629 lines
31 KiB
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629 lines
31 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-46-vestibule}{%
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\section{Chapter 46: Vestibule}\label{chapter-46-vestibule}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``I make it a habit to kill all the people at court who do not
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want to usurp me, as they are principled fellows and so eminently more
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dangerous than your average conspirators.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Iniquitous, first of the `Mayfly Emperors'
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\end{quote}
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As of dawn there were eleven villains in Hainaut, if I was considered to
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stand among their number even with my Name not yet fully formed.
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We didn't even make up half the Named currently in the principality,
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though at least we did count for more than a third, yet I honestly
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couldn't think of many occasions were so many villainous Named had
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gathered together in the same place at the same time -- much less while
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being on the same side. Not unless Revenants counted, anyway, which in
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my opinion they did not. It was a lot easier to herd cats when they were
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dead. This was not the sort of thing to approach half-cocked, but I
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found there was a remarkable scarcity of knowledge on affairs this: even
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more than heroes, Below's lot clutched their secrets tightly.
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Fortunately for me, I had to the former heiress to Wolof in my service.
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And considering that Akua had once intended to rule all of Calernia,
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she'd paid even closer attention to the underlying currents of villainy
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that your average Sahelian scion would have. She'd wanted to avoid the
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mistakes of her predecessors, after all. Her ambition itself might have
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been foolish, but I had to concede she'd not gone about pursuing it
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foolishly. Save for one or two exceptions. When I brought up the subject
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in my tent early in the morning, over my breakfast, I found her almost
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eager to talk about it. It was subject of long-standing fascination for
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her, as it turned out.
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``Alliances between villains have not been studied in great depth
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outside of Praes,'' Akua told me, still sounding pleased by the line of
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inquiry. ``And aside from the Tower itself, there are none who can rival
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the records of Wolof on the subject. It was of great interest to my
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predecessors, as you might imagine.''
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Wasn't hard to. I'd seen enough corpses I barely needed to try.
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``I recall hearing the Sahelians haven't raised the most tyrants, among
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the old families,'' I noted a tad more diplomatically. ``Though you're
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up there for Warlocks, right?''
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``The Mirembe of Aksum are not far behind us on the latter count,'' Akua
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said. ``Six less, I believe, though it might have changed since I
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absented myself. They raised very different practitioners from my
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family, however, and their arts have not well adapted to modern
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warmaking.''
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I cocked an eyebrow, curious as to what Praesi highborn might consider
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sorcery aging poorly. Devils didn't exactly get dusty.
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``Impractical?'' I asked.
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``Aksum was once known as the Cauldron of Beasts,'' she said. ``The
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Mirembe have long been known for their interest in the crafting and
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alteration of life.''
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Monster-making, she meant. Charming.
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``They dabbled in heredity as well, and created the first known stable
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breeding program,'' Akua continued. ``The practices have since shifted,
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of course, but their work remains foundational.''
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I could see why their specialties had not aged well. In the old stories
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the Praesi always came at Callow with a few horrifying monsters that one
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of our heroes ended up killing, and the stories about the orcs that
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could breathe under water and the sentient tigers were infamous even out
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west. Not a lot of those had been successes in a more than marginal
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sense, though, and the Reforms would have been the final nail in their
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coffin -- especially so after the Conquest proved that the Legions as
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envisioned by Grem One-Eye and my father were highly effective. And
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since every High Seat and more than a few lesser lords now ran their own
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breeding programs, it'd not given the Mirembe a lasting advantage.
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``That aside, I would caution you to think of raising too many tyrants
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as a crown worth contending for in the eyes of the High Seats,'' Akua
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said. ``The Yeboah of Nok once succeeded at claiming the Tower three
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generations in a row, but none of the oldfamilies were willing to allow
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rule of Praes to be clutched too tightly. Their lines was exterminated
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to the last, and the Sesay were installed to rule the city.''
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``I get your point,'' I drily said. ``It wasn't in the interest of the
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Sahelians to win too much, even when they could.''
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``Exactly,'' Akua smiled. ``Though even over periods of relative
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humility my ancestors were not the kind of people to suffer lack of
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influence. As the Empire often boasts the largest concentration of
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allied villains on Calernia in any generation, grasping the nature of
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such alliances was a necessity.''
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``Allied might be a bit of a stretch,'' I snorted.
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Back in the old days Praes had usually counted more Named than the
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kingdom, but they'd so frequently lost in part because they were as
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interested in backstabbing each other as actually stabbing Callow.
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``Perhaps not to the extent of the Calamites,'' Akua noted, ``but you
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would be surprised. The most famous example would be the Black Knight
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and Chancellor of Malignant the Second, who all histories agree loved
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him deeply. It is why the man reigned a full decade and a half while his
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handling of the Empire can most charitably be describe as occasionally
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benign ineptitude.''
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There'd been a sprinkling of occasions like these throughout imperial
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history, she told me, but the pattern that emerged to my ear was that
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the bonds were usually between smaller groups: a pair or maybe three
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Named, often who'd come up through a transitional Name together. About
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half of the time they ended up offing the ruling tyrant and putting one
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of them up on the seat instead. Being a tightly bound band of five, and
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one essentially loyal to the ruling Empress to boot, was where the
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Calamities had broken fresh grounds.
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``The Empire usually waxes and wanes between three and eight villains at
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any time,'' Akua said. ``Though only four Names are considered to be
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part of the fabric of Praes.''
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I didn't need her to tell me which. \emph{Dread Emperor, Chancellor,
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Warlock and Black Knight.} The four roles that'd been at the core of the
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Empire's way of life for centuries, Yet I was now learning that there
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were much more nuances to those roles than I'd believed. For one, not
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all Names came with every generation. Praesi highborn usually saw which
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had had come and which had not as an indication of what should be
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expected from a reign.
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``It is usually seen as the mark of a weak tyrant to have a Chancellor
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but no Black Knight,'' she told me. ``On the other hand, one who claimed
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the Tower with both a Black Knight and a Warlock but no Chancellor will
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be expected to aggressively contest influence with the High Seats --
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often with a measure of success, historically speaking.''
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``But you get other Named as well,'' I said. ``There's been other
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Assassins -- in other places too, but more in Praes -- and old Callowan
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histories speak of Necromancers too.''
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Unfortunately the skill of Praesi in that branch of sorcery paired with
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the relative magical ignorance of my countrymen meant that old records
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could often only guess at if they'd been dealing with a necromancer or a
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Necromancer.
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``Indeed,'' Akua nodded. ``Before the Wars of the Dead it was common for
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a Lich to exist, and since the heyday of fighting arenas in Maleficent
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the Second's reign we've had recurring Gladiators. The latter is even
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more common in Stygia, however, and so somewhat looked down.''
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``Of course it is,'' I sighed ``I take it Names without much precedent
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are also considered pedestrian?''
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``The Captain and the Scribe were once underestimated for this very
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reason,'' Akua said, then looked chagrined. ``I was not immune to some
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shade of that foolishness, I'll admit. I once thought very little of the
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Scribe.''
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``She cultivates that impression actively,'' I said with a kernel of
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sympathy, though it really \emph{had} been a mistake.
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The Scribe's spies had been instrumental in keeping her contained, back
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when she'd been Governess of Liesse, and that was just a drop in the
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bucket of the quiet work done to hasten her downfall. The bloody coup
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against Hasenbach in Salia was a good example of what Scribe could when
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let off the leash, and its aftermath was \emph{still} haunting the First
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Prince even years later.
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``So I've head,'' Akua neutrally said. ``Regardless, the Empire's
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traditional position as the leading light of villainy-``
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Did that count as blasphemy, I wondered? Probably not unless she was
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talking about Light.
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``- has meant that foreign villains whose defeats were not mortal have
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often fled to Praes for refuge. Treatment varied according to who held
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the Tower, but some rose quite high when the Dread Empire was expanding
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and looking for champions. Sorcerous, in particular, opened his court to
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many and gave them great authority.''
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My brow rose.
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``I don't recall hearing of any foreign villains in Praes during my
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lifetime,'' I said. ``Which surprises me, considering the Grey Pilgrim
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has been terrorizing villains out west and south. There were bound to
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have been a few who wanted to get out before either he or the Saint
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strolled into town.''
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``The end of the last two gave pause to any possible takers, I expect,''
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Akua drily said.
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A beat passed.
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``Black killed them, didn't he?'' I bluntly said.
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``They came in the decades preceding our births -- the Reaver from
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Penthesand the Blue Mage form Ashur, to be specific -- but they were
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brought in as helpers for the Purebloods,'' Akua elaborated. ``Naturally
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the Carrion Lord brutally murdered them at the first halfway decent
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excuse and extended the purge to anyone associated with them. An entire
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branch family of the Niri of Okoro was forced to eat until their
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stomachs burst in what he called a warning about `overly ambitious
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appetite'.''
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I coughed to hide the way my lips were treacherously twitching upwards.
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She noticed.
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``It's considered one of the reasons for the later succession crisis in
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Okoro,'' Akua reproached.
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``Very sad,'' I got out soberly. ``Not at all ironic, or in any way
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cathartic to hear about.''
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I changed the subject before that woeful look she was giving me could
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lead to a reproach about the importance of \emph{not} killing Wasteland
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aristocrats in amusing ways. Talk about not knowing your audience.
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``Praes isn't the only place to have had villain alliances, though,'' I
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said. ``We had the Sable Order, in Callow, and the Free Cities were
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whipped by the League of Rogues for a while.''
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The Sable Order had been a chivalric order led by four fallen heroes
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who'd gathered a lot of disaffected knights, bandits and penniless
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soldiers in an army and brought the kingdom to its knees. They'd had the
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run of the countryside for years, until the Albans managed to finally
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beat them on the field. The League of Rogues -- although they'd never
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called themselves that, and the name had come with later histories --
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has been even more successful, the seven villains having occupied half
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the Free Cities for over a decade and cowed even Ashur for a time. About
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two centuries back, I figured?
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I remembered them in part because they'd surprised me, as a kid. They'd
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been unusually steadfast allies even when they began losing ground,
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supposedly because they'd taken oaths of mutual loyalty to each other
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guaranteed by devils. I'd wondered why every villain do that for two
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months, until I got my hands on the second volume of Wicked Deeds and
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learned about the \emph{very} ugly way the last two had died when the
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devils came to collect.
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``The Iron Kingdoms are arguably a greater success story than either of
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these,'' Akua replied.
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I blinked in surprise.
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``Those collapsed almost immediately,'' I slowly said. ``And they were a
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refuge for villains, but hardly led by them.''
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It'd been one of the history lessons from the orphanage tutors instead
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of one of my private forays, but I distinctly remembered being told
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this.
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``That is what Proceran histories insist, yes,'' she amusedly told me.
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``And so most everyone believes. Fortunately one of my ancestors, Elimu
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Sahelian, served as court mage to `Queen' Alandra so we reliably know
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otherwise from his memoirs.''
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``He served aswhat now?'' I flatly asked.
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``Court mage,'' she repeated. ``It is an old practice of my family,
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dearest. We've gathered many secrets and artefacts this way, leaving
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with them when the cause collapse. We did the same thing with Theodosius
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the Unconquered himself, and a dozen other lesser hegemons.''
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I was quite itching to get my hands on the memoirs of whoever the
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Sahelians had sent to advise the man that was arguably the greatest
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military mind in Calernian history, but that could wait until later.
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``So the Iron Kingdoms were a villain alliance?'' I frowned.
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These days some scholars even argued that the name `Iron Kingdoms' was
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meaningless, that it'd simply been a very chaotic period in Proceran and
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Levantine history where rule of law had frayed nearly beyond repair in a
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certain region, but that wasn't yet the traditional view. Properly
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speaking, the words referred to a bunch of bandit fiefdoms that'd
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briefly seized control of most of current Valencis as well as the
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adjourning Brocelian Forest and Cusp.
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``It was led by nine bandit and raider Named,'' Akua agreed, ``the
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remembered kings and queens of iron. And while three of the `kingdoms'
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collapsed swiftly, as you said, others fared much better. It was nearly
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nine years before Valencis was fully reclaimed, and it took over two
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decades before the five kingdoms in the Brocelian were brought down by
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heroes.''
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I let out a thoughtful noise. Yeah, I could see why Procer in particular
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would have wanted to keep that story quiet. These days the Principate
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went all Damned this and Damned that when Named got inconvenient, but
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it'd been a lot younger back then. It would have been a bad blow to its
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prestige if a pack of villains had been able to seize one of its
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principalities. The kind of blow that made fresh conquests consider
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rebellion and borderlands mull independence. The histories I'd been
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taught would be a lot more palatable to the Highest Assembly, and safer
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to own up to.
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``Neither Praes or these alliances really fit what we have as a
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precedent,'' I finally decided.
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``This is true,'' Akua easily said, ``but attempting to establish direct
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precedents when multiple Named are involved is foten a fool's errand
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regardless. Valuable insight can still gained from observing what led to
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the victories and the failures of these arrangements.''
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``Infighting,'' I drolly said. ``And heroes. Occasionally armies paired
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with the previous too.''
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``Yes, very clever,'' she replied, rolling her eyes. ``About what I
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might have expected, given your terrible essay on the Licerian Wars.''
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I gaped at her. Wait, \emph{what}? Shit, no, it atcually made sense that
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she might have read that at some point. Sure, it was a piece of homework
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I'd written half-drunk in the backroom of the Rat's Nest, but Malicia's
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spymistress had gotten her hands on it back in the day -- she'd even
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mentioned it, when we'd first spoken in the Tower. The Sahelians had
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infiltrated the Eyes and the Tower, back in the day, though I was never
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sure to quite what extent. Merciless Gods, though, was this the only
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piece of writing that I was ever going to be known by?
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``At least Hasenbach won't know about it,'' I mused.
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``Mother sold quite a bit of imperial intelligence through Mercantis
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when her coffers ran low, so she actually might,'' Akua amusedly
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replied.
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\emph{Goddamn Sahelians}, I uncharitably thought. Given my luck, that
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fucking thing was going to end up my only written work to be passed down
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the ages.
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``Regardless, my heart, you are correct that infighting is recurring
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pattern,'' the shade mused. ``Arguably the most important. It has been
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the end of a many a skillful reign in Ater, and certainly precipitated
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the fall of the Iron Kingdoms.''
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``That's the nature of villainy, to an extent,'' I said. ``You don't
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become one without being hard-headed, and unlike heroes we tend to see
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each other as potential threats instead of potential allies. That's a
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recipe for blood on the floor at the first disagreement.''
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Heroes did kill each other on occasion too, I wouldn't ignore that, but
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it was significantly rarer.
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``Ah, but there lies the area of interest,'' she smiled, golden eyes
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alight with pleasure. ``What aspect of villainy in particular drives us
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to conflict amongst ourselves? I have pondered this long, Catherine, as
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when I dreamed of empire still I believed that the governors of my
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Calernian empire must be villains. It was imperative that I understand
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how to keep them from turning on each other as well as myself.''
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I drummed my fingers against the table absent-mindedly as I thought.
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Villains tended to be more prone to violence, broadly speaking. They
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also tended to just be worse people than heroes, but that was a weak
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argument. Most people on Calernia were worse than heroes, by the same
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measure, and they weren't as prone to infighting as villains. Names did
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tend to magnify your flaws as well as your virtues, but that was a weak
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argument as well. Villains weren't all cut from some universal cloth, in
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either personality or objectives, so the consistent infighting of their
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alliances couldn't really be traced back to some universal flaw we all
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shared.
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But then that was looking at the individual, when one of my first
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lessons had been that the system often had the greater impact.
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``Villain stories tend to reward conflict and acting decisively,'' I
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finally said. ``It's an incentive. If it makes you stronger, helps you
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to win, most people will lean into the traits. When unchecked and become
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reflexive, that tendency results in poor decisions like backstabbing a
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nominal ally while heroes are at the gate.''
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``Squire to the end, I see,'' Akua murmured, sounding thoughtful. ``An
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interesting answer, and not one I necessarily disagree with. Yet I
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arrived to a different conclusion myself. I believe that \emph{ambition}
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is the keystone.''
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``Not all villains are ambitious,'' I pointed out. ``It's not like every
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Black Knight eventually made a play for the Tower.''
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``Ambition can be a nuanced thing,'' she replied, leaning forward in
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animation. ``A Black Knight's ambition could be to stand the greatest
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hero-killer of the age, or to lead the Empire to military victory. Rule
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need not be the driving force of them. Ambition is, to my eye, the
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seeking of excellence. The nature of that excellence varies with every
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Named.''
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There was a refrain of old Praesi pride in there, I thought. The old
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guard of tyrants had often claimed that they were seekers of excellence,
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that their philosophy was one of advancement while the Gods Above were
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enemy of all change. Like most philosophical arguments preached by
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people who practiced mass human sacrifice and casual assassination, I
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tended to be skeptical of their claims. If anything it was the Praesi
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circular circus of usurpation and civil war that was stagnant, whatever
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the adherents of `iron sharpens iron' might claim. I didn't entirely
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disagree with her assertions, though.
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``I'll agree that Named tend to be driven people,'' I conceded. ``But I
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don't buy the rest of that. There's outliers, sure, like the Tyrant of
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the Hierarch. But someone like the Harrowed Witch isn't trying to be the
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best anything -- she's trying to not get eaten by the brother she
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murdered and bound, and maybe trying to move up in the world when
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there's nothing more pressing.''
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``She improvised the spell that bound her brother's spirit, highly
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advanced necromancy, with few resources at hand and no margin of error
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or time to spare,'' Akua stated in reply. ``One might argue that her
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ambition is survival in difficult times, and that she has proved highly
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able in pursuing it.''
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``Or she was already skilled, and just got desperate and inspired,'' I
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replied. ``But fine, for the sake of argument let's say I agree with
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you. Where is this headed?''
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``Conflicting excellences are the cause of strife between villains,''
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she said. ``Unlike Above's champions, who seek not excellence but a
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particular outcome, rivalry is natural between us. And given the rewards
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of violence, as you have put it, villains are more prone to disposing of
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rivals and obstacles than reach peaceful accords even when these might
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be more practical. It is why Procer can be the region that has the most
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villains on Calernia, by simple numbers, but alliances between them are
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nearly unheard of.''
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I took me a while to place the expression on her face. She was enjoying
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this, I realized. The discussion, the debates. I did not let it distract
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me, or allow my thoughts to meander down the path of who she might have
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been if she were not the Doom of Liesse.
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``Without a common framework keeping us bound,'' Akua continued, ``like
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the Dread Empire or a greater common ambition in the vein of the League
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of Rogues and the Iron Kingdoms, villains will nearly always default
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into competition.''
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Mhm. The argument somewhat held even when looked at closely, I decided.
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The infighting in villain alliances tended to crop up when the shared
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ambition was collapsing, not in the initial string of victories that
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most villains got to taste before their comeuppance.
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``And how did your great Calernian empire propose to get around that
|
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flaw?'' I asked.
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It'd been idle curiosity that made me ask, but suddenly there was a
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weight to the tent. To this conversation. We had not often talked of the
|
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Doom of Liesse, of her plans when she had been the Diabolist. And never
|
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this explicitly. She did not openly show hesitation, but her silence and
|
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calm face made it plain to me anyway. The golden-eyed shade knew me
|
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well, these days, but that blade cut both ways.
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``By making more of you,'' Akua eventually replied. ``Client queens and
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kings that were genuinely invested in the rule of their province, and
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capable of dominating Named within their realm. So long as my fortress
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stood, fear of Greater Breaches being opened in retaliation to treachery
|
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would have prevented most forms of rebellion -- and I believed myself
|
|
capable of triumphing in the inevitable ensuing shadow wars.''
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``It was a shit plan,'' I frankly replied. ``You gave yourself a single
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point of failure and left each of your `clients' a powerbase to
|
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consolidate. The moment the fortress was out, your entire empire would
|
|
immediately collapse.''
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``Which was why I intended to build several more,'' Akua admitted,
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``once I had the resources of Callow and Praes at my disposal.''
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I breathed out. Shit. I'd never actually considered that. Would it have
|
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worked? No, I eventually decided. The moment she got Malicia and I to
|
|
surrender, Diabolist would have stood as a beacon for every hero on the
|
|
continent. I'd had to bend over backwards to avoid that, and she
|
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wouldn't have been able to manage while standing atop a fucking doomsday
|
|
weapon. She'd not last long enough to make a second fortress, or it'd
|
|
get destroyed while still incomplete. The Diabolist would still have
|
|
made a horrid mess on the way out, though, possibly afflicting several
|
|
parts of Calernia with permanent Hellgates before dying. Gods, Second
|
|
Liesse had been a nightmare but it was still better than\ldots{} this. I
|
|
forced myself to think of something else.
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|
|
``A framework,'' I evenly said. ``The Truce and Terms are one of those,
|
|
arguably. As is the war against the Dead King.''
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|
``The Truce and Terms are and should be considered a construct to help
|
|
to wage war against Keter,'' Akua said.
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|
|
It was quiet, but I could hear the muted relief to her voice. Like we'd
|
|
both stepped away from a ledge.
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|
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|
``It is the war that has gathered Named,'' she continued, ``and in my
|
|
opinion it should be considered the `alliance' within which villains
|
|
will be jostling for position.''
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|
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|
``Jostling only to an extent,'' I reminded her. ``I've avoided a lot of
|
|
fights by having such a strong position that potential rivals didn't
|
|
want to take the risk of a challenge.''
|
|
|
|
More than a few villains coveted my seat as our representative under the
|
|
Truce and Terms but they were also aware that I had an army, Named
|
|
allies and the Kingdom of Callow's power backing me. It wasn't
|
|
full-proof, of course. Some had tried to take that swing anyway, unable
|
|
to deal with being the second in anything. The Red Reaver had been one,
|
|
and I'd made an example of him. Others, like the Barrow Sword, had
|
|
picked a fight to test my strength and then fallen in line almost
|
|
amicably when I'd proven I was not to be trifled with.
|
|
|
|
``Several sources of your current influence are temporary,'' Akua
|
|
pointed out. ``Your position as representative, your queenship over
|
|
Callow, your positional advantage within the Grand Alliance. They can
|
|
serve as a defensive asset, prevent others from striking at you, but
|
|
they should not be confused for a way to make people listen to you. If
|
|
you want obedience of the villains you have gathered here, and for them
|
|
to bind themselves to your Accords, you must find a way to help their
|
|
own ambitions within the frame of your own greater one.''
|
|
|
|
I did not immediately reply. As it happened, I was not under the
|
|
illusion that my current influence among my kind would carry beyond the
|
|
war against Keter. I was in a unique position at the moment but sooner
|
|
or later the stars would fall out of alignment and my authority would
|
|
wane. For now, though, I still had it. And I fully intended to use it as
|
|
much to carry out the war as to prepare the peace that'd follow it. Akua
|
|
was still thinking of this as a warlord would, though or perhaps a Dread
|
|
Empress -- like a centerpiece binding important assets to her by giving
|
|
them what they wanted, and pairing that fulfillment to service.
|
|
|
|
But I couldn't think like that, not if I wanted my work to survive me.
|
|
If I wanted villains to embrace the Liesse Accords, that meant
|
|
convincing them that submitting to some rules was worth the benefits the
|
|
submission would earn them.
|
|
|
|
``Turning wolves into wolfhounds,'' I mused.
|
|
|
|
``One piece of meat at a time,'' Akua Sahelian softly agreed.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The morning's war council yielded no surprises. The Iron Prince and I
|
|
would hold command of the two offensives, and General Pallas broad
|
|
authority but not actual command over the reserves. I'd wasted no time
|
|
in politely requesting of Princess Beatrice of Hainaut, freshly under my
|
|
command, that she `make suggestions' about the fantassins companies that
|
|
would best suit our needs. I made it clear I wasn't trying to leave
|
|
Klaus Papenheim with only dregs, but that she shouldn't feel shy about
|
|
taking the better cut either. She was amenable to the request, and gave
|
|
the impression she amenable to my being in command period. I had hopes
|
|
of a good working relationship.
|
|
|
|
Mind you, she was an Alamans of royal blood. I fully expected she'd be
|
|
able to put a smile on surrendering to Malicia.
|
|
|
|
With that settled, I turned to the looming matter of the council of
|
|
villains. The hill Akua had told me of turned out to be more than
|
|
serviceable, and so we went ahead with using it. The firepit was cleaned
|
|
and deepened, then ten high seats brought out in a broad circle --
|
|
Hakram would not need one, bringing his own. Seating would be assigned,
|
|
I'd decided, to avoid chaos breaking out immediately instead of
|
|
eventually. I considered the known tapestry of grudges in silence,
|
|
looking at the seats. The Barrow Sword and Headhunter couldn't be too
|
|
close without fingers being lost so I put the fire between them, and
|
|
leaving the Summoner by either the Beastmaster or the Berserker was a
|
|
recipe for a snide comment preceding bloodspill so they'd have to be
|
|
split up.
|
|
|
|
Hakram on my left and Indrani on my right was only to be expected, but
|
|
the seat to their sides would be taken as signs of favour so I had to be
|
|
careful who got them. The Rapacious Troubadour would have to get the
|
|
seat by Archer, I thought. I'd left him to handle Named-finding out here
|
|
with little prior warning and he'd done well, so it was owed. It would
|
|
be the Berserker by Adjutant's side, though, I eventually decided. She
|
|
was fresh to Hainaut, and I'd only met her the once before leaving --
|
|
just long enough to send her beyond the trenches to hunt with the Silver
|
|
Huntress -- but during my absence she'd apparently killed a Revenant and
|
|
wounded another, which merited encouragement.
|
|
|
|
That made five seats settled, and I leaned on my staff as I worried my
|
|
lip and considered the rest.
|
|
|
|
``Where do you intend to place the Headhunter?'' Akua asked.
|
|
|
|
I did not glance back, having known she wasn't far. I would have brought
|
|
Hakram as well, but he wasn't exactly in a state to make the trip
|
|
quickly. Indrani was currently sleeping, having travelled a full day and
|
|
night over the last stretch to get here in time, so of my inner circle
|
|
it was only the two of us here.
|
|
|
|
``Between Berserker and Beastmaster, I think,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
The Levantine villain wouldn't be able to easily mess with either,
|
|
considering neither was a slouch up close or a stranger to violence. She
|
|
nodded, eyes pensive.
|
|
|
|
``Barrow Sword by the Rapacious Troubadour?'' she suggested.
|
|
|
|
I hummed. Ishaq tended to get along with people who weren't of the Blood
|
|
-- or whose savagery he did not consider to be damaging his own chances
|
|
of becoming one of the Blood, namely the Headhunter -- so I was actually
|
|
wary of placing him too early. He was valuable because of that relative
|
|
lack of enmities. Still, he had to sit \emph{somewhere}.
|
|
|
|
``Then Concocter by him,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
`Cocky' was both sharp-tongued and not physically powerful, so I had to
|
|
be wary of where I placed her. If she mouthed off to the Berserker she
|
|
was liable to lose a few teeth, not to mention the bloody scalp the
|
|
Headhunter would be after. The Concocter would likely have pockets full
|
|
of poison, I further considered, so if she retaliated the escalation
|
|
would be steep and immediate. Best to avoid the trouble entirely by
|
|
giving her mild-mannered neighbours.
|
|
|
|
``Summoner by her,'' Akua said. ``He will enjoy word of the Arsenal,
|
|
no?''
|
|
|
|
The man was still miffed he'd been assigned as a combat sorcerer instead
|
|
of a researcher, as I recalled, but he'd never hidden his continuing
|
|
fascination for the Arsenal. It was a good pick. With a little luck he
|
|
might even be too busy talking to her to insult anyone else for at least
|
|
\emph{part} of this council.
|
|
|
|
``Agreed,'' I grunted. ``Which would leave the Harrowed Witch between
|
|
Summoner and Beastmaster.''
|
|
|
|
``She was in Archer's service for some time,'' Akua noted. ``That should
|
|
ensure civility of the Beastmaster.''
|
|
|
|
Or encourage him to lash out at the Witch as indirect vengeance on
|
|
Indrani, I thought, since her connections made her very risky to take
|
|
swing at these days. It'd not escaped me that Archer's fellow pupils
|
|
under the Lady of the Lake did not have the fondest memories of their
|
|
time together, though Beastmaster had always struck me as indifferent
|
|
where the Silver Huntress and the Concocter had been venomous. It was a
|
|
measured risk, I decided. The worst the Summoner would send the Witch's
|
|
way was likely to be a few snide words about hedge wizardry, and I
|
|
trusted her to be able to ignore that. She'd struck me as being steady
|
|
of temperament, back in the Arsenal.
|
|
|
|
``It will do,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
My gaze swept over the seats. It would have to. Soon enough we would be
|
|
going to war, and I wanted every sac of venom emptied before we were on
|
|
the march.
|