560 lines
27 KiB
TeX
560 lines
27 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-19-viviennes-plan-redux}{%
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\chapter{Vivienne's Plan (Redux)}\label{chapter-19-viviennes-plan-redux}}
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\epigraph{``A superior strategic plan can fail on tactical grounds should
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decision-making in battle be disconnected from strategic concerns. This
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is why training officers to understand these concerns is a priority for
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a modern army, and the foundation of our manner of warfare.''}{Extract from ``The Modern Legion'', a treatise by Marshal Ranker}
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The Thirteenth Legion was something older Callowans avoided talking
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about.
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My generation didn't care about is as much, since we'd been raised to
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Legion garrisons and imperial governors, but I'd served drinks to enough
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soldiers that'd served during the Conquest -- on either side -- to hear
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the whole gauntlet of opinions on Legio XIII, \emph{Auxilia}. Most of my
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people knew the basics, that it was a legion raised almost entirely out
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of native Callowans that'd sided with the Dread Empire either during or
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after the Conquest. Bandits and rebels, people called them, and a lot of
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things nowhere as nice. Led by General Jeremiah Holt, who'd once been
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\emph{Sir} Jeremiah Holt, they'd not actually done much to help the fall
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of Callow when Praes invaded and only become a formal legion afterwards.
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Their main assignment over the following decades had been garrisoning
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Thalassina, but they'd done a few stints elsewhere in Praes. Never,
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however, back in Callow.
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The thing was, some of the older soldiers who'd fought under the
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Fairfaxes actually had complicated feelings about Jeremiah Holt. The man
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was nearly seventy now and he'd been called a traitor for forty years
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but in his youth a lot of people had seen him as somewhat of a romantic
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figure. He'd been a rebel against the crown, sure, but before the
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Conquest the situation in Callow had been a lot more complicated that my
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people cared to remember. For all that Callowans like to pretend that
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the years before the Praesi rolled in had been a flawless golden age
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where our wise and benevolent Fairfaxes rulers had been beloved
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overlords, that was ignoring the realities of it. They'd been a popular
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dynasty, the Fairfaxes, but they'd also been two reigns removed from a
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brutal internal civil war and that sort of thing left \emph{marks}.
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The War of Cousins had shaken up the balance of power in Old Callow,
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with two branches of House Fairfax twining the line with respectively
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the Caens of Liesse and the Sarsfields of Summerholm before taking
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swings at each other for control of the throne. There was a lot of to
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say about that civil war, but ironically what mattered most was the
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people \emph{not} mentioned in the writings about it: the northern
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baronies of Hedge and Harrow. They'd stayed aloof throughout the entire
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war, same as they'd been during the Conquest, because by the time that
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branch of House Fairfax my father destroyed came to the throne the north
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had effectively become a realm within a realm. With the power
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increasingly gathering in Laure, Summerholm and Liesse northerners had
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started resenting the authority of a distant crown that little aside
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from collecting taxes.
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Enter Good King Robert, last true Fairfax king of Callow, and Sir
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Jeremiah Holt of the Order of the Antlers. The estrangement between the
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north and throne had sunk deep enough that Holt, a bold young knight of
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northern extraction, had rebelled against King Robert to seek the
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independence of the northern baronies and parts of the territory now
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under Southpool. He'd been fighting for the restoration of the `Kingdom
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of Dunloch', the ancient northern realm that the Albans had conquered
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before turning to the last holdout of the Kingdom of Liesse in the
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south. The historical grounds for that rebellion were pretty thin,
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considering that before the Albans annexed the north it'd been more of
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an alliance under a prominent warchief than a proper kingdom and said
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warchief \emph{had} surrendered in exchange for being named Duchess of
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Dunloch. Resentment of Laure had been strong enough up north, though,
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that Holt found more than a few knights and soldiers flocking to his
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banner when he raised it.
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Their rebellion had been rather tame, very knightly. It'd been more a
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play of fox-and-hound with the Fairfaxes than the kind of violent
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resistance that'd followed the Conquest. Unfortunately, after a few
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humiliations too many King Robert had gotten serious about putting them
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down and bodies had started piling up. Holt lost most of his rebel
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troops and had to go increasingly bandit to stay in the fight, which
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tarred his reputation. Enter the Conquest and bandits popping up
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everywhere as troops marched east, leaving everyone's holdings
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unprotected. A much grimmer Jeremiah Holt saw his opportunity. He'd been
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halfway to gathering a sizeable army of malcontents and robbers when
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Amadeus of the Green Stretch had reached out with an offer to him.
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Self-rule for the northern baronies so long as Holt entered imperial
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service, as well as a formal military office for him and his men.
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Jeremiah Holt took the offer, famously, and slew a few hundred soldiers
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under the Count of Ankou before capturing the man himself and keeping
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the city out of the war by threatening to hang him his noble prisoner
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should anyone pass the city gates.
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He'd never quite been forgiven for that by the older generation. Having
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one of their romantic heroes shake hands with the Black Knight and rise
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to the rank of general in the Legions of Terror in the aftermath had
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been one of the many hits the pride of Callow had taken after the
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Conquest. It'd been striking enough that I'd been surprised to learn
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after joining the Legions that there were songs about Holt -- two of
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them, a sad one called `O Knight of Dunloch' and a merry one called `The
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Ride at Luthien's Crossing' -- because I'd never heard either of them
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sung. I tended to believe that if he'd ever been allowed to serve as a
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garrison in Callow his star would have risen, especially if he checked
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the abuse of an imperial governor, but then that was likely why my
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father had assigned the Thirteenth duties on the other side of the
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empire.
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Today's Thirteenth Legion wasn't the same that'd formed during the
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Conquest, of course. Most those soldiers were either dead or retired,
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with the holdouts being high-ranking officers whose position wouldn't
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require much fighting. But unlike other legions, the Thirteenth had
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become something a family trade while out east. Children and
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grandchildren of the original soldiers and officers made up most of the
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ranks, and while many of my people wouldn't consider them countrymen the
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soldiers themselves believed differently. Praesi tended to call them
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Duni, but for all that the soldiers of the Thirteenth were now often
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mixed blood -- not only Taghreb and Soninke but also from Ashur and the
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Free Cities -- they largely considered themselves Callowans. An
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estranged tribe gone into exile, perhaps, but still Callowans.
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And on that hinged Vivienne's plan, because there was nothing more
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exiles wanted than to come home.
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It hadn't been easy to get into the camp. We'd approached under the
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cover of Night as well as night, but regular patrols and a solid ward
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layout had still slowed us down to a crawl. It'd been a game of
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patience, which had irked me considering the looming battle and how
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impatient to get this done it was making me. We'd eventually slipped in,
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though, if much later than I would have preferred: past Early Bell. Most
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the camp was still asleep but one of Vivienne's spies had made contact
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with the legion's junior legate, Alice Burnley, and it paid off exactly
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the way it was supposed to. Within half an hour of our arrival, the
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Thirteenth's senior officers were shaken awake and summoned to an
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impromptu war council in the usual tent.
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Where Vivienne and I waited seated in a dark corner, cloaked, as
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officers filed in one after another and the sturdy, grim-faced Legate
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Burnley fielded questions about the summons by deferring until the
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general was there. Jeremiah Holt was the last to come and I took a
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moment to study him from under my hood. Still built like a bull even at
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his late age, he was blue-eyed with a crooked nose and white hair that'd
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fallen atop his head. He moved gingerly but with assurance, for all that
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he seemed rather tired from being woken up at this hour.
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``What's this about, Alice?'' General Holt asked. ``Your messengers were
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tight-lipped about everything but the urgent need.''
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His eyes moved to us, our shrouded silhouettes in the corner.
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``Eyes of the Empire?'' he asked.
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I smiled in the dark and struck a match, revealing up my one-eyed face
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just long enough to light up my pipe. I pulled at the wakeleaf,
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breathing in deep and blowing it out in a long stream, as the half of
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the room that'd caught sight of the telltale details froze. Jeremiah
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Holt was one of them, but his surprise did not last long. He
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straightened, hand casually coming to rest on the dagger at his side.
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``Good evening, Your Majesty,'' the general of the Thirteenth evenly
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said.
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``General Jeremiah,'' I nonchalantly replied.
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Half a dozen swords were out in the heartbeat that followed but their
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leader snorted at them.
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``Put that away, you fools,'' he said. ``If they'd come for blood it
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would already be on the floor. If Alice let them in it'll be for
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talks.''
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His eyes went to Vivienne's silhouette.
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``Would that be the Webweaver or Princess Vivienne with you?'' he asked.
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Vivienne rose to her feet, pulling back her hood.
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``You are quick to adjust,'' my successor praised.
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``I'd been wondering if one of you would come,'' General Jeremiah said.
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``Nim believed not, but she's always been better at reading the east
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than the west.''
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``They're here to make an offer, Jeremiah,'' Legate Alice said. ``I got
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oaths through the Jacks that blood won't be spilled even if we refuse
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it.''
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Blue eyes went to me, following the plume of smoke leaving my lips.
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``And will those oaths hold, Black Queen?'' he boldly asked.
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``I keep to my word,'' I simply said. ``Good or ill.~Have any of you
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heard otherwise?''
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None refused me that. For all that I'd turned my back on the Empire, I
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was known to keep my promises. It was a reputation that'd cost me much
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to maintain but moment like this were why it had been a worthwhile
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investment. There were a dozen people in here, most above fifty but a
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few closer to thirty, and the tension went out of them all when I backed
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up Legate Alice's words. The white-haired general snorted again, going
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to pour himself a cup of spiced wine before dropping into the seat at
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the head of the table.
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``Let's hear it, then,'' General Jeremiah said, tone deceptively light.
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``What is it that you're offering for us to tun on the Tower?''
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There were murmurs, in the wake of his words, but no one bared the
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swords already returned to their sheaths. I laughed.
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``Are you saying you no longer consider yourselves loyal subjects of the
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crown of Callow?'' I mused. ``A most surprising turn.''
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There were a few chuckles but many more wolfish smiles. They had no love
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for my crown, these men and women. The few that'd once lived under the
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rule of Laure had been outlaws to it. But neither were they the Tower's
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folk, because they'd never been allowed to be. The reason one legion had
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been left to garrison a wealthy city like Thalassina for so long without
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fear of corruption was that the Thirteenth was as estranged from Praes
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as it was from Callow. Even after a generation of living east of the
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Wasaliti they were still strangers in these lands, distant from its
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factional struggles. I glanced at Vivienne and she inclined her head.
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She was to take the lead: it was her plan and so hers to execute.
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``You know who I am,'' Vivienne Dartwick said. ``I am now a princess,
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heiress to the throne in Laure, but I was once the Thief and a rebel of
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the Lone Swordsman's band.''
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``A hero who fought to restore the same throne many of us fought
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against,'' General Jeremiah bluntly said.
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``There are no Fairfaxes left, Holt,'' Vivienne replied just as bluntly.
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``The Kingdom of Callow that will stand when this war ends will not be
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the same as it was in old days. Your war ended when Amadeus the Black
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opened the throat of the last of that line in a cradle. You have
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\emph{won} it.''
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A dark-haired man in his early fifties who by his uniform should be the
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senior legate of the legion, Eldon Hawley, broke in.
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``Why's it you doing the talking?'' Legate Hawley challenged. ``Princess
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you are, but it's the queen who rules. What are your words worth,
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Dartwick?''
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Some approving mutters followed, as well as glances at me. In the dark
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they could see little more than the red burn of my lit pipe and the
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smoke wreathing me, but it was enough. Vivienne stood in the light,
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upright and bearing a silver circlet, but the hard truth was that it
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wasn't her reputation that had these people willing to hear us out.
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There was nothing I could do about that, though, without making it
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worse. It was a hurdle she had to overcome herself.
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``I'm the one talking because I'll be the one dealing with you in twenty
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years, legate,'' Vivienne replied, unflinching. ``You're trying to make
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it a slight, but it is the very opposite.''
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She did not elaborate. The general let out an approving grunt, eyes
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considering.
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``It's not a bribe and a pat on the back you're offering us, then,'' he
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said. ``You're in it for the long haul, and the long haul for Callow is
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you on the throne.''
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Understanding spread through those that hadn't followed along, interest
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coming with it. This lot had been offered many a bribe, in Thalassina.
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The Kebdana and their great vassals had been some of the wealthiest
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people in Praes. They'd not taken them then and they would not now. Gold
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wasn't what any of these people were after.
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``You have grievances with the throne in Laure and I'll not speak to the
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justice or injustice of them,'' Vivienne said. ``It was before my time.
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But I tell you now that throne is dead and buried. What's left behind is
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Callow, and it is that same land that beckons you home.''
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``We've been out east for long, princess,'' a fair-haired woman said.
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``Some of us were born here. We have families, husbands and wives and
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children.''
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The blonde was Kachera Tribune for the Thirteenth, Sally Thoms, whose
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name might be right out of a Laure street but was deeply tanned from a
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Taghreb father who'd raised her in Thalassina. The city might be dead,
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but the ties were not. There were many in the Thirteenth so bound to
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Praes.
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``And they will be welcome in Callow as well,'' Vivienne said.
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It wasn't quite the right angle, I thought, and she saw it too from the
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hardening of a few faces.
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``We've made homes here, princess,'' the Staff Tribune said. ``You're
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asking us to abandon them and pretending it's a favour.''
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``Have you really?'' I mildly asked.
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Eyes went back to me. The Staff Tribune straightened, his close-cut grey
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hair lending him a certain presence under torchlight.
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``We might not be Praesi-'' he began.
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``Duni,'' I softly interrupted. ``That's what they call you, isn't it?''
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He looked angry at being interrupted, but none denied what I said.
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They'd all heard the word before.
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``That's all you'll ever be, out here,'' I said. ``Useful servants.
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Serve for a dozen generations and it will mean nothing. You all know
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that already, you've seen it with mfuasa and they think more of those
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than you. Bad blood cannot be made into good blood, that's the way of
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the Wasteland. You have reached the summit of what you can aspire to in
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Praes. So the question left to ask is simple enough.''
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I shrugged.
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``Are you satisfied?''
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The silence was telling. Rebels and bandits were ever hungry men. I let
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the silence stand, passing the torch back to Vivienne.
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``You sacrifice in going home, like all exiles,'' the princess of Callow
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said, tone honest. ``I will not pretend otherwise. So let me speak to
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what you will gain instead.''
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That had a few leaning forward, those who'd struck closer to the bandit
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strains of the Thirteenth than the rebel ones. The ones with mercenary
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leanings.
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``Amnesty for any crimes once committed in Callow-'' Vivienne began, and
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already a few scoffed.
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We'd known they would, but this step was necessary for the rest. General
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Jeremiah was studying her with a frown, as if wondering why she had so
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blundered.
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``I take no alms from the throne in Laure,'' the Supply Tribune bit out.
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``It was no crime to buck the tyranny of Fairfax laws then and it needs
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no fucking forgiveness now.''
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``It does,'' Vivienne replied evenly, ``as by ancient custom it is
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forbidden for an outlaw to hold or be granted a noble title.''
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That little sentence went off like a sharper in the tent. Even General
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Jeremiah, who'd not been known as \emph{Sir} Jeremiah since the Order of
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the Antlers had stripped him of his rank, looked surprise. Legate Alice,
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who'd left our side to go stand with her fellow officers, was the one to
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voice her skepticism.
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``Even out here we've heard that you two have been stamping out the old
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nobles,'' she said. ``And now you're offering to make us of the same
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breed you want to smother? That seems like an ill fate awaiting us.''
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I bit my tongue, for though I wanted to reply it was not me who should
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speak. It was Vivienne that needed to draw the distinction between what
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had been the policies of my reign and what would be the policies of
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hers.
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``Nobles got in our way, after we broke with the Tower,'' Vivienne said.
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``They were treated accordingly. Yet I'll not pursue that enmity into my
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reign. The territories that were cut out as imperial governorships under
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Amadeus the Black will remain administrative provinces with appointed
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governors, but under that authority I will raise nobles again.''
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I didn't like it, I honestly didn't, but it wasn't the same for her as
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it was for me. Vivienne was a Dartwick, minor nobility but still very
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much a noblewoman by birth, and she wouldn't come to the throne with the
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kind of baggage I brought. Orphan, apprentice to the Carrion Lord,
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villain. Nobles would actually be willing to work under her in a way
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they simply hadn't been for me. She wasn't going to undo the brutal work
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of centralization that my father and then myself had done, she knew
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better than that. That was the whole point of keeping governors: there
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would never again be dukes in Callow, that kind of power would only ever
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be held by the grace of the throne. Yet she was very much in favour of
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cultivating the presence of lesser nobles once more.
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She had valid reasons to, I'd been forced to admit. Lesser nobility was
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how Callow had been able to maintain so many knights without bankrupting
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itself, pushing off the costs of that to noble families instead of
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making the state coffers bear it, and it was also a solution to our
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still chronic lack of qualified officials. Vivienne intended to turn my
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father's orphanages into schools under the aegis of the crown, but that
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would take years and it'd never work outside the largest cities in
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Callow. Until then, she'd be relying on spare sons and daughters of the
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nobility to serve -- and even after, she'd keep using them as a balance
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to keep the power of her own Laure bureaucracy in line. She had learned
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from Malicia's reforms in Ater in a way I'd never thought to.
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``Noble titles,'' General Jeremiah calmly said, but I saw the huger in
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his eyes. ``Would you care to elaborate, Princess Vivienne?''
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``For you, the barony of Longcourt,'' the dark-haired princess replied.
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``Which you might not be familiar with-''
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``A week's travel north of Liesse,'' Jeremiah Holt calmly interrupted.
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``Known for its apple orchards, as I recall. The last baroness of
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Longcourt was a girl of fourteen that died at the Siege of Summerholm.''
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``She was,'' Vivienne said, hiding her surprise with some skill.
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``The land was placed under the imperial governor in Liesse, but there
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are cadet branches to the family,'' the general said. ``That title would
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come with enemies.''
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Vivienne smiled and so did I, pulling at my pipe. And there was where
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her cleverness had shined through. Because the dozen in this tent had
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already been high-ranking strangers in a foreign land before, made to
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step on toes just by being who they were. Half the reason they were even
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hearing us out was that they were sick of being in that role. They
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weren't eager to start being the same thing only after uprooting
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themselves across two rivers to a land most of them hadn't seen in
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decades if ever at all. Any of them picking up titles would make enemies
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of the relatives of the people who'd once held to those titles. This had
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been meant to be great hurdle, but Vivienne had instead managed to turn
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it into an asset.
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``It does not,'' Vivienne said, ``but it does come with a wedding. I
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believe your eldest grandson is yet unmarried?''
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The old man blinked.
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``He is,'' the general warily admitted.
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``So is Holly Leyland, the eldest daughter of the man with the best
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claim to the title,'' Vivienne said. ``Both have already agreed to unite
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the lines, should you and your grandson agree.''
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General Jeremiah seemed genuinely taken aback. My successor's gaze swept
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across the rest of the officers.
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``I offer twenty lordships to be divvied up among you as you wish, but
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in truth that is the lesser part of my offer,'' she said.
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She reached into her cloak, taking out a folded parchment and setting it
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down on their table.
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``This is a list of sons and daughters from noble families in good
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standing that have agreed to marriage with officers of the Thirteenth or
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their descendance,'' the princess of Callow said. ``Age and rank in
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succession are included.''
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The tent was as silent as a grave.
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``This is not a trap,'' Vivienne Dartwick gently said. ``When I speak of
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bringing you home, I mean every word. I am not the Tower, to strand you
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among enemies and then use the fear to weaken all beneath me. Come back
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to Callow, and you will truly be \emph{back}. All the land offered is in
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what was once the Duchy of Liesse and now lies empty, but this will not
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be solely a noble's game. Freeholds will be provided to retiring
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soldiers and formal knighthood to any cavalrymen who are willing to join
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the knightly order I will found -- the Order of the Stolen Crown.''
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Kachera Tribune Thoms licked her lips then broke the silence.
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``And what do you want in exchange?'' she asked.
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``Fight with us here,'' Vivienne said. ``On this field. When we march
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east to bury death for good, fight with us still. And when the war ends,
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\emph{come home}. Be part of the peace we'll all have fought for.''
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She'd hit all the right notes, I thought as I watched them teeter at the
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brink, and still had things been even just a little different this would
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not have enough. But the droplet that'd tip the cup was that Thalassina
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was gone. It was where the Thirteenth had been for the longest, and when
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that city had died to the Warlock's wrath many of the ties that bound
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the legion to the Wasteland had died with it. The same kin that they
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might have been afraid Malicia would kill as retribution to changing
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sides were already dead and buried. They had a lot less to lose now than
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they would have had five years ago and Vivienne had offered them more
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than they had ever hoped they might receive.
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``We'll need to talk it over,'' Legate Hawley roughly said. ``Bring more
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officers into it-''
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I blew out a long stream of smoke.
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``No,'' I said. ``Tonight. You have until the hour's done to make your
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decision.''
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Some looked angry, but General Jeremiah was not one of them. If anything
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he looked approving. Smart man.
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``Any longer than that and the Eyes will be onto us,'' he said. ``You
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want us to march right now, don't you? Smash through the palisades while
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we have the element of surprise and link up with the Army of Callow.''
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I nodded. The moment the Thirteenth went over to our side or refused to,
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the Battle of Kala had effectively begun. When they moved all sides
|
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would begin to muster for combat, because to do anything else would be
|
|
ceding the initiative to the opposition -- and none of the four armies
|
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on the field were willing to do that, when all knew annihilation was
|
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just one mistake away.
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``Come dawn there will be a battle,'' I said. ``Now's the time to decide
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on which side of it you'll stand. You've heard what Princess Vivienne
|
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Dartwick offers you. You know what the Tower will give you and the worth
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of Malicia's promises. \emph{Choose}.''
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|
It was not a simple choice and they did not simply make it. They
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gathered among each other, talking in low voices as they argued faults
|
|
and merits. Vivienne retreated, coming to stand by my side, but neither
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of us spoke as we watched it unfold. It wasn't the kind of plan I would
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have made, and my fingers itched to see it play out. It'd give power and
|
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wealth to people that I honestly considered to be pretty shitty and
|
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untrustworthy, but beyond that there was too much\ldots{} give to this.
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Making nobles diluted the authority of the crown. Making several nobles,
|
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all with close ties to each other and in the same region, was making a
|
|
potentially dangerous power bloc. I would have preferred cornering them,
|
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burning their ties to Malicia and taking them in on my own terms.
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A third Gallowborne, to match the one I'd lost and the one I'd spent.
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|
Vivienne wasn't me. It wasn't that she didn't see the same dangers I
|
|
did, just that we didn't have the same\ldots{} instincts about how to
|
|
deal with them. She wasn't afraid of a Baron Jeremiah Holt because even
|
|
if he grew powerful she was confident she would make him into an ally.
|
|
Bring him into the fold, use that power to her advantage without needing
|
|
to have something to hold over his head. And in someone who hadn't been
|
|
with me for so long I would have been tempted to call it naivete, but
|
|
Vivienne wasn't naïve. It was the same part of her that'd made her
|
|
refrain from killing when she'd been the Thief, that'd seen her join the
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|
Woe when the odds were Callow would burn if she didn't. She was willing
|
|
to embrace foes in ways that I just wasn't.
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|
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|
There was little of our old madness in Vivienne Dartwick, of the slights
|
|
and long prices, and I could not help but feel that our people would be
|
|
better off for it.
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|
The officers of the Thirteenth chose, and they chose hope. They chose
|
|
home and peace after the war. I saw it spread from one to another, the
|
|
decision, until even the holdouts bents their heads and the same man who
|
|
my people had once written songs about turned his blue eyes back to us.
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|
``It has been,'' Jeremiah Holt softly said, ``so very long since I saw
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home.''
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|
He breathed out shakily.
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|
``An oath broken and an oath taken is a cheap price for that,'' he said.
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|
``Then kneel,'' I said.
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|
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|
They did, but I did not rise. My hand touched Vivienne's side and she
|
|
met my eye, looking almost startled. I almost snorted. As if I would
|
|
reap the harvest she had sown. No, those oaths were hers. She had won
|
|
them, she would keep them. And the officers of the Thirteenth, on their
|
|
knees, spoke their oaths to the princess of Callow. And with every oath
|
|
the world shivered, until the same rebel who'd once fought a throne now
|
|
swore to another. Jeremiah Holt spoke his oath, and when he swore to the
|
|
princess of Callow the whole of Creation bore witness. Vivienne shivered
|
|
too, the weight of the pivot pressing down on all our shoulders.
|
|
\emph{Ah}, I thought. Indrani had tried to tell me, hadn't she? I'd gone
|
|
too deep, too\ldots{} narrow trying to figure out who Vivienne was. I
|
|
should have known that the simplicity had been at the hear of her the
|
|
whole time.
|
|
|
|
Vivienne Dartwick had entered the tent as a princess, and now stood a
|
|
Princess. It was a simple as that.
|
|
|
|
I almost laughed, seeing the hope and awe in those eyes, because didn't
|
|
the Gods just love their little jests? Vivienne had once been a fine
|
|
enough thief she'd earned a Name out of taking from Praes, and yet the
|
|
greatest of her thefts only came now that she had left behind. As a
|
|
girl, all she'd ever taken form the Dread Empire was coin and good. Now,
|
|
though?
|
|
|
|
The Princess of Callow had stolen back an entire legion.
|