885 lines
42 KiB
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885 lines
42 KiB
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\hypertarget{grand}{%
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\section{Grand}\label{grand}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The reed survives the storm, but only in the shadow of the
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oak.''}
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-- Proceran saying
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\end{quote}
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Princess Adeline's hospitality had been flawless, but it was still with
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some irritation that Cordelia left the grounds of her Salian estate.
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Neither the wine nor an exquisite rack of lamb had loosened the Princess
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of Orne's tongue enough for her to reveal where she stood on the matter
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of the provisional superintendence. The other woman had greatly risen in
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influence in the east since the disgrace of House Odon of Bayeux during
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the coup had ended the family's former prominence. Her position was
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further strengthened by the unspoken truth that Princess Adeline was
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Rozala Malanza's voice in Salia, which have her some draw over the other
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members of Princess Rozala's bloc in the Highest Assembly. That she'd
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been noncommittal at dinner was not promising.
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Riding briskly through the darkened streets of the capital, the First
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Prince of Procer mulled over the issue as her escort swept ahead to
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clear the way. She had spent a great deal of goodwill forcing through
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the measures that had bought the help of the Titanomachy, but not so
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much that she should be seeing opposition for opposition's sake at the
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moment. Considering that Rozala and her followers were usually broadly
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in support of motions that would secure further funding for the war
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effort -- as granting the office of First Prince the right to appointed
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superintendents to temporarily supervise the princely collection of
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taxes doubtlessly would -- the hesitation must be coming from the
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perspective that having such a right would grant Cordelia herself too
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much power.
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Perhaps a compromise could be arranged, the fair-haired prince mused.
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One of Malanza's supporters appointed to the head of that newly founded
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office, and a motion in the Highest Assembly legally binding the measure
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to the end of the war against Keter? There was some shouting ahead and
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Cordelia spurred on her mare, only good manners keeping a frown away
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from her face. Four of her personal guards were arguing with what looked
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like an officer of the Salian city guard, tones rising. The First Prince
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approached, dismissing the young guard who tried to argue that it was
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all being handled, and reined in her mount just in time to hear the
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source of the argument.
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``- coming back from a ceremony under House auspices, I can't let you
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disperse them,'' the Salian officer was heatedly saying. ``You'll have
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to go around.''
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``Do you quite understand exactly \emph{who} it is you're speaking to?''
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Captain Anton flatly replied.
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It would be good for her reputation to give way to the commons if
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nothing else, Cordelia thought, and painted a soft smile on her face as
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-- the only warning was the glint of torchlight on steel, behind the
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shutters. Without a single word of warning the three shutters on the
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house to her left were torn down, clearing the way for crossbows that
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promptly fired. She threw herself back, so that her horse might take the
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bolts instead, but her reaction had been too slow and\ldots{} A pale red
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blade carved through the air with a whistle, the Swaggering Duellist
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cutting down the projectiles with impossible swiftness. Landing poorly
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on her elbow, Cordelia still had enough of her wits about her to keep
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her voice calm as she gave her orders.
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``Catch them,'' the First Prince of Procer said. ``Alive.''
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Agnes had been right, Cordelia Hasenbach grimly thought. They had
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finally learned to get around her foresight.
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---
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``Two of them swallowed poison,'' Louis de Sartrons, head of the Circle
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of Thorns, calmly said. ``The third man knew little, even when put to
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sharp question, but we confirmed his identity. His husband was arrested,
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we will see if there is more to be learned.''
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Cordelia slowly nodded, sipping at her lemon water. Uncle Klaus would
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have teased her for not even reaching for a proper bottle after a brush
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with death, if he still spoke to her at all.
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``Praes?'' she simply asked.
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``It was a sloppy operation, by the standards of the Eyes, but I will
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not dismiss the notion,'' the skeletal old man said. ``We gutted their
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ability to operate in the Principate after the coup, it could be a
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reflection of that diminished ability.''
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The Prince of Rhenia prided herself in her ability to read others, and
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though Louis de Sartrons had always been a difficult one -- as was only
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befitting of one of three great spymasters of Procer -- in this
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particular instance his thoughts were not deeply hidden.
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``You do not believe that,'' Cordelia said.
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``It might have been Praesi crossbows used, but the Silver Letters got
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their hands on some stock after the Black Knight was captured,'' the
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older man said. ``Some leftover rebellious elements seem a more likely
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culprit to me, though they will have a backer.''
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A Proceran backer, he left unsaid, and that meant a crown. The finest of
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her spymasters believed that someone in the Highest Assembly was trying
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to kill her. The blonde Lycaonese hid her dismay by sipping at her lemon
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water once more. Even now? Gods, \emph{even now}? She snuffed out the
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anger that rose before it could turn into something uglier, something
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dangerous. Cordelia set down the cup, mistress of her own mood once
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more.
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``Keep me informed,'' the First Prince said. ``That aside, the original
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reason for this meeting still applies. You have word from the League?''
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Louis de Sartrons, thin as a stick and balding, spent a moment watching
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her before finally his lips quirked.
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``Indeed,'' he said. ``The Magisterium of Stygia is reaching out to us
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through informal means. They are interested in the Grand Alliance, and
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Procer in particular, brokering peace in the region.''
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\emph{Of course there are}, Cordelia thought. Were she a less courteous
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woman, she would allowed herself a nasty little smile. General Basilia,
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fresh off her success in installing \emph{Princess} Zenobia as ruler of
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Nicae, had negotiated a truce with the rulers of Atalante and with her
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northern flank clear had begun to march into Stygian territory. She'd
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not even waited for the Magisterium to declare war on her, catching them
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by surprise, and several of the small cities that Stygia and Nicae
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regularly fought to rule over had immediately rebelled at the news. The
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chaos had the magisters unnerved, and rumor had it that Delos was not
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only disinclined to help but looking at snatching a few border
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territories for itself.
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The Secretariat, for all its scholarly reputation, was just as
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opportunistically cutthroat as the other rulers of the Free Cities.
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``Allow me to guess,'' Cordelia airily said. ``We must help them, lest
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wicked Basilia take all of the Free Cities, and they will offer a few
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concessions to sweeten the bargain.''
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``They offer to break ties with Dread Empress Malicia,'' Louis de
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Sartrons replied, sounding faintly amused. ``And not to make offensive
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war for twenty-five years following the peace, save for the four
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thousand soldiers they would lend to the Grand Alliance for war against
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Keter. The usual bribes and gifts were added, of course, as it their
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way.''
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In other words, the Magisterium wanted to hide behind a treaty for a
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quarter century as its rivals returned to warring against each other and
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wanted to buy this at the cheap price of abandoning an ailing ally and
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sending the oldest of their slave phalanx to die up north instead of
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disposing of the aging soldiers themselves.
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``Put them off,'' Cordelia ordered.
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It was tempting to try to make a bargain while the alliance they backed
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-- Basilia and Zenobia -- was on the rise and before it dissolved into
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backstabbing as most Free Cities alliances did, but it would be a
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mistake. If Stygia lost a battle or two on the field as well as a deeper
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cut of territory, it would offer much better terms. Besides, the First
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Prince would not intervene too deeply in the region without first
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holding council with the Queen of Callow. General Basilia was under
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Catherine Foundling's patronage, containing her without the Black
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Queen's assent would be\ldots{} indelicate.
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``I will see to it, Your Most Serene Highness,'' the spymaster replied.
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``As for Mercantis, we have confirmed that Merchant Prince Mauricius is
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taking bribes from the Tower.''
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Cordelia's teeth clenched, though she hid it. Bribes, so that he might
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help along the end of the world? The utter selfish madness of that was
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infuriating. What good would gold do when the Dead King was at the gates
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of Mercantis? Did Mauritius believe he'd be able to buy a peace with
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death?
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``He is not their man, however,'' Louis de Sartrons noted. ``We
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intercepted some communications of the Eyes, and it seems that Malicia
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is rather displeased that he is taking the coin without delivering on
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what is asked. Though the man remains untrustworthy, Your Highness, I
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believe that his intent is to play us against Praes and enrich himself
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as much as possible in the process.''
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Which, while morally repellent in every war, was something that the
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First Prince could work with. Procer was already deeply in debt, but
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Cordelia had been gathering resources for this very eventuality.
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Artworks, artefacts, ancient treasures that her predecessors had filled
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palaces with. There would be talk in the Highest Assembly at a Lycaonese
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like her `pawning off' the wonders of her southern precursors, but let
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them talk. If it kept the Principate afloat, she was not above allowing
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the edges of her reputation to be tarred.
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``Find out the price,'' the First Prince of Procer evenly said. ``But
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pass word along to the Painted Knife: she now has free rein to hunt
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Praesi agents in Mercantis as she wishes.''
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The City of Bought and Sold could do with a reminder that the Grand
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Alliance had teeth of its own. Cordelia drank the last of her lemon
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water, slowly so that the angle of her arm would never be boorish, and
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allowed herself a long breath as she set the cup down. Tired as she was,
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there was more yet to do.
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There was always more to do.
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---
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It was embarrassing for Cordelia to be forced to mediate in the matter,
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not because her authority had been called on but rather because the
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dispute involved one of her closest allies.
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Prince Renato Braganzo of Salamans, who had followed his brother into
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being one of her partisans and bared sword in her defence during the
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botched coup. The mustachioed Prince of Salamans had been painstakingly
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polite since he had been invited to sit but could not quite his anger
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for the man across the table. Prince Salazar Arazola of Valencis, eldest
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child of Princess Leonor and her successor since her abdication at the
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Princes' Graveyard. The young man was more aggressive than his mother
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had been -- Leonor had been careful never too lean too closely the way
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of the First Prince or her opposition -- but he'd also signaled an open
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mind to aligning himself more closely to Cordelia's politics than she'd
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been willing to entertain.
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Which made it all the more unfortunate that the two princes were one the
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edge of open war.
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``There isn't a noble south of Cantal that doesn't know the \emph{Bonito
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Finales} are in the service of the Arazola,'' Prince Renato bit out.
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``The crown of Valencis holds no such contract, as I have told you more
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than once,'' Prince Salazar evenly replied. ``Further accusations,
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Prince Renato, would be a matter of honour.''
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Renato was a seven-sun duellist, from what Cordelia recalled, but while
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Salazar might still be on his fourth sun he was a reputation as a sharp
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sword and his lesser rank was rumoured to come largely from his lack of
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formal matches. The First Prince had been following the dispute long
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before it reached her seat of power, the Silver Letters -- temporarily
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under the authority of Louis de Sartrons, making him the most powerful
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spymaster in the history of the Principate -- having tried to ferret out
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the truth of the claims made on each side. Prince Renato was
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understandably furious because a dozen towns in western Salamans had
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been extorted by a fantassin company, the Bonito Finales, who had even
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dared to sack a town when it refused to `pay extraordinary taxes'.
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Said company had been in the pay of the House of Arazola for decades but
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never formally, as it was used largely for strikes at its Valencis'
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neighbours that the princes of Valencis did not want publicly tied to
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them. It was an open secret in Arlesite lands who the Bonito Finales
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answered to, however, which meant that though difficult to prove by
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legal means Prince Renato's anger was well-founded.
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The trouble was that, according to the Silver Letters, Prince Salazar
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had not ordered the mercenaries to attack Salamans. The fantassins had
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not been paid in six months, which Cordelia's agents believed to be the
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reason they'd taken to extorting towns. Prince Salazar, however, could
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not admit as much without also admitting to House Arazola having
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attacked its neighbours for decades with the Bonito Finales. With the
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younger man's hold on his throne still shaky and his treasury near
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empty, admitting to that was the kind of mistake that would see him
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overthrown by an ambitious cadet branch of the Arazola. Worse, Prince
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Renato had sent some of his horse too unseasoned to campaigned against
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the dead at the border of the principalities and done some provocative
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forays into northeastern Valencis as a sharp warning. No skirmished had
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ensued for now, but Cordelia knew it was only a matter of time if this
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kept up.
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``I am sure His Grace only meant to express frustration at the raiding
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on his lands, Prince Salazar, not to impugn your honour,'' the First
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Prince warmly smiled. ``No doubt you would be just as incensed had a
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Valencian town been sacked, as any worthy prince would.''
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The young man eyed her warily but slowly nodded. Good, Cordelia thought.
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So long as Salazar recognized that extorted tribute could be repaid but
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a sacked town was a much starker offence, this could be salvaged. People
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had died, but the First Prince must ensure than this conversation would
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not end in a way that made the number swell.
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``These\ldots{} animals came from the south,'' Prince Renato said.
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``From Valencis. Do you deny that too, \emph{Your Grace}?''
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``These are troubled times,'' the Prince of Valencis replied. ``Neither
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roads nor countryside are settled. If bandits passed through my lands I
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offer my apologies, but who is to say if this is true? They could have
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come through Aequitan instead. Princess Rozala took much of her soldiery
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north, her holdings have grown turbulent.''
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So had everyone else's, Cordelia knew. With so few armed men remaining
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in the southern principalities and such heavy burdens being forced onto
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the people, an increasing amount of commoners preferred to riot or turn
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bandit rather than let themselves be squeezed any further. And though
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Salazar might think himself clever, trying to push the blame onto
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Princess Rozala -- a common adversary to Cordelia and Prince Renato --
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he had blundered. The Prince of Salamans reddened at the sight of what
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would seem to him the younger royal trying to slither out of paying for
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his crimes, and the First Prince simply could not allow one of her
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finest generals to be troubled over a matter to which she had no real
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relation.
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Besides, the backdraft in the people's opinion should Rozala be recalled
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or condemned over something like this would be\ldots{} severe. Her
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popularity had only risen since her stunning victory at Trifelin.
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``One cannot bring such an issue to trial before the Assembly without
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evidence,'' Cordelia said, her tone a warning to the furious Renato.
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``Though I expect, Prince Salazar, that you understand hosting such
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reprobates \emph{would} be worthy of censure.''
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It would not be treason, not even under the terms of Cordelia's
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yet-to-be-repealed crusade authorities, but it would represent a failure
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of a prince's sworn duty to ensure the safety of the lands he ruled
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over. To depose a prince over something of this sort was not a precedent
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anyone would want to set, given that every principality deal with
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banditry to some extent, but censure would pass without trouble given
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that it was a largely symbolic measure. Or would be, the First Prince
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knew, were Prince Salazar's hold on his throne secure. A censure would
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do just as well as a confession of misdeeds, for the ambitious cousins
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of the Prince of Valencis seeking a pretext for overthrow.
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``Of course,'' the young man replied, bowing his head. ``I would not
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tolerate the presence of murderers in Valencis.''
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Cordelia smiled pleasantly, knowing she'd led him to stand where she
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needed him to. Should the Silver Letters come through, as Louis de
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Sartons believed they soon would, then this could be settled neatly.
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Presently, however, Prince Renato looked on the verge of speaking in
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ager. Best to end this before he could. The First Prince elegantly
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wielded her precedence over the two in etiquette to prevent them from
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directly addressing each other until she called the conversation to an
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end, hinting at Salazar that he should depart first. Perhaps sensing he
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had made a misstep, the young prince followed the unspoken suggestion
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and left her to speak with Prince Renato a little longer. The older man
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calmed, after being offered a second cup of tea, but the anger was still
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in him.
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``I will not let almost a hundred deaths go unanswered, Your Most Serene
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Highness,'' the Prince of Salamans told her. ``Justice must be had.''
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``And it will be, rest assured of that,'' Cordelia calmly replied.
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``War, however, would be disastrous.''
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``I dare not recall my riders until those mercenaries are hanging from
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gallows,'' Prince Renato replied, a tad coldly.
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``I would ask no such thing,'' Cordelia smiled. ``It seems unwise,
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however, for them to continue their forays into Valencis. They only
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serve to warn the bandits of their arrival, making the coming hunt more
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difficult.''
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The mustachioed prince, for all that in some ways he was more openly
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emotional than most Arlesite royalty, was no fool. He grasped the
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message she had sent: that there would, in fact, be a hunt.
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``Perhaps there is truth to what you say,'' the Prince of Salamans
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reluctantly said, then sighed. ``You have been a true friend to the
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House of Bragzanzo, Your Highness, and so I will take you to your word.
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The order will be sent.''
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``You have my thanks,'' the First Prince said, inclining her head. ``I
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understand the trust that has been extended.''
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The older man looked faintly rueful.
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``Then allow me to offer words on wisdom as well, Your Highness,''
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Prince Renato said. ``The opposition to the matter of provisional
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superintendence you mean to bring to a vote in the Assembly runs perhaps
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deeper than you know.''
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Cordelia maintained her calm with great effort, face betraying nothing.
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Her silence invited elaboration.
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``I have been approached,'' the Prince of Salamans said, ``by other
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sitters of the Highest Assembly. Concerns were expressed as to the power
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such a measure, even if temporary, would concentrate in the office of
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First Prince.''
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The fair-haired prince did not bother to note that the measure could be
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enshrined by law as limited in length, knowing the objection went
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deeper: it was the precedent that her fellow princes were uncomfortable
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with. They saw it, she suspected, as the first step towards making her
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office as a queenship over Procer. Power granted in a crisis could be
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granted anew, with lesser pretexts, or simply never set down at all. The
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worst of them would be the most scared, she thought. Those who had been
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underreporting the taxes due to high throne for years, if not decades,
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and were now afraid that their crimes would come back to haunt them.
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As if Cordelia wanted to start a civil war in the middle of a struggle
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for the Principate's very existence, as if she did not simply want the
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princes and princess of Procer to simply \emph{obey the laws they had
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agreed to}. The surge of fury kept her from speaking for a few long
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moments, revealing more than she would have wished. The other prince
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looked, she thought, almost sympathetic.
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``No doubt there is truth to what you say,'' Cordelia Hasenbach echoed,
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her smile a careful artifice.
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---
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Once she knew the right questions to ask, answers came in battalions.
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It was a conspiracy, but not the kind that Cordelia was used to
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breaking. It was not the old politics of the Highest Assembly, the
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tiresome but predictable factionalism that came of jostling for
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prominence in that hall, but an altogether older game. It was fear not
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of the implacable for in the distant north but of the very high throne
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she sat, of what it meant. Her reforms, though passed into law by vote
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after vote, had stoked that fear to new heights and it had spread like a
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sickness to even people she had considered close allies. Princess
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Isabelle of Tenerife, a steady supporter since her ascension, had turned
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on her. So had Sophie's younger brother in Lyonis, even as he swore by
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letters to follow his abdicated sister's old friendships.
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Orense, Arans, Bayeux -- so much for Arsene Odon returning the mercy
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she'd shown him in the wake of the coup -- Segovia, Cleves and finally
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Orne, the very same Princess Adeline who'd hosted her on the night where
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assassins had struck. Adeline was, her spymaster believed, if not the
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leader of the conspiracy then at the very least its most influential
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member.
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``It is a large bloc,'' Louis de Sartrons said, ``but not large enough
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to defeat a motion in the Assembly you might put forward.''
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``It is,'' Cordelia replied, shaking her head. ``While I have patronized
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most of the fresh sitters in the Assembly, they will not remain under my
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guidance forever. When an opposition bloc this large is unveiled, it is
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certain to draw in some of them.''
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If nothing else, some of the crowns in her debt would seek to free
|
|
themselves of her influence by aligning with her opponents. Worse, the
|
|
moment she no longer had a clear majority in votes several of her looser
|
|
allies would reconsider lending their own. The Lycaonese vote was solid,
|
|
as were Brus and Salamans, but aside from that perhaps the only one she
|
|
could rely on if hard-pressed was the Princess of Creusens.
|
|
|
|
``You are certain that Rozala Malanza has no role in this?'' Cordelia
|
|
asked, indulging in a rare instance of repeating a question already
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
``We have personal letters of Princess Adeline specifying that she was
|
|
not to be informed,'' the spymaster said. ``It appears to be the
|
|
Princess of Orne's own initiative, and she believes that Malanza would
|
|
not react amenably.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia dismissed the older man, needing to be alone with her thoughts.
|
|
The nights of Salia had warmed, allowing her to have her windows opened
|
|
for the breeze to whisper through, and the First Prince of Procer leaned
|
|
against the windowsill as she looked out at the city below. When had
|
|
Princess Isabella turned, she wondered? Had it been forcing Gaspard
|
|
Langevin to abdicate for scheming to betray their allies in the middle
|
|
of a war that had done it? Or perhaps evern earlier, the decree that'd
|
|
obligated every prince to make the sum of their debts and the identity
|
|
of their debtors known -- a necessity, if Cordelia was to bargain with
|
|
Mercantis for the realm. It could have been the Principate-wide
|
|
restrictions on exported metals, the ordained sale of all grain reserves
|
|
beyond a certain amount to the high throne, the tax of on the sale of
|
|
any warhorses sold outside the war effort or even the repeal of the
|
|
ancient ban on silver from the Dominion being allowed into legal
|
|
Proceran coinage.
|
|
|
|
Necessary measures, Cordelia had argued before the Assembly, and always
|
|
they had agreed.
|
|
|
|
And now nearly a third of that same Assembly was scheming to defeat her
|
|
proposal for superintendence, even now reaching out for support among
|
|
her own allies. It was not a negotiation that Princess Adeline was
|
|
attempting, that much was clear: the numbers she'd already gathered
|
|
would have been enough for Cordelia to take her seriously, for a genuine
|
|
attempt at a compromise over terms to be made. The Princess of Orne
|
|
wanted her to lose a formal vote on the floor of the Highest Assembly
|
|
for the first time since the failed coup, a stinging and public rebuke.
|
|
|
|
``Was I truly so much of a tyrant, Adeline Sauveterre, that you could
|
|
not even attempt words?'' Cordelia murmured.
|
|
|
|
And she had been careful, so very careful, not to step on toes beyond
|
|
what survival demanded. For every decree passed Cordelia Hasenbach had
|
|
set three aside, never brought them to light out of a desire to avoid
|
|
being seen as taking advantage of the crisis to push through her
|
|
reforms. Many would have helped, cut away some of the many tumorous
|
|
growths the Principate had accrued over centuries of venality and
|
|
corruption, but the First Prince had chosen to use her influence only
|
|
sparingly. Gods Above, she had fought the White Knight and bargained
|
|
with the Black Queen to preserve the rights of the same royals now
|
|
sharpening knives for her back. Had she truly been so domineering that
|
|
this should be seen as earned, as courted?
|
|
|
|
Cordelia placed a hand over her heart, where the last words her cousin
|
|
would every write her stayed with her. How many of her kin, of her
|
|
people, had she sacrificed for the preservation of the Principate of
|
|
Procer?
|
|
|
|
\emph{Enough}, Cordelia Hasenbach thought.
|
|
|
|
The First Prince sent for the same spymaster she had dismissed, as she
|
|
had orders to give.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Prince Salazar was smiling, expectant. He had reached out through
|
|
intermediaries to inform the Silver Letters of the same conspiracy that
|
|
Prince Renato had told her of days ago, adding that it had approached
|
|
him. No doubt he expected his support was about to be bought with a
|
|
resolution of the dispute in his favour. Cordelia instead had her
|
|
attendant -- Léonie, today -- present him with three parchment sheaths.
|
|
|
|
``A gift, Your Highness?'' the Prince of Valencis gamely asked.
|
|
|
|
``In a manner of speaking,'' Cordelia replied. ``Two of these are
|
|
transcriptions of letters your mother exchanged with Captain Raoul of
|
|
the Bonito Finales, regarding raids into Aequitan and Salamans that were
|
|
undertaken at her explicit order.''
|
|
|
|
The young prince went very, very still.
|
|
|
|
``Fakes,'' Prince Salazar hotly said.
|
|
|
|
``The signature is an assumed name, but the handwriting is hers,''
|
|
Cordelia said. ``Your cousin, Lady Francisca, has attested to this by
|
|
oath sworn under the auspices of the House of Light.''
|
|
|
|
``A transparent plot to ruin my good name, surely Your Highness can see
|
|
this,'' the Prince of Valencis tensely replied.
|
|
|
|
``The third,'' Cordelia said, ``is a letter you will receive by noon
|
|
from a captain in your service, reporting that he has found the same
|
|
company holed up in the town of Salanera. Near the border with Aequitan,
|
|
I believe. They appear to be in collusion the ruling lord, having bought
|
|
his friendship with a cut of the loot from Salamans.''
|
|
|
|
The young prince paled. This was, they now both understood, not a
|
|
negotiation. It never had been.
|
|
|
|
``Your principality troops will join those of Prince Renato in capturing
|
|
these bandits,'' Cordelia said. ``The crown of Valencis will offer
|
|
appropriate reparations to the crown of Salamans for the extortion and
|
|
the sacked town, which took place due to its negligence. It will also
|
|
send the ruling lord of Salanera to Prince Renato so that he might be
|
|
tried in the royal court as accomplice to all these deeds.''
|
|
|
|
Prince Salazar's brow creased ever so slightly as the younger ruler
|
|
grasped that he was not going to be personally being attainted for any
|
|
of this. That no mention of his mother's letters had been made. Cordelia
|
|
pleasantly smiled.
|
|
|
|
``I understand you were approached for an alliance by interested
|
|
parties,'' the First Prince said.
|
|
|
|
``I have, it seems, already chosen my side,'' Prince Salazar said, a tad
|
|
drily.
|
|
|
|
``So you have,'' Cordelia evenly replied. ``Accept it regardless.''
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Salamans was no Arnaud Brogloise, monstrously ruthless in
|
|
the service of the greater good of the Principate, but he would serve
|
|
her purposes regardless.
|
|
|
|
``What a lark that will be,'' the prince sighed, accepting the brisk
|
|
turn of the Ebb with some grace. ``And what I am to uncover your behalf,
|
|
Your Highness?''
|
|
|
|
``Do you know, Your Grace, what the legal definition of warfare is
|
|
according to our laws?'' Cordelia asked.
|
|
|
|
Prince Salazar cocked an eyebrow. It was elementary knowledge, to a
|
|
prince.
|
|
|
|
``Action undertaken on behalf of a crown that meets the requirements of
|
|
violence, trespass and righteousness,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``Indeed,'' the First Prince said. ``That is, at least, one of them.''
|
|
|
|
``I do not follow your meaning,'' Prince Salazar admitted.
|
|
|
|
``This definition came after the reforms that followed the teachings of
|
|
Sister Salienta,'' Cordelia said. ``The powers granted to the office of
|
|
First Prince in time of crusade were determined much earlier in the
|
|
history of the Principate, and so function under an earlier legal
|
|
definition of warfare.''
|
|
|
|
Proving this beyond dispute had been difficult, but then the First
|
|
Prince did have a particularly skilled Librarian at hand. The
|
|
fair-haired princess amiably smiled.
|
|
|
|
``You are to find me treason, Prince Salazar,'' she said, ``that does
|
|
not know what it is.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``Prince Florimont Langevin,'' Louis de Sartons said.
|
|
|
|
The name echoed in the silence of the parlour. The Prince of Cleves, it
|
|
seemed, had not forgiven the forced abdication of his father. That it
|
|
had been made necessary by a nearly disastrous bout of stupidity that
|
|
had not only embarrassed the Principate and burned goodwill with some of
|
|
its most important allies but also nearly drawn in Chosen into Proceran
|
|
territorial disputes was evidently of little importance. It must be,
|
|
else why else would the son of Gaspard Langevin not only join Princess
|
|
Adeline's alliance but go even a step further and even attempt
|
|
Cordelia's assassination?
|
|
|
|
``He was approached by the last vestiges of the rebellious Silver
|
|
Letters, not the other way around, but he appears to have embraced the
|
|
opportunity eagerly,'' the spymaster continued.
|
|
|
|
Prince Florimont had been busier than Cordelia ever knew, it seemed. She
|
|
had wondered at his lingering in the capital even after the Highest
|
|
Assembly confirmed him as Prince of Cleves, but believed it to be mere
|
|
courting of a place as one of Rozala Malanza's followers through
|
|
Princess Adeline. What an ambitious young man he had turned out to be.
|
|
|
|
``Do we have proof?'' Cordelia asked.
|
|
|
|
``Enough to stain his reputation, should we release it,'' the skeletal
|
|
old man said. ``Nothing that would sway the Highest Assembly, however.
|
|
It is all circumstantial, or lesser proof.''
|
|
|
|
Nothing material and evident, the last meant, or testimony only by
|
|
individuals who could not take an oath under House auspices -- because
|
|
of past criminal offences, contradicting oaths or possession of magic.
|
|
It was a dark irony, Cordelia considered, that the last of these three
|
|
was an injustice she had several times restrained herself from undoing
|
|
because she'd believed it would have caused too strong a resentment in
|
|
the Highest Assembly. Neither just nor unjust, she had instead straddled
|
|
the line and reaped only the worst of what she had sown. A lesson, the
|
|
First Prince of Procer thought, that was worth learning.
|
|
|
|
``Reputation is not enough,'' Cordelia said.
|
|
|
|
``I assure you, what we have is suggestive enough the House of Langevin
|
|
would be made into pariahs,'' Louis de Sartons said. ``They would be
|
|
stripped of all allies.''
|
|
|
|
``Arsene Odon was without allies, after the coup,'' Cordelia said. ``And
|
|
now here he is again, dogging my footsteps as part of the conspiracy of
|
|
Princess Adeline.''
|
|
|
|
``You spared Clotilde of Aisne as well, and she has held true,'' the
|
|
spymaster noted.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Ah}, Cordelia thought, \emph{but for how long will she hold?}
|
|
|
|
``Florimont Langevin is not cut of the same cloth as she,'' Cordelia
|
|
said. ``You know this to be true. To corner him and let him stew in his
|
|
resentment would be recklessly neglectful.''
|
|
|
|
Louis de Sartrons studied her for a long moment, eyes shadowed.
|
|
|
|
``A decision of sone weight,'' the spymaster said.
|
|
|
|
``It can be done?'' Cordelia asked.
|
|
|
|
``It can,'' the old man said. ``Should it?''
|
|
|
|
She met his gaze, unblinking.
|
|
|
|
``If you remain of the same mind on the morrow,'' he finally said,
|
|
``then I will obey. Yet I request, humbly, that you reflect on this. It
|
|
is not an order that should lightly be given.''
|
|
|
|
He took his leave soon after, leaving her to her thoughts. Cordelia had
|
|
duties she ought to see to, her hours never empty, but instead she had
|
|
her maids fetch her a shawl and headed for the garden. It was a pleasant
|
|
enough night out, though not so warm that the First Prince would have
|
|
gone without the shawl, but that mattered little to Agnes Hasenbach. She
|
|
wore a long pale dress, already stained from grass and dirt, and the
|
|
sensible shoes that Cordelia had gotten her last winter solstice. She
|
|
was also seemingly lost in thought, seated on her favourite bench and
|
|
looking up at the stars. Cordelia sat by her cousin's side, letting the
|
|
silence stretch out.
|
|
|
|
It was almost restful, to be with someone who required nothing of her.
|
|
|
|
The Augur emerged from her thoughts after a long while, that short bob
|
|
of blond hair turning in startlement when she realized she had company.
|
|
Agnes' eyes -- Hasenbach blue, cold and clear -- were confused for a few
|
|
heartbeats, until her mind returned to the here and the now.
|
|
|
|
``It is taking longer than it once did,'' Cordelia quietly said.
|
|
|
|
Her cousin sighed.
|
|
|
|
``Snow falls, rivers flow,'' Agnes Hasenbach simply said.
|
|
|
|
An old saying of their people, warning that rage against the inevitable
|
|
was wasted breath.
|
|
|
|
``I have favours that could be called on,'' Cordelia murmured, ``among
|
|
Chosen and Damned alike.''
|
|
|
|
And those that she had not traded with, she could be introduced to.
|
|
Neither the White Knight nor the Black Queen would be the kind to refuse
|
|
her this sort of boon.
|
|
|
|
``It avails us nothing,'' Agnes said, sounding surprised they'd not
|
|
already had that conversation. ``It only\ldots{} ah, it is not winter
|
|
yet?''
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Cordelia gently said. ``It is not.''
|
|
|
|
``I was following far threads,'' Agnes said. ``In the south. They grow
|
|
clearer now, fates are precipitating.''
|
|
|
|
There was a beat of silence.
|
|
|
|
``Did you come to ask about Hainaut?'' her cousin asked. ``It is only
|
|
light, Cordelia. Blinding. It does not change.''
|
|
|
|
The First Prince of Procer smiled, the first time today the gesture felt
|
|
genuine.
|
|
|
|
``I had though to ask you for advice, in truth,'' Cordelia admitted.
|
|
|
|
``Owls are gossips,'' Agnes helpfully replied, ``but you can trust a
|
|
pigeon, so long as it is well-fed. Those of Salia are very nosy, but
|
|
they do not spread the secrets.''
|
|
|
|
It was unfortunate that only Agnes seemed able to speak with birds in
|
|
such a manner, as the blonde princess suspected that pigeons would be
|
|
staggeringly successful spies should they be put to work. Some of
|
|
Cordelia's peers seemed to favour friendships with martial Chosen and
|
|
Damned, but to her this was frank stupidity: the most useful of such
|
|
souls in her service was the Forgetful Librarian, who while barely able
|
|
to use cutlery instead brought to the table the ability to see through
|
|
ever single correspondence cipher under the sun. Her own spymaster had
|
|
broached the subject of permanent employment there, and she was inclined
|
|
to agree.
|
|
|
|
``There is a choice that must be made,'' Cordelia told her cousin. ``And
|
|
I do not know the face of the right answer, should there even be one.''
|
|
|
|
Agnes studied her a moment.
|
|
|
|
``This is not a question for the Augur,'' she finally said.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Cordelia quietly agreed.
|
|
|
|
It was a question for one of the last people in this world she could
|
|
trust with her thoughts.
|
|
|
|
``I do not know of Ebb and Flow,'' Agnes hesitantly said. ``We never
|
|
learned, any of us. There was always you for it. It was a relief, that
|
|
it could all be entrusted to you.''
|
|
|
|
``I sometimes wonder how much I truly learned, Agnes,'' Cordelia said.
|
|
``Every mercy I give is repaid with treachery, every striving for reform
|
|
met with sullen resentment. It is not that I am unskilled at this game,
|
|
I know better than that. I simply seems\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
She bit her lip.
|
|
|
|
``As if, sometimes, I am the only one in that hall that sees Procer as
|
|
in need of mending,'' Cordelia said.
|
|
|
|
``The Assembly changes too quickly,'' Agnes muttered. ``Gives me
|
|
headaches.''
|
|
|
|
Even odds, the Prince of Rhenia mused, whether she meant their futures
|
|
or simply their names.
|
|
|
|
``But when I make choices,'' Agnes quietly continued, ``I have a rite.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia's smiled eased, and she met her cousin's eyes seriously. Agnes
|
|
nodded, satisfied.
|
|
|
|
``I make myself remember who I am,'' the Augur said. ``Where I am, when.
|
|
And then I ask myself what it is I want.''
|
|
|
|
And Cordelia's heart broke a little bit for the cousin she'd known since
|
|
they were both but girls, for the way her expression wavered when she
|
|
admitted she so often forgot all these things. But she would take it
|
|
seriously, the First Prince told herself. She closed her eyes, breathing
|
|
out. She knew who she was, for it might as well have been branded into
|
|
her soul Cordelia Hasenbach, First Prince of Procer, Princess of Salia
|
|
and Prince of Rhenia, Warden of the West and Protector of the Realms of
|
|
Man. She sat here in Salia, the heart of the Principate, as the realm
|
|
faced the coming of the end times. Knowing all this, embracing it, what
|
|
did she want? Survival, for Procer and for herself, but that was not a
|
|
want so much as a need. She dug deeper.
|
|
|
|
``I want to make Procer what it should be,'' Cordelia Hasenbach quietly
|
|
said. ``What we promise the world it is, only to so utterly fail.''
|
|
|
|
Agnes nodded, eyes already half-gone.
|
|
|
|
``Then you know,'' the Augur said, ``the choice you must make.''
|
|
|
|
She turned to look at the sky again, going silent, and Cordelia breathed
|
|
out shallowly.
|
|
|
|
So she did.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The timing had to be particular so that the proper effect would be
|
|
achieved. The session for the vote on the provisory superintendence was
|
|
called at the end of the month, as had been announced, but in the few
|
|
hours that preceded the royals or the representatives setting foot in
|
|
the Chamber of Assembly a few events took place in quick succession.
|
|
|
|
First, as she participated in the charitable distribution of bread to
|
|
the impoverished people of the Silenin neighbourhood the First Prince of
|
|
Procer was shot by a crossbow in broad daylight.
|
|
|
|
Second, Prince Florimont Langevin of Cleves took a crossbow bolt through
|
|
the back of the head as returned from a visit to an upscale brothel.
|
|
|
|
Before the hour had passed Salia was a city-wide riot. The Dread Empire
|
|
was blamed, but there was talk of there being traitors in the Highest
|
|
Assembly that had helped the easterners. ``Too Many Cooks'' was heard
|
|
sung in the streets shortly before cobblestones and rotten fruit were
|
|
thrown at the mansion belonging to the Prince of Bayeux, though Arsene
|
|
Odon was far from the capital.
|
|
|
|
Third, formal messengers were sent to every royal and \emph{assermenté}
|
|
in the city to confirm that the First Prince lived and the session of
|
|
the Assembly would still be held.
|
|
|
|
Fourth, a mere hour before the session was to be held every member of
|
|
Princess Adeline's conspiracy save the princess herself received two
|
|
scrolls. One held evidence for the dealings of Florimont Langevin
|
|
relating to an assassination attempt. The other laid out the legal case
|
|
for treason committed by Adeline Sauveterre.
|
|
|
|
Fifth, the Pilfering Dicer was tasked with stealing the luck of one
|
|
woman in particular until misfortune plagued her like fleas might a dog.
|
|
|
|
And so when the First Prince of Procer entered the Chamber of Assembly,
|
|
her torso bandaged more for effect than out of need, it was to silence.
|
|
Every whisper had died the moment she came into the hall. There was
|
|
still one of them missing, for Princess Adeline of Orne had been
|
|
unfortunately delayed after she was thrown by her horse, but the session
|
|
began without her.
|
|
|
|
``As First Prince of Procer,'' Cordelia Hasenbach said, ``I declare that
|
|
every vote held this evening will be entered into the formal public
|
|
record.''
|
|
|
|
It was the Alamans here who first understood the threat, not her own
|
|
countrymen or the Arlesites. It had always been the people of the lakes,
|
|
of the heartlands of Procer, who best understood the weight the opinions
|
|
of the people carried. It fell into place, after that, one stroke at a
|
|
time. Prince Salazar of Valencis brought forth the accusation of treason
|
|
against Princess Adeline, making the faces of more than a few
|
|
conspirators pale in dread. Evidence was brought out, mere
|
|
technicalities -- movement of troops through the territory of another
|
|
prince without explicit permission, an act of war under ancient laws,
|
|
and the hiring away of fantassins already in the service of another
|
|
without reparations being offered -- but enough that the legal
|
|
requirements were met.
|
|
|
|
These were, every soul in this room understood, almost laughable
|
|
charges. Only a First Prince with unshakable support in the Highest
|
|
Assembly, with power and influence at their zenith, might feasibly
|
|
attempt such a transparent ploy without being run out of the Chamber.
|
|
And still, after the evidence was laid out, only silence followed. And
|
|
in that silence the howls of the people echoed loudly, the riots that
|
|
had yet to end. Cordelia Hasenbach watched the Highest Assembly with
|
|
cold eyes. \emph{Which of you}, she asked them silently, \emph{wants to
|
|
be known to the mob as the traitor that helped shelter treason? Which of
|
|
you wants to be known on every whisper as the Praesi hireling, as the
|
|
turncoat that bickered with the First Prince of Procer while her breast
|
|
was still bloodied?}
|
|
|
|
Princess Adeline of Orne stormed into the Chamber but moments later,
|
|
unannounced by heralds, but before she could so much as speak a word
|
|
Cordelia Hasenbach addressed the Highest Assembly.
|
|
|
|
``I now call for the vote on the charges of treason laid against Adeline
|
|
Sauveterre, Princess of Orne,'' the First Prince calmly said, voice
|
|
echoing across the hall.
|
|
|
|
One after another the votes came, and Adeline went from mocking to
|
|
defiant to deflated and finally to \emph{shaking}. Falling on her knees.
|
|
She was condemned unanimously.
|
|
|
|
``See her out,'' Cordelia ordered the guards.
|
|
|
|
She called the vote on the provisional superintendence, then, and after
|
|
not a word of debate it passed unanimously. She saw then in their eyes
|
|
the belief that it was done, that they were free of this drumming.
|
|
Cordelia Hasenbach did not free them. Instead she called for a vote on
|
|
the repeal of the law preventing magicians from taking oaths under the
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auspices of the House of Light.
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By midnight, she had passed every single reform she had ever wanted to
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pass.
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They would unseat her for this, in time, but what of it?
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Cordelia Hasenbach knew exactly who she was, and what it was she wanted.
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