781 lines
36 KiB
TeX
781 lines
36 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-east-ii}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: East II}\label{interlude-east-ii}}
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It would have been a mistake for him to watch the swords.
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It was her feet that warned him, when he had any warning at all. Amadeus
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circled to the side, shield raised and sword low. Hye darted forward,
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striking high, but he did not bite. Arm tightening, he took the real hit
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-- come by the side, a blindingly quick swing and flick -- on the shield
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and shot into a riposte. She stepped to the side, let it pass her, and
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turned to swing at the arm. Cursing in silence, he struck out with his
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shield. He wasn't quite swift enough to withdraw, her blade slamming
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into his wrist harshly enough he almost dropped his sword, but it wasn't
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as bad as it could have been. The shield slam forced Hye to step back
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and abandon the killing stroke she'd been setting up.
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Amadeus took two steps back, his back drenched with sweat from the hour
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of sparring now coming to an end. He was slowing, losing his edge. Old
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age, he supposed, though the now grey-haired man knew he was closer in
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shape to a man in his forties than this true age. For now, at least.
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``You get baited into that riposte too easily,'' Hye said. ``You got too
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used to being able to kill people with it when you were Named. You're
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slower now, you can't keep using it.''
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``I'm still used to being able to correct midstroke,'' he admitted. ``I
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collected too many habits that relied on Name reflexes.''
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She snorted, bringing her blades back to the sheaths with a purely
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unnecessary twirl. Her long hair was kept in a braid today and he'd
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always loved the look on her -- especially when she had a blade in hand.
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Which she was perfectly aware of, from the sly looks she kept sending
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him.
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``You're too hard on yourself,'' Hye told him. ``In terms of
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swordsmanship, you're still one of the most impressive opponents I've
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had. In the finest ten, at least. You just have more practical limits to
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deal with than before.''
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``I did have a skilled teacher,'' Amadeus smiled.
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She smiled back.
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``I speak, of course, of my mother,'' he casually continued.
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He got a clump of dirt tossed at his head for that, ducking away
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laughing. Since early in theory acquaintance Hye had insisted that there
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be wagers to their sparring, which had never lost him much coin but
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ensured he'd cooked most of her meals on the move for decades. Tonight
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was not to be exception, though he'd been farsighted enough to get the
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stew going before they began. It was mostly ready by the time he went to
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check on it, needing only seasoning. Only roasted greens for side dish,
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as\ldots{} Amadeus felt his heart clench. He forced himself to finish
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the thought. As Wekesa was gone and would no longer assembled a
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makeshift oven to help him make fresh bread.
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Hye sat at his side, silent. She knew how to read his moods, and so
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stayed close but did not impose touch. An invitation. He leaned into her
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side, enjoying her arm going around his waist as he leaned his head on
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her shoulder.
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``Who?'' she asked.
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``Wekesa,'' he said.
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``He went out on his own terms,'' Hye said. ``For his son. Remember that
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as well as the rest.''
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Amadeus allowed himself to enjoy the comfort a little longer then moved
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away. Neither of them spoke more of it. Hye was one of the people he'd
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met who were even more private than him by inclination, she well
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understood that for some the light of day burned more than it cleaned.
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They sat with the stew, the old lacquered bowls -- whose cracks were
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filled, oddly enough, with silver -- that she'd been using longer than
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he'd been alive warm in their hands.
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``I did miss your stew, and that damned lentil soup,'' she laughingly
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told him. ``My pupils were nowhere as fine cooks, even though Cocky at
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least should have been better by sheer divine mandate.''
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``The Concocter?'' he asked, cocking a brow.
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It was not common for her to talk of her old students, but not uncommon
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either. She still had much fondness for her years in Refuge, even though
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she had left that part of her life behind much as she had once parted
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ways with the Calamities. He'd always admired -- envied -- that in her,
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the capacity to walk away. He was not so blessed.
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``Feral little thing,'' Hye fondly said. ``Never seen a Crafter that
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much bite to them before.''
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The Teoteul, her father's people, called Named whose Role tended to
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creation `Crafters'. In those lands they were held in great respect,
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she'd told him, often greater than martial Named.
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``The way you raised them likely had something to do with that,''
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Amadeus mildly said.
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She cast him a sideways look.
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``You can just say it outright,'' Hye said, amused.
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``You already know my thoughts on the affair,'' he replied. ``I can
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understand what you meant to accomplish, but when one's means involve
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cruelty to children they are best reconsidered.''
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``What I \emph{did} accomplish,'' Ranger calmly said. ``They left my
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tutelage with all they needed to survive and thoroughly discouraged from
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banding together. I didn't coddle them like you did your girl, Amadeus,
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but they came out stronger for it. Named that get tucked in at night get
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killed in their first decade. I've seen it happen to more heroes and
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villains than you've put in the ground.''
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``Wealth of experience tends to mean more powerful aspects,'' he
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conceded, ``and personalities less brittle. But you only painted in
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black, Hye.''
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I'd been painfully obvious the few times he'd encountered her pupils,
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never more so than when he'd spoken with young Indrani. The Archer,
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who'd thought the way to tame the evils of the world was to make herself
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and her Name into the Ranger's shade.
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``It's what I know,'' she frankly replied. ``And it's what sticks.''
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He shrugged, seeing no point in further speaking of it. He'd already
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told her his thoughts before and she'd disagreed with them then too. She
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respected his opinions but had never felt bound to heed them in the
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slightest -- which was, he would admit to himself, half the reason he
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was in love with her in the first place.
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``I suppose you think your student-''
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``My daughter,'' he corrected calmly, evenly.
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Pointedly, too. She winced.
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``Look, I've already apologized for that talk in Arcadia,'' Hye said.
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``I wouldn't have been so hard on her if I'd known she mattered to you
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as more than an apprentice.''
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An apology which she meant, and he'd accepted, but it would not mend the
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broken pot. Catherine was now singularly predisposed to seeing Hye as an
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enemy, which might just end up being a massive headache before this was
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all over.
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``She does,'' Amadeus said, ``which is why I see little point in
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comparing the deeds of our former students. She would not have gotten so
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far without your Indrani at her side.''
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Hye's lips quirked at the mention. Ranger was not a particularly fair
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woman and she'd never shied away from having favourites. Of her little
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band of Named, Archer had been the one she most liked. Not out vanity,
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though one might be forgiven for believing that, but because Indrani had
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in her belly a rare sort of fire.
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``Your little queen might still kill you, before this is said and
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done,'' Hye plainly said. ``She won't like what you're scheming.''
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``Neither do you,'' Amadeus teased.
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She rolled her eyes and let it go. Eudokia, for all that he loved her
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dearly, would not have. It was not in her nature to leave details
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unattended to, to embrace the unnecessary risk. That attitude had saved
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his lives many a time, over the years, but it should not be taken as the
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iron law habit had slowly turned it into. They'd gotten old, set in
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their ways even as their bodies stayed the same preserved statues of
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wax. Hye, while older than any of them by centuries, never stayed still
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long enough to rot. There were lessons to learn in that. In embracing
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impermanence. Amadeus should not have presumed he would stay the same
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under the face because the face did not change.
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Or believe the same of Alaya.
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``She brought the last of your pupils east, you know,'' he said. ``I am
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not the only one who might face a rough end.''
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Hye's face was serene as a pond, the shadows of their fading fire
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clawing at her cheeks.
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``Have they grown enough for that?'' she asked. ``I wonder. I will have
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to see, Amadeus, who it is they have become. One last test for the
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children of Refuge.''
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They went to bed early, for they were to begin moving before the dawn.
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Northeast of them was an old run-down inn owned by the cousin of a
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friend, and there letters waited for him. A confirmation from one of his
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people in Ater that Grem was still alive and writing, growing fat in his
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house arrest. Alaya did not seem to suspect. Yet it was the other
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letter, the one from the south, that set him to smiling. Nahiza had
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corresponded with Wekesa for decades, back when she'd still lived in
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Kahtan instead of retiring to her tower, and it was only out of courtesy
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for that she'd accepted his first letter. After that, though, it had
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been out of curiosity.
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The problem he'd put to her was one too fascinating for such a mind to
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resist, and the possibility of eternal glory a temptation to her pride.
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\emph{It can be done}, she wrote in that terse way of hers. \emph{But
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only with the Tower. No one else has the mages and coin.} The formulas
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she'd sketched out as a proof of concept he could not understand, not
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even after all his years of trying to understand more than the barest
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edges of Trismegistan sorcery, but he tucked them away in his doublet
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anyway. They would have a use. What he'd needed of her had been
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confirmation that it was possible at all: the rest was only a matter of
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finding the right place and right time. The last letter he read twice,
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to commit the words to memory. Nim had ambushed Catherine out of the
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Wasteland but the Army of Callow had held fast and now all the vultures
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were drawing in. Good, rather like he'd thought it might go.
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The game he'd not seen coming was the release of Akua Sahelian to become
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the Warlock, but then he'd been consistently blindsided when it came to
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Catherine's treatment of Tasia's girl. That she'd not been publicly and
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brutally executed years ago remained a source of bemusement.
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With the loyalist Legions and those that'd deserted coming ever closer,
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the moment of truth was drawing near. He'd sown the seeds but done
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nothing more than that, could not do more than that. As he'd told Layan
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down south, the last thing Praes needed was another banner raised. When
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the time came, when the blades were out, what was it that would win --
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the mud or the orders? Amadeus of the Green Stretch had spent most of
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his life betting on the mud and he had no intention of ceasing at so
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late an hour. Leaning forward, he put the letter from Kala to a candle.
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It burned bright and quick, smoke curling upwards. He caught sight of it
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disturbing a spider, which crawled to a corner of its webs on long legs.
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Smiling, he dropped the last smouldering remnants of the letter and
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stepped on them.
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Were he a superstitious man, he might have called that a good omen.
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---
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High Lady Takisha Muraqib of Kahtan was to come to Ater, along with most
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the nobility of the south.
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It was an unusual and unforeseen decision, so Malicia investigated. What
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dearest Takisha had wanted out of gathering the entire Hungering Sands
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to her court had become plain enough after a little digging: she'd been
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trying to rally houses to her banner for an attempt at taking back
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Foramen. She could have made such an attempt without such pageantry, of
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course, as Malicia was in no position to stop her. Yet Takisha, for all
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that she was an intelligent woman, was prone to dithering.
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It was a learned error. Kahtan had the most vassals out of all the High
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Seats, which made large scale enterprises for it difficult unless time
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was spent wrangling support. Takisha had heeded that lesson a little too
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well, to Malicia's eye, and come to avoid bold action even when it would
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best serve.
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Yet she was skilled at wrangling, and with the traditional rivals of the
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Muraqib for prominence in the desert -- the Banu of Foramen -- dead and
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gone Malicia had expected her to find a measure of success. That not
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only she had found none but that she had been driven to take her court
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north had been a noticeable enough reversal that it must be looked into.
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Even if this was not the action of a player but instead of an
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undercurrent of popular feeling, clarity was required. The empress'
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plans had arrived at too delicate a stage for interference to be
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permissible.
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Spies came and went, scrying rituals crisscrossed the land. Ime was
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busying herself chasing Amadeus' trail, which she had finally caught,
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but Malicia left the matter to her capable hands. Instead, as she sat in
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a comfortable salon tea in hand, she poured over lists of names. Those
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who had petitioned High Lady Takisha to journey to Ater and formally
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petition the imperial court for intervention in the south. Some of those
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names she well knew.
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Lord Feisal Rahab, whose great silver mines made one of the wealthiest
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men in Praes. Lady Nawal Morcos, whose kin had skirmished with the
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Tribes for centuries. Prominent names, at first, but they had met with
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Takisha late. And more importantly, they had little to gain from the
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decision made. She sent for earlier reports. The first to speak with the
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High Lady of Kahtan were less known to her. Lady Layan Kaisha, Lord
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Habid Tannen, and on it went for a dozen names. Lesser aristocrats, all
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of them, with few common interests that she could grasp.
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She sent for the files the Eyes had on them. Layan Kaisha was one of
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Amadeus' veterans, it turned out. So were two of the rest, but most were
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not. Yet Malicia's mind itched with intuition. This had been done in
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accord, she grew convinced as her Name began to swell. There was
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something to \textbf{Connect} those names even if she did not yet
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understand it. Her aspect had never failed her before, even though the
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leaps of intuition it sometimes leant her were the ficklest part of the
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boons it granted. She set the Eyes to digging deeper at the nobles.
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Behind closed doors, alone, Alaya would admit that the aspect's blooming
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was a deep relief. After the encounter with Foundling in Wolof, she had
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feared\ldots{} Her fingers clung desperately to the cup of tea she
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forced herself to drink with decorum. \emph{Be silent}, the Black Queen
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had ordered, and Alaya's soul had obeyed. As if to be able to declare
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silence was the girl's due Alaya had found that she could no longer
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Rule. Not in the simulacrum she'd worn, not in her own body, not
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\emph{anywhere}. It had taken days for the aspect to return, and even
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now it was weakened. She could feel it in the people around her, through
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the connections that \textbf{Connect} allowed her to instinctively
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understand.
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Her authority had thinned.
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It would come back into its fullness, she thought, that was the trend.
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But after how long? Another month, year, decade? She'd been told that
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the Black Queen was not yet Named and already she could do this. The
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thought was\ldots{} frightening. As was the memory of the girl's mad
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grin as she was wrestled down by a dozen men, Alaya tasting blood in her
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mouth as the little monster cackled. There's always next time, the Black
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Queen had laughed. Foundling was coming for her head, Malicia now
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understood. She would settle for nothing less if she were not
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\emph{forced} to settle otherwise. Practicality and gains would not be
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enough to sway her, Malicia had misread that very badly.
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Spies came and went, scrying rituals crisscrossed the land and her Black
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Knight ambushed the Black Queen in the depths of the Wasteland. Akua
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Sahelian was proving worth the investment.
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``All is in place with the deserters?'' she asked Ime.
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``It is,'' her spymistress confirmed. ``We've prepared the scapegoat.''
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Good, that was one worry in hand.
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``Sepulchral?'' she probed.
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``We still don't know who plans her campaign,'' Ime admitted. ``Not
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anyone openly in her service, at least. It's slickly done, Malicia. It's
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possible whoever is doing it isn't even with her army.''
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That seemed\ldots{} unlikely, from what Malicia understood of military
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affairs. Perhaps a Named would be able to work through such constraints,
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but there was none around to provide such guidance.
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``Best prepare for a bloody end,'' the empress pragmatically said. ``She
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has served her purpose, the time has come to pull the curtain on her
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rebellion.''
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``Troke Snaketooth is on track to win the election as High Lord of the
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Steppes,'' Ime said. ``And he's reiterated to our agents that the terms
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still stand: if we confirm him in that title he'll lead the Clans
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against Nok.''
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Which, combined with the destruction of Abreha Mirembe's field army,
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would be enough to bury the cause of Sepulchral. The Sahel of Nok and
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the Mirembe of Aksum would turn on their ruling kin the moment they
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thought the cause helpless, and Malicia was willing to offer relatively
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mild terms of surrender for their return to fold. No need for
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soulboxing, it would be overplaying her hand. Increases on a selection
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of taxes would hamper their economic recovery for long enough that the
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empress could smother them out instead of wielding an executioner's axe.
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Perhaps an expansion of the Green Stretch at the expense of Aksum, she
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mused, as pointed lesson.
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Treachery was treachery, but no one should swing at the Tower and miss
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without proper admonishment.
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When the in-depth reports on the few nobles she'd asked for came, she
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finally connected the dots. The lords and ladies that were not veterans
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were nearly all from border or trade holdings. The kind that would be
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negatively affected in a direct way by the kind of civil war that'd
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afflicted the Empire for the last few years. \emph{Ah}, Malicia thought
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with a smile. It was a faction she was looking at. A very discreet one,
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difficult to make out on parchment, but a faction nonetheless. One that
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was hostile to her rule of the Tower. A rash of assassinations would not
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be overly difficult to arrange, but Malicia restrained herself. When one
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got rid of weeds, it was best to burn them out root and stem.
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It was too early for blades, and she could make use of this for other
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purposes.
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She had letters from Wasteland lords that expressed concerns about the
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Clans being on the move, and those concerns were slowing her attempts to
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put together one of the measures that would keep her head on her
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shoulders and her crown atop her head. The ritual that might solve the
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Hellgates that terrified the Grand Alliance had exhaustive resource
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requirements, the kind that not even the Tower's vaults could see to.
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She'd had to rely on drawing on the resources of northern lords for some
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of the substances. It needed to be ready soon, she knew. The ritual
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would bind the gates to open only once every decade for seven days and
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seven nights, an ideal solution, but it needed weeks of preparation
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before it could be implemented.
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``Send word,'' Malicia ordered Ime. ``We are holding a formal court
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session in the Tower. As the nobility of the south is coming, so will
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the nobles of the north.''
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The Taghreb play had Amadeus' signature all over it. He liked to move
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pieces towards the centre, were they could be more easily dealt with.
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He'd get his wish, Malicia decided, and more. Much more. Using the
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gathering of the Clans as a reason for the court session would see even
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the most reluctant of lords and ladies come, the empress knew, and with
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them would come an army's worth of retinues. Another assurance to have
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in her pocket, should it come to the worst. With the Empire tended to
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for now, Malicia could turn her attention to further measures that would
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preserve her life and reign. She needed leverage on the Grand Alliance,
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not only Callow, and there was only one place left to acquire it.
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The Free Cities, where General Basilia's attempted unification of the
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League was beginning to worry the cities yet to be conquered. There was
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potential in that, but none of the rulers involved were willing to
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engage in talks with the Tower. Between Hasenbach and Foundling, the
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costs of dealings with Praes had been made to steep for any there to
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still be willing to pay them. How fortunate, then, that Malicia had
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replaced the Merchant Prince of Mercantis with a creature of her own.
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Alaya was the Dread Empress of Praes. Should weather this storm and
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emerge from it triumphant, as she had all others.
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---
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It ought to be an exciting sort of war, but somehow it was not.
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Dear Sargon had offered Akua the use of the Amaranth, a sure indication
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he was looking to get rid of the Tower's leash around his neck. The
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necklace was a splendid thing, a collar and trailing generous expanse of
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beads in polished gold and onyx. Each bead held a small sliver of power,
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at the fingertips of whoever wore the necklace. Yet it was the pale
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purple precious stone set in the hollow of the throat that made the
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Amaranth such a powerful artefact, for within it lay a Titan's tear
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turned to crystal. The purity of the overwhelming grief it emanated
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allowed a caster to free themselves of all feelings and doubts, leaving
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one's will the sharpest it could be. Akua's ancestors had used the
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artefact to make even the most middling of their sorcerer-lords seem
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skilled, in the past, as the Amaranth was enough to turn even a middling
|
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fool into a passable battlemage.
|
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|
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Having been a prodigy herself, she had found instead that the Amaranth
|
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not only ended the difficulties she'd had in acclimating in her new body
|
|
but that it had allowed her to surpass some of her old limitations. The
|
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swiftness of her recovery had made spawned many a murmur that she was
|
|
becoming the Warlock in truth, as was only to be expected, but Akua knew
|
|
it to be otherwise. She had been Named, once, and not forgot the
|
|
sensation of it -- the warmth of unbroken certainty settling on her
|
|
shoulders like a cloak.
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|
|
It had not been difficult to prove her value to the Black Knight, though
|
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the stern Marshal Nim had treated her as a hissing viper at first.
|
|
Detailed information on the spellcasting capacity of the Army of Callow
|
|
and Catherine's own limitations -- which were ever-shrouded, but Akua
|
|
had deduced to some extent -- had bought her a place at the table. From
|
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there, it had only been a matter of finding out the Named's weaknesses
|
|
and presenting herself as a remedy to them. The auxiliary cavalry that
|
|
had been assembled from highborn sons and daughters from all over the
|
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Empire had been defiant of the ogre's authority, at first, but Akua had
|
|
eased the burden. She was of the greatest of lineages herself and
|
|
rumoured to be Named: within days she had them eating out of her palm.
|
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|
|
She took one of them to bed, on a whim. A Taghreb captain with a crooked
|
|
smile and dangerous manners, whose large rough hands had appealed. Not
|
|
so after she fucked him. She'd had her due of pleasure, more than once,
|
|
but it had not sated her. It had\ldots{} lacked intensity, somehow,
|
|
though she knew that to be absurd. She'd been a shade for years, the
|
|
sensations should have been almost overwhelming. Akua was careful not to
|
|
think of what hands might have better pleased -- smaller, knuckles
|
|
always half-scuffed and, no, she was not this \emph{weak}. There were
|
|
better uses of her waking hours than chasing the never-be.
|
|
|
|
Settling the highborn cavalry had not given her a foothold with Nim,
|
|
only ensured that she was now being treated as a mildly useful
|
|
rattlesnake. Organizing the auxiliary mages into proper casting circles,
|
|
however, would be a step in the right direction. Akua did not even have
|
|
a rival there, as the only person of Praes who might have contested her
|
|
-- Nahiza Serrif, widely recognized as the greatest mage in the south --
|
|
had declined service in war due to her age. Dubious, that, but Serrif
|
|
was famously reluctant to ever leave her mage tower and Malicia had
|
|
little to gain from throwing stones at the wasp's nest. After a few
|
|
brisk duels fought under the pretence of practice, Akua broke the
|
|
ringleaders of the most important cliques to her service. Most gave way
|
|
with good grace, as was custom, but some did not.
|
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|
|
Kendi Akaze fell to his knees, panting and covered in sweat. The last
|
|
wisps of his spell faded away, shattered at his feet. Swaths of the
|
|
ground had burned, but Akua was well-learned in curses and he had not
|
|
studied them deeply. His blood was slowly boiling.
|
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|
|
``Surrender,'' Akua ordered.
|
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|
|
``Did you even know her name?'' Kendi hoarsely asked.
|
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|
|
She cocked an eyebrow.
|
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|
|
``Of course you didn't,'' he laughed, wetly. ``Just another mfuasa. A
|
|
servant. We don't even know if she died as your dog or if the Black
|
|
Queen nailed her to a cross. \emph{We weren't important enough the
|
|
question was asked}.''
|
|
|
|
Akua studied him for a long moment.
|
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|
|
``Your sister?'' she quietly asked.
|
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|
|
``And two of my cousins,'' Kendi snarled. ``All for your pride. So you
|
|
could go on serving the enemy. We're all just games to you, aren't we?''
|
|
|
|
Murmurs of disapproval. It was one thing to bear a grudge for the death
|
|
of one's kin, respected even, but for a mfuasa to question their place
|
|
was\ldots{} disgraceful. If they had been fit to be more than servants,
|
|
jino-waza would have ensured that they were.
|
|
|
|
``Surrender,'' Akua repeated.
|
|
|
|
He spat to the side, struggling to rise on shaking limbs.
|
|
|
|
``Her name,'' he croaked, ``was-''
|
|
|
|
The roar of the flames he formed, not even voicing an incantation,
|
|
drowned out his own words. There was an irony in that, she thought. A
|
|
lesson, for those who cared about such things. The spell was at her
|
|
fingertips in an instant, quicker than even his despair. The flames were
|
|
smothered in darkness, rot writhing its way up Kendi Akaze's arm. He
|
|
howled in pain, dropping unconscious, and Akua knew he had to die. He
|
|
would try again, otherwise. Some grudges could not be set aside. And
|
|
still she ended the spell. Ordered him dragged to a tent. They thought
|
|
she would order him tortured, she saw in the eyes of the watchers. Made
|
|
an example of.
|
|
|
|
She had him healed instead. The hatred was not gone in his eyes when he
|
|
woke.
|
|
|
|
``This changes nothing,'' Kendi hissed. ``\emph{Nothing}.''
|
|
|
|
``I did not expect it would,'' Akua quietly said.
|
|
|
|
There was a long moment of silence. She looked outside the tent, hearing
|
|
his steady breath.
|
|
|
|
``Why?''
|
|
|
|
She turned, met pale brown eyes with golden ones. \emph{Because you are
|
|
my past made man}, she thought. \emph{There is no pit in Creation deep
|
|
enough I could bury you in it.} \emph{Because I loved a girl as a
|
|
sister, once. I murdered her, and a thousand other sisters since. Where
|
|
does it end? If no one kills me, where does it end?}
|
|
|
|
``Why not?'' the Doom of Liesse replied.
|
|
|
|
She dreamt of her father, that night, and woke up with red eyes. Iron
|
|
sharpens iron, the other mages praised her. She kept to the old ways
|
|
truly, to have a kept a man who wanted to kill her alive just so she
|
|
would remain sharp. Bile rose in her throat even as she smiled. This
|
|
what who she was now, wasn't it?
|
|
|
|
She did not regret sparing him.
|
|
|
|
With the mages in line, she proved her value to the Black Knight. A
|
|
ritual to bring the Army of Callow forcefully into Creation, to deny
|
|
retreat through the Twilight Ways. It was an inspired piece of
|
|
spellcraft, she thought. And she found her hand, moving again and again.
|
|
Adjusting numbers. It was pointless, Akua thought. Even if the blow was
|
|
softened she would never be forgiven for it. And still. The hand moved.
|
|
Some had hated her, in the Army of Callow. Many. Others had been\ldots{}
|
|
kind. In their own way. How many of them would she kill with her ritual?
|
|
|
|
A few less, she thought. If she could.
|
|
|
|
It worked, and the battles that followed saw her prove herself. Then
|
|
there was that hard night where the Army of Callow reminded them it was
|
|
still the same mule that'd kicked in the ribs of half the armies on the
|
|
continent, slipping behind them. And there would have been battle, but
|
|
Sepulchral surprised them all. Instead there was a tense, hesitant
|
|
stalemate and Akua was at last invited to dine in private with Marshal
|
|
Nim. It was a stiff affair, almost begrudged, and there was no dessert.
|
|
The marshal proved remarkably forthright, by the time the plates were
|
|
taken away.
|
|
|
|
``I can smell it on you, you know,'' the Black Knight rumbled.
|
|
``Ambition.''
|
|
|
|
Akua smiled easily, drinking of her wine.
|
|
|
|
``It seems like a singular curse to be able to smell such a thing while
|
|
living in Praes.''
|
|
|
|
``You're only charming to humans, Sahelian,'' the Marshal glared.
|
|
``Malicia saw use in you and she's been proved right in that, but I
|
|
still question her judgement to have taken up such a hiltless sword.''
|
|
|
|
``Do you often?'' Akua asked.
|
|
|
|
The ogre eyed her in silence.
|
|
|
|
``Question the empress' judgement, I mean,'' the Doom of Liesse idly
|
|
continued. ``Idle curiosity, I assure you.''
|
|
|
|
``Highborn,'' the Black Knight said, tone disgusted. ``He was right
|
|
about you all, B- Amadeus. Even if the sun fell down on us you'd jostle
|
|
for the nicest place to die. You don't know what loyalty means.''
|
|
|
|
Oh my, but what an intriguing mistake she'd almost made. Telling, too.
|
|
She would not be the only to change the word halfway out of her mouth:
|
|
the Carrion Lord had, for better or worse, been part of the backbone of
|
|
the empire for decades. That was not a legacy easily cast out. Did it
|
|
weaken her Name? It likely did. Enough, perhaps, that Catherine's little
|
|
Squire might be able to slay her given the right opening. Something to
|
|
ponder.
|
|
|
|
``Interesting, this talk of loyalty,'' Akua said. ``There are some who
|
|
would say you've broken faith, following the Empress over your
|
|
predecessor.''
|
|
|
|
``That's because you think like a child, Warlock,'' the Black Knight
|
|
scathingly replied. ``Like loyalty can only be about people. You want to
|
|
know what I follow? There's no need for games, mageling, I'll tell you.
|
|
It's not like I hide it.''
|
|
|
|
``That would be most helpful of you,'' Akua agreeably replied.
|
|
|
|
``I believe in the empire promised us in the Reforms,'' the Black Knight
|
|
bluntly said. ``A Tower that holds to law and order, that does not cater
|
|
to the whims of the High Lords. A realm that is not a mangy pack of
|
|
alley cats fighting over scraps.''
|
|
|
|
``And Malicia offers you this?'' she asked, genuinely surprised.
|
|
|
|
Though the Empress was certainly of a mind to gather the power in Ater,
|
|
she had never been one to mind a bit of intrigue. It would have been
|
|
like a prize champion being shy of the arena.
|
|
|
|
``You're not listening, Warlock,'' the Black Knight bit out. ``This
|
|
isn't about people. You know what the cornerstone of that dream is? The
|
|
Legions of Terror. An army that can cow the High Seats, professional and
|
|
modern and most of all \emph{loyal.}''
|
|
|
|
Akua studied the other woman with open fascination.
|
|
|
|
``This isn't about the Tower at all,'' she said. ``This is about the
|
|
Legions.''
|
|
|
|
``You think half my officers, half my men, don't want him on the
|
|
throne?'' Nim said, tone hard. ``She's been good to us, Malicia. Better
|
|
than most. But she's not known. She's the stranger in the Tower.''
|
|
|
|
``It would kill the Reforms, if you rose to help him climb the Tower,''
|
|
Akua slowly said.
|
|
|
|
``We wouldn't be an institution anymore,'' the Black Knight said. ``The
|
|
bedrock of stability. It would make us into just another High Seat to
|
|
please and defeat the entire purpose. Do you think it's a coincidence
|
|
that he's been skulking about scheming instead of calling on the Legions
|
|
of Terror? Soldiers would come if he raised a banner.''
|
|
|
|
``I have read the reports,'' Akua delicately said. ``That decision might
|
|
not be one of principle, but driven instead by the Emerald Swords-''
|
|
|
|
Marshal Nim laughed, leaning over the table. Her breath was unpleasant.
|
|
|
|
``You think he's the kind of man who'd flinch at killing elves?'' she
|
|
said mocked. ``He's got Ranger at his side. Don't be a fool. He knows it
|
|
too, what it would do to Praes to call. Just like he knows we'll fight
|
|
him tooth and nail if he comes for the Tower.''
|
|
|
|
``You sound like you admire him,'' Akua said.
|
|
|
|
``I do,'' the Black Knight said. ``I don't like him, Sahelian. I don't
|
|
love him either, and I fear what kind of an emperor he would make. But I
|
|
do admire him. Even now, he still believes in the same dream that I
|
|
do.''
|
|
|
|
The ogre bared her teeth.
|
|
|
|
``And he'd agree it matters more than any single man.''
|
|
|
|
And there it was, Akua thought. The Black Knight thought herself a
|
|
fortress for her principles, unassailable to temptation because her
|
|
loyalty was to something above the dross of petty ambition. She was
|
|
wrong, of course. Idealists were no less fragile than anyone else if you
|
|
knew the lay of their castle.
|
|
|
|
``Oh dear,'' Akua sighed. ``You really are going to get yourself killed,
|
|
aren't you?''
|
|
|
|
The Black Knight scoffed.
|
|
|
|
``Repeat that threat and-''
|
|
|
|
``It won't be \emph{me}, you fool,'' Akua sighed. ``Warlock. Black
|
|
Knight. Scribe. Captain. Ranger.''
|
|
|
|
``The Calamities,'' Marshal Nim said, impatient. ``What of them?''
|
|
|
|
``Where are they now, \emph{Black Knight}?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
A moment of startled silence.
|
|
|
|
``Gone,'' Akua said. ``The Dread Empress of Praes does not long tolerate
|
|
other Named at her table. Even the band that made her bid for the Tower
|
|
was broken and sent out in pieces, Nim. How long do you think you'll
|
|
last?''
|
|
|
|
``Captain died abroad,'' Marshal Nim flatly replied.
|
|
|
|
``On whose behalf?'' Akua laughed. ``Come now, you ought to know better.
|
|
Did you truly think yourself so different than me in the empress' eyes?
|
|
You, too, are a hound raised to run down a particular trouble.''
|
|
|
|
The golden-eyed mage pleasantly smiled.
|
|
|
|
``And Dread Empress Malicia is not the kind of woman who keeps a hound
|
|
at the table when the hunt is finished, Black Knight,'' Akua said. ``It
|
|
is a waste, to her. She \emph{puts them down}.''
|
|
|
|
The Black Knight laughed mockingly.
|
|
|
|
``And you'd never, of course,'' Marshal Nim said. ``So I ought to back
|
|
you instead, for fear of my life. You've only listened to the parts you
|
|
wanted to hear.''
|
|
|
|
``I have listened to everything,'' Akua sharply said. ``It is you who
|
|
ignores the reality around you. Do you think Malicia cares a whit about
|
|
your little dream, save in how it helps her maintain control?''
|
|
|
|
``Wind,'' Nim dismissed, ``she benefits from-''
|
|
|
|
``Not enough,'' Akua snarled. ``Gods, when are you all going to
|
|
understand? It will not be enough, because when you hold the Tower
|
|
\emph{it can never be enough}. There's always another enemy, another
|
|
doom, another doubt. She'll cut open the Legions to make what's left her
|
|
creatures. She'll hobble them so they can't ever raise a hand against
|
|
her. Because you have ideals, you fool, and \emph{she doesn't share
|
|
them}. In the back of her mind the whisper is always there: is this the
|
|
line that makes them turn on me? Is this the order they will refuse? She
|
|
doesn't make decisions because they are lawful or fair or they bring
|
|
stability. Malicia cares about being in control. That's it. That's all
|
|
of it.''
|
|
|
|
She had risen to her feet, at some point, but she did not recall.
|
|
|
|
``There's no place for your dream in that Dread Empire,'' Akua said.
|
|
``And there's no place for you either, Black Knight. For a Named that
|
|
will get in the way of making the Legions safe. I have a spell that will
|
|
kill me, somewhere in this body, but Gods burn me if there is not a
|
|
sword hanging above your head just the same. We are meant to be
|
|
\emph{temporary measures}.''
|
|
|
|
The armoured ogre watched her in silence, still as a statue.
|
|
|
|
``I rode that black doom to my end, once,'' Akua said. ``I know the look
|
|
of it, Marshal Nim, and the empress is a woman in the deep throes. There
|
|
was a time where I thought-''
|
|
|
|
\emph{That I spoke words like these so they would trust me}, she
|
|
thought. \emph{So they would love me. So that I would have a seat by the
|
|
fire, until they saw through it and turned on me.} Her nails bit into
|
|
the palm of her hand.
|
|
|
|
``It doesn't matter,'' Akua got out. ``It is all scrapped iron, that's
|
|
all. Pointless.''
|
|
|
|
``You are,'' the Black Knight slowly said, ``perhaps the finest liar I
|
|
have ever known.''
|
|
|
|
``You want truths?'' Akua asked. ``You want proof? Fine. Ask someone you
|
|
trust to inquire as to what a pattern of three is, Black Knight. You who
|
|
fought a Squire and won.''
|
|
|
|
She smiled mirthlessly.
|
|
|
|
``Because I know,'' the Doom of Liesse said, ``and I assure you the
|
|
Empress does too.''
|
|
|
|
And she had not, Akua knew bone-deep without even have looked, said a
|
|
word. And though tomorrow they would return to war, to the bitter fruit
|
|
risen of the bitter seeds Akua had lain, she knew from the look in the
|
|
Black Knight's eyes that she had just cracked the stone with the blow.
|
|
|
|
And still, curse all the Gods who listened, she was not hearing the
|
|
\emph{damned song}.
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{share-this}{%
|
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\subsubsection{Share this:}\label{share-this}}
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\begin{itemize}
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\item
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\href{https://practicalguidetoevil.wordpress.com/2021/05/07/interlude-east-ii/?share=twitter}{Twitter}
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\item
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\href{https://practicalguidetoevil.wordpress.com/2021/05/07/interlude-east-ii/?share=facebook}{Facebook}
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\item ~
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\hypertarget{like-this}{%
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\subsubsection{Like this:}\label{like-this}}
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\end{itemize}
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Like Loading\ldots{}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-east-ii}} \chaptermark{Interlude: East II}
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