lose, even if the mere undertaking of it would
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bankrupt them for a generation. She'd emptied the coffers of Mercantis
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appeasing the king of Callow, and no merchant lord had ever seriously
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talked of taking Callowan land again. Jehan the Wise had been a Named of
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heroic bent, the practical sorts were now eager to remind the City.
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The Black Queen was a monster that gave even the Wasteland pause, and
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the Consortium wanted to \emph{extort} her?
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Mauricius had been privately amused by that rejoinder, for the Black
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Queen did not truly give the Wasteland pause in the slightest. Some days
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he wondered if anything ever did. Poor Fabianus had been stuck in the
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middle of it and lost what few feathers he'd still had. Their Merchant
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Prince was first tricked into keeping the First Prince's secrets, and
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then was pushed so strongly to reveal them that he'd preferred to recuse
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himself of such matters entirely than continue to be involved. Given
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that Fabianus' office held little direct power but a great deal of
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influence, that decision had practically ended his reign in every real
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sense.
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Mauricius smiled and looked at the shadowed mosaics down below. A decade
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ago, most of the city had thought him the strongest contender for that
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very same office. He was among the wealthiest few -- trading arms in the
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Free Cities was ever a tidy profit -- of the Consortium, he'd served in
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the Forty-Stole Court for over a decade and save for that little offence
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when he'd had his first wife's lover and the man's entire family sold
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into slavery, there were no black marks on his record.
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He'd made sure they all ended up in Stygia, so that they were actually
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slaves even in the legal sense. He was not a forgiving man, and
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preferred his revenges to be of the through kind.
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Though Mauricius was reputed to be somewhat indolent, back then that'd
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been in his favour. No one in the Consortium wanted too motivated or
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skillful a prince lest the days of the Caepio, who had ruled as kings in
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all but name, return. He'd campaigned for the office, of course. Sunk a
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fortune into buying the love of the streets, the votes of the Lesser
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Courts. But he'd not fought for the support of other merchant lords.
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\emph{Indolent}, his supporters had mourned in the years that followed.
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After Fabianus was elected the office. None of them ever learned that
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he'd never sought the title at all: while most saw the elections as a
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gaping pit for coin, he'd been after a profit. Mauricius had required
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twice as much as he'd invested in the election as a bribe, to let
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Fabianus win.
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He'd kept a single gold coin from that bribe, as a sentimental token,
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and as the lights of Mercantis shone in the distance the merchant lord
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took it out of his robes and idly toyed with it. The luster of it
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brought out a hunger he knew would never be entirely sated, but
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Mauricius was a patient man. He'd learned as a boy that the patient
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always got their day, if they picked the right opportunities. And what
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was this era of chaos, if not a great banquet of opportunities? The
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Consortium was fighting itself, the recklessly hungry and the cravenly
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cautious at odds in the markets and the courts. Praesi gold set tongues
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wagging, or silenced them, while the long shadow of the Grand Alliance
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blotted out old certainties.
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Mauricius had taken the Dread Empress' bribes, of course. And he'd
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listened to the honeyed words of her envoys, to the schemes she wove
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even here in the City. He was not in the habit of refusing coin, though
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her plots he'd been lukewarm to. At least until it had all unfolded
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exactly as she had predicted: dear Livia scared into a barely acceptable
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settlement, a band of Named coming to keep the City under the boot and
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the armies of the Grand Alliance charging into Hainaut. Far away, and
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soon to be bloodied. All the while Consortium had turned on itself in
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bitter infighting, needing the guidance that its Merchant Prince had
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surrendered the right to provide. And so Mauricius had agreed to the
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plot, seeing the need for it.
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In the distance, what he had been waiting for all night finally
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appeared: a red light blinked into existence atop a tall tower, for
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three heartbeats before disappearing.
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Merchant Prince Fabianus was dead.
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Indolent, patient, Mauricius waited. It was the better part of an hour
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before a messenger for the Forty-Stole Court found him. Fabianus was
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dead, he was told, and elections would need to be had. An emergency
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session of the Forty-Stole Court was to be held soon. And still
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Mauricius waited. It was almost another hour before he was presented
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with a second cup of chilled wine, and only then did the merchant lord
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smile.
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``Thank you,'' he told the shadowy servant.
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Prosperus Soranus was dead. That was what the cup had told him. And with
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him gone, Dread Empress Malicia had lost her puppet candidate to the
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office of Merchant Prince. All that gold she'd sunk into preparing his
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election would be gone unless she found another flagbearer for her
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interests. And even if she tried, that candidate might just lose to
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Mauricius should he try his hand at being elected. The Empress would
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suspect his hand at work, but she was a practical woman in her own way.
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More gold was coming his way, and soon.
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Merchant Prince Mauricius would walk the line, prevent debts being
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called in early but refuse to extend `dangerous' loans. Negotiations
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would be opened again, seeking better terms. Malicia would get what she
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wanted, a Mercantis unwilling to meekly serve as the coin purse of the
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Grand Alliance, and the Grand Alliance would be pleased by the rise of a
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Merchant Prince willing to actively steer policy to their advantage if
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certain terms were met. There was wealth to be made, standing between
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the Tower and the West, and even more between the West and annihilation.
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Mauricius slowly rose to his feet, finally ready to attend the emergency
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session of the Forty-Stole Court. He was eighty-three, today, and so
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when he looked down at the mosaics of the Irenian Plaza it was with
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something like understanding.
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``You'd understand, wouldn't you?'' Mauricius mused. ``You died
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clutching your brush, after all.''
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---
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Leo had been raised to revile the name of Hypathia Trakas.
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His mother had hated it before him and her father before that, a chain
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going back all the way to the first Trakas to have inherited a mutilated
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throne after Basilea Hypathia lost the ancient rights of their line.
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\emph{There was a time}, Mother had taught him as a child, \emph{where
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we shared power over Nicae with none.} In those days the Trakas had
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ruled as kings, titling themselves Basileus not out of humility but as a
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means to claim descent from the legendary emperor Aenos Basileon -- and
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so primacy over all other crowns come from the collapse of his ancient
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empire. But Hypathia Trakas had been arrogant, and unwise. She had made
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such disaster of the Second Samite war that a swaggering thug of an
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admiral had been able to carve her throne in two: thereafter, there
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would be a Strategos as well as a Basileus.
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Yet the truth was that, for all the bile that Mother had passed onto
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him, neither of them had truly expected that they would be able to right
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this ancient wrong in their lifetimes. They had been taught the
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dominance of their enemies when Leo's own father went to sea and never
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returned, taken by `Stygian pirates' on one of the safest stretches of
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water of the Gulf. Father had been of a military line, an old one and
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more importantly one foe to Strategos Nereida Silantis. The warning was
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heard clearly, and the alliances carefully sealed by Mother withered on
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the vine. The Trakas had tradition on their side, hallowed blood and the
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sacred duties only an anointed Basileus could undertake. They even had
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deep influence in matters of stewardship.
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Yet the Strategoi had swords, and without those what was the rest worth?
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Leo Trakas had been fresh to the throne when the war with Stygia and
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Helike erupted, though of course it was not so simple as that. In
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private the war had been a cause for despair, for when steel was out the
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Strategoi had excuses to meddle in every matter be they high or low.
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Leo's palace would be filled with spies, appointments stripped away and
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granted instead to supporters of Strategos Nereida and the treasury of
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the office of Basileus plundered at will for \emph{war funds}. Silanis
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had even developed ties to the First Prince of Procer, who now showered
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her with silver and soldiers even as the latest Theodosian madman set
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the Free Cities aflame. The years ahead looked grim.
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And then the armies of Helike and Stygia encamped beyond the walls of
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Nicae, and Leo realized he'd underestimated the threat of the enemy
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being fought. Penthes had collapsed into civil war, Atalante outright
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capitulated and Delos so badly mauled it was good as out of the war.
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Bellerophon was busy somehow failing to invade the territories of a city
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at war with itself, as was the wont of the People, but that was hardly a
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relief. Nicae stood alone, and in the streets the people were
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\emph{afraid}. Even the arrival of a band of heroes -- and Leo would not
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soon forget they had gone to Nereida, not him, even though the Trakas
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stood closest to the Heavens by Nicean law -- had done little to improve
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the mood.
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This was no danger to Leo Trakas, for his strengths were not the kind
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that could be unmade by the displeasure of the people. His blood was in
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his veins, his authorities writ into immutable law. It was not so with
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Strategos Nereida Silanis, whose authority came from the sword but also
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from the love of the people. Strategoi hated by the commons had a
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tendency to take sick and die, so that the old families might elect a
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more suitable replacement in their stead. And so Leo Trakas sent what
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few servants were still solely his to whisper in the right ears, to
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wonder if once-bold Nereida had not gone craven in her old age. The
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whispers took, for Nicae's strength had stayed behind its walls during
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the war, and when the enemies assaulted the wall the Strategos fought in
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the ranks.
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It amused Leo Trakas a great deal, in private, that though he had paid a
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man to kill her during the battle the assassin died to a stray arrow and
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the Strategos was still killed by a Helikean blade.
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Leo surrendered to the Tyrant of Helike himself, the red-eyed monster
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humming and grinning like a lunatic all the while before offering terms
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that were highly generous: the only concession required of Nicae would
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be its vote in the election of some nobody Bellerophon diplomat to the
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office of Hierarch of the Free Cities. Unearned as the acclaim was, the
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city thrummed with praised for his `having tricked' the Tyrant into
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gaining nothing of worth from Nicae for his victory. And so when the
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opportunity had come, when the old families had come to him and asked
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for him to officiate over the ceremonial council that would elect the
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next Strategos, he'd done what every Trakas since Hypathia's own
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daughter had craved like a drowning soul craves air.
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``\emph{No},'' Leo Trakas had smiled, savouring the word like fine wine.
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They cajoled and whispered sweet promises, at first. And when that
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failed, oh but how they raged and threatened. Yet it was all but air,
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for Leo was beloved of the streets -- fickle as they were -- and they
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were not. To Nicae, it was a Strategos that had made a disaster of this
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war. They were not clamouring for another, not yet. And Leo Trakas
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intended on having seized power properly, by the time it occurred to
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them that they might want to. At first he courted the First Prince's
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support, for Cordelia Hasenbach had wasted no time in initiating
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correspondence, but when he saw the wind turn against Procer in the
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councils of Kairos Theododian's puppet Hierarch he leaned into it.
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There was nothing the people of Nicae loved more than a good settling of
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scores with the Thalassocracy, and such a war would put him at odds with
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Procer regardless. That lion was getting old anyway, he'd heard: there
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were rumours of the Dead King raiding to the north, even as Praesi and
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Callowans smashed Proceran armies left and right. The League of Free
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Cities was riding high, in contrast, and Theodosian was a madman but he
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was a \emph{successful} one. He was also not as wary of his `allies' as
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he should perhaps be, for when Leo began reaching out to the other
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cities for alliances he found more takers than he had expected. Basileus
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Leo Trakas had already restored the old powers of his blood, but still
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he hungered for more.
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Was his line not descended from Aenos Basileon himself, who had ruled
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over the great cities that did not yet call themselves free? There were
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none more fitting than Leo to rise to prominence in the League, to
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replace Helike and its twitching goblin of a king as the power behind
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their simpleton Hierarch. Gods, but in those heady days he'd come so
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\emph{very close} to getting all he wanted. How had it all gone so
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wrong?
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``The rioters have seized the amphitheatre, my lord Basileus,'' Captain
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Attika told him.
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Leo looked down at the kneeling captain of his guard, letting the calm
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on her face settle his own unease. The game was not yet over, he told
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himself.
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``Better that than the treasury,'' the Basileus finally said. ``Have the
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Valeides and the Petros answered my messengers?''
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``They have not, my lord,'' Captain Attika admitted.
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It was a grim tiding, when even his closest allies within the old
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families were not willing to consider lending soldiers to keep order in
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the streets -- or at least prevent looting of the granaries and the
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island-gardens. Most of Leo's soldiers we bound to guard the palace and
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the treasury, which limited his ability to enforce peace in the streets.
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``Two days,'' Leo said. ``In two days we will receive the Stygian grain
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and the dole will appease the people. We only need to hold for that
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long, Attika.''
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His captain grimaced.
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``I fear that the riots might be as much from the northern news as the
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rationing, my lord,'' she admitted. ``And Stygian grain cannot mend such
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accusations.''
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``Hasenbach,'' the Basileus hissed. ``Her work, this. None of the others
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have the subtlety for it.''
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When the threat had first come through the Grand Alliance -- that band
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of robbers -- that Leo might be named a \emph{friend of the Dead King}
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if he did not surrender and come to terms with `Strategos' Zenobia, he'd
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laughed at the letter. Procer was too busy warring against the dead to
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meddle in the south, and the Black Queen had proved a rather distant
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patron to General Basilia. As for the Dominion it was a pack of
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squabbling tribes that the only civilized lot among them, the Isbili of
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Levante, had little control over. They couldn't agree on the colour of
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tablecloths without honour duel, much less genuine diplomatic policy.
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There was a lot less to laugh about now that word of the condemnation
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had been smuggled into the city and riots shook the streets. Zenobia
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Vasilakis might be a mere country landowner, well beneath any of the old
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families that tended to claim the office of Strategos, but she had
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partisans anyway. Though with no real ties to the ruling naval elite of
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Nicae, the Vasilakis family did have a record of meritorious service in
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the army -- which had often been neglected in favour of the fleet, over
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the years. Army folk kept tight loyalties, which was half the reason
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Leo's own mother had taken a husband from one such family.
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The Vasilakis reputation had won Zenobia sympathies, even before the
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Grand Alliance's official recognition of her as the legitimate ruler of
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Nicae cemented her status. Leo's attempts to present her to the old
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families as a country agitator out to replace the influential lines from
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the city had been largely successful, but after such honours from great
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crowns it wouldn't matter. Grand Alliance backing made them as powerful
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as any of them, in practice, and ties to General Basilia's Helike only
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added bite to her candidature. Zenobia had not been elected under the
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proper ceremony, which would have required Leo to officiate, but fewer
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people cared every week.
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``I cannot speak to that, my lord,'' Captain Attika said, ``but I will
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say that should we lose the grain to rioters, it will deal your reign a
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great blow. I wager they will call it Zenobia's dole instead, and the
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streets will sing her name.''
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``The docks are also guarded by our\ldots{} friends,'' the Basileus
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said. ``They would not hesitate to disperse riots.''
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The thrice-cursed Dread Empress of Praes had massacred and stolen his
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fleet in the same stroke, but there was nothing Leo could do about that.
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What he \emph{could} do was trade the Praesi access to the port for
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repairs of the ships in exchange for them funding Stygian grain
|
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shipments and providing the coin that let him keep paying his army even
|
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after the collapse of trade in the Samite Gulf. If Ashur weren't
|
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fighting a very polite civil war with itself Leo might have been afraid
|
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of reprisals for the sacks of Smyrna and Arwad he'd ordered, but until
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the Thalassocracy dealt with its succession crisis Nicae would remain
|
|
safe.
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|
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``I fear that would only incite further unrest, my lord,'' Captain
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Attika said. ``Would the sight of the dead slaying the living not seem
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to put truth to the accusations of the Grand Alliance?''
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|
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Leo's fingers clenched. He'd not considered that. Any thinking man would
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grasp that the Dead King fielded no armies this far south, but angry
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mobs were not renowned for their wisdom. No doubt his enemies would
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|
seize on the opportunity presented regardless of the truth, too.
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|
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|
``Then we must secure the docks with our own men,'' Leo reluctantly
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said. ``All is lost, without the grain.''
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He peered at his kneeling captain.
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|
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|
``Where would you suggest the men be taken from?'' he said.
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She hesitated for a moment.
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|
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|
``The palace,'' Captain Attika finally said. ``It is much easier to
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defend, and less likely to be attacked. Greed will lead rioters to try
|
|
their hand at the treasury sooner or later, my lord.''
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|
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|
``Agreed,'' the Basileus said.
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|
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|
Or rivals from old families under the guise of rioters, even. None of
|
|
that lot was above plundering the coffers of the state to fill their
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|
own.
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|
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|
``See to it, Captain Attika,'' he ordered.
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|
``My lord,'' she replied, saluting.
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|
|
|
After the door closed behind her, Leo Trakas sat alone on the throne
|
|
he'd been the first of his line to ever fully reclaim. And still the
|
|
thought niggled away at him -- would the Trakas of days yet to come name
|
|
him as another Hypathia, another fool who'd wasted the gifts of fate?
|
|
The long tapestries and slender columns around him gave no answer to his
|
|
musings. No, Leo told himself. The game was not yet over, and this could
|
|
yet be salvaged. Once the grain ships had come many of the rioters would
|
|
disperse and he could finally suppress the riots. After he regained
|
|
control of the city, he could come to terms with `Strategos' Zenobia.
|
|
|
|
To his knowledge she was still unmarried, if a decade older than him,
|
|
and perhaps the surrender being forced on him could be turned into a
|
|
marriage alliance instead. He doubted Zenobia was any more eager to be
|
|
under the Grand Alliance's thumb than he was to be under Malicia's. A
|
|
united Nicae would be able to force Helike to end its incessant
|
|
war-making, especially if it clasped hands with Stygia, and Leo could
|
|
count his debts to the Tower settled if he made that savage Basilia
|
|
cease attacking the reign of Malicia's Penthesian puppet Exarch. Perhaps
|
|
sending for a painting of Zenobia was in order, he thought, so that he
|
|
might have a notion of what he'd be in for.
|
|
|
|
With Captain Attika gone he'd expected servants to begin attending him
|
|
again, but the hall was instead eerily silent. Leo frowned. Was
|
|
something wrong, or did someone simply need to be switched? The Basileus
|
|
became uncomfortably aware that his regal clothes came without a weapon,
|
|
or more protection than a few layers of cloth could afford him. There
|
|
were armoured statues here in the hall, though, bearing the gilded
|
|
armour of his forbears and matching ceremonial blades. Yet if he were to
|
|
leave here having strapped on such a sword and there'd been no trouble,
|
|
if servants saw him\ldots{} Laughter was the death of fear, and much of
|
|
his reign now depended on fear.
|
|
|
|
Silence lingered throughout his thoughts, and that as much as anything
|
|
else made the decision for him.
|
|
|
|
The blade of Basilea Sousanna Trakas came clear of the scabbard with a
|
|
hiss. It fit his hand well, as Sousanna had been tall for a woman. As he
|
|
recalled she was best known for her victories against encroaching Stygia
|
|
and having extracted tribute from the hill tribes later to become
|
|
Helike, so at least half of the old use might see the light of day
|
|
again. Sure-footed even if it had been years since he'd last held a
|
|
blade, Leo pushed open the great gates of the throne hall and slipped
|
|
into the corridor beyond. Still not a soul in sight, he saw with dismay.
|
|
That was not natural.
|
|
|
|
Had his own servants begun to flee the palace, abandoning his cause?
|
|
|
|
More worryingly, there was no trace of his personal guard. There should
|
|
have been four in the corridor, awaiting his orders, but instead only
|
|
further silence awaited. Leo decided to head for his quarters in the
|
|
deeper palace, where more guards should be awaiting him. Tense moments
|
|
walking through deserted hallways came at an end when he found the
|
|
butchered corpse of one of his soldiers on the floor. Stabbed in the
|
|
back, he found, and the body was still warm. It was a coup, must be, and
|
|
by heading to his quarters he'd be putting himself into the hands of his
|
|
enemies.
|
|
|
|
He must turn back now, find the barracks and convince soldiers to escort
|
|
him to the manse of an allied family. The Valeides might have denied him
|
|
more men, but they could not refuse him shelter without dishonouring
|
|
themselves: his father had been brother to their patriarch's wife.
|
|
Discarding the last pretence of being in control, Leo ran for it.
|
|
|
|
He heard it as a whistle first. A the tune of a half-familiar song,
|
|
though he could not remember the name of it. The Basileus abandoned the
|
|
corridor it came from, banking left to shake whoever was whistling.
|
|
Except the same slow, mournful whistle awaited him there. Dead end after
|
|
dead end, until he began to hear the words.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Did we not lose,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{A hundred times?}
|
|
|
|
\emph{Did we not win,}
|
|
|
|
\emph{A hundred times?}
|
|
|
|
His blood ran cold. And as the snare tightened around him, Leo Trakas
|
|
ran until there was nowhere left to run. Cornered in his own palace,
|
|
surrounded by tapestries speaking to old glories as slowly the sound of
|
|
hooves on stone came closer. The scent of blood was in the air. Back to
|
|
a splash of blood-red silk, a golden sword in hand, the Basileus of
|
|
Nicae stood his ground as rider came into the flickering torchlight. Her
|
|
voice was clear, strong.
|
|
|
|
``For we did lose,
|
|
|
|
A hundred times,'' General Basilia sang, a sharp smile on her face.
|
|
|
|
Her sword was already in her hand, dripping red on the stone. Behind
|
|
her, a pack of riders followed her into the corridor -- red-handed
|
|
savages, defiling a palace older than their entire misbegotten city.
|
|
|
|
``And we will win,
|
|
|
|
A hundred times,'' General Basilia sang, the smile fading form her lips
|
|
and sinking into her eyes.
|
|
|
|
She leaned forward on her saddle.
|
|
|
|
``You warned of me consequences once, Leo Trakas. Shall we now finish
|
|
our talk?''
|
|
|
|
The Basileus of Nicae spat to the side, defiant.
|
|
|
|
``Once a hound, always a hound,'' Leo said. ``You will fail your new
|
|
masters, just as you failed your last.''
|
|
|
|
``Where was that spirit,'' General Basilia laughed, ``a year ago?''
|
|
|
|
Her blade rose, and so did his. She spurred her mount and he ran
|
|
forward, ran and yelled until the horse was past him and he felt a flash
|
|
of heat across his chest and face. Blood, he found as he stumbled onto
|
|
the tapestries.
|
|
|
|
```till falls the age,
|
|
|
|
And end the times,'' the general softly said.
|
|
|
|
Darkness came. And just before it, dread. Gods, if they'd taken the city
|
|
-- the undead the Tower had left, would they not burn the city as they
|
|
fled? Malicia would not suffer the port to stand, if she could not use
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
Leo Trakas' last word was a rasping gurgle as he tried too late to speak
|
|
a warning.
|