730 lines
35 KiB
TeX
730 lines
35 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-west-i}{%
|
|
\section{Interlude: West I}\label{interlude-west-i}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{quote}
|
|
\emph{``Terror is the hand that rips away the masks. What stays when it
|
|
has stripped away all the civilized lies we tell ourselves is our truest
|
|
face, ugly as it is.''}
|
|
|
|
--Alrich Fenne, first of the Iron Kings
|
|
\end{quote}
|
|
|
|
Life was full of ironies, Prince Frederic Goethal had found.
|
|
|
|
Death too, he supposed, though circumstance dictated that one's
|
|
enjoyment of such humour would be severely curtailed. For this jest,
|
|
however, the Gods Above were yet smiling down on them. The endless
|
|
armies of the Hidden Horror had smashed themselves against the walls of
|
|
the Morgentor again and again, hordes beyond counting and horrors
|
|
beggaring nightmares. The last fortress of Twilight's Pass had held back
|
|
the madness, as Lycaonese grimly had for centuries, but all the world
|
|
had known that it was only a matter of time until the Morgentor fell.
|
|
|
|
There were simply too many of the dead and too few soldiers to stop
|
|
them, no matter how sharp the courage and tall the walls. All of Procer,
|
|
perhaps even all of Calernia, had turned its eye to fortress in the
|
|
frozen north where horror was yet dammed. Like a face cringing away from
|
|
a blow yet struck.
|
|
|
|
Yet they had \emph{done} it. Against the odds, against the night and the
|
|
fear and the endless cruelty of Evil, the Morgentor had held. Towers had
|
|
fallen, even the fortress itself for a time, but always the armies under
|
|
Otto and Frederic had taken it back. Even now, as the morn's light fell
|
|
on the stony grounds below, Prince Frederic stood atop the tower known
|
|
as the Westenhaupt and knew the living to be the masters of the field.
|
|
The dead were scattered and burning, the miraculous engines known as
|
|
Pickler's Nails -- \emph{picklernagel} -- pounding away at their
|
|
retreating mass.
|
|
|
|
Balls of pitch hit the ground, tossed by spindly catapults, spilling
|
|
blackness where they landed and spreading the flames everywhere. The
|
|
changes goblin engineering had made here\ldots{} The Dead King's
|
|
commanders had grown \emph{wary} of committing beorns to the first wave
|
|
of the assault, after the fourth time they died without even touching a
|
|
wall. Wary! The absurdity of that old monster's generals being wary of
|
|
anything at all had been as fine wine.
|
|
|
|
It had been night and day. Even after the Hidden Horror plied fresh
|
|
tricks and opened a gate into the very Hells, the lines had buckled yet
|
|
stubbornly refused to break. With valour and fire, the armies of the
|
|
west had held back the tide even as all the world expected them to fall.
|
|
But life was full of delightful, cruel ironies and so it had not
|
|
mattered. To the southeast the Hocheben Heights had fallen: the dead
|
|
were now pouring into Bremen like an unstoppable tide, burning and
|
|
killing as they went.
|
|
|
|
The Morgentor had not fallen but it was going to have to be
|
|
\emph{abandoned}, lest the dead march north and surround it entirely.
|
|
|
|
The Kingfisher Prince looked down at the fleeing dead, sword in hand and
|
|
fingers tight on the grip. Two years he'd fought here. Bled here, with
|
|
the hard-faced soldiers at his side. The Morgentor was hundreds of miles
|
|
from the borders of Brus, but he fancied he now knew the fortress as
|
|
well as if he had been born here. It was not his home, but Frederic had
|
|
well thought it might be his grave before it all ended. It was\ldots{}
|
|
frustrating to abandon it like this. The prince knew well the strategic
|
|
necessity -- already it would be a hard campaign to push south through
|
|
the enemy invading Bremen, to be enveloped here was death -- yet what
|
|
the mind knew the heart disavowed. It tasted like defeat, leaving.
|
|
|
|
It was in the soldiers around him too, he could feel it. \textbf{Aid}
|
|
fluttered in him like butterfly wings, urging him to help but not quite
|
|
knowing how. Westenhaupt was heavy on Neustrians, whose home was south
|
|
of Bremen was now next to fall, but that stern lot was no more inclined
|
|
to leave than the rest. Garbed in steel and iron the soldiers milled
|
|
about the rampart, talking in terse Reitz and keeping an eye on the
|
|
wyrms in the distance. Even Frederic's own retinue was in a dark mood.
|
|
Such a small thing, pride, but was it not the smallest of axles on which
|
|
the world rested? Small wounds could kill an army if left to fester.
|
|
|
|
Yet what could he do?
|
|
|
|
``It is finished for the day, my prince. The curs will not return until
|
|
they have greater numbers than this to field.''
|
|
|
|
Frederic glanced at his captain -- a distant cousin of his, he'd been
|
|
given to understand -- who'd addressed him and nodded agreement.
|
|
|
|
``They'll be back under cover of darkness,'' the Prince of Brus said.
|
|
|
|
Even with goblin spotters, night had the living at a disadvantage. The
|
|
span they'd just bought, however, would be the opportunity of their
|
|
departure. The armies had been ready to decamp and march south for days,
|
|
it was only the constant assaults of the Enemy that'd kept them still. A
|
|
fighting retreat all the way to Bremen would be\ldots{} difficult, even
|
|
for veterans like these. The soldiers around them had been listening
|
|
without even the pretence otherwise and a familiar officer stepped
|
|
forward, Captain Fredda of the Neustrian royal army.
|
|
|
|
``It is done, then,'' she said. ``We will flee south?''
|
|
|
|
The question was blunt, but more importantly reflected on the faces of
|
|
most around them. \textbf{Aid} fluttered in him still, insistent. The
|
|
Kingfisher Prince looked away, down at the fleeing throng of corpses.
|
|
What could he claim?
|
|
|
|
``We will be back,'' Frederic said. ``And so will they.''
|
|
|
|
Grim nods, but the arrow had missed. The Kingfisher Prince thought, for
|
|
a moment, of what Otto would say in his place. Something stern, do
|
|
doubt. They were a stern and unflinching lot, the Reitzenberg. The
|
|
Prince of Bremen was called Otto Redcrown by men for the proof of that,
|
|
the same stubborn charge that'd killed his father and two elder sisters
|
|
before the crown passed to him and he carried it to its end. And like
|
|
that, Frederic found his answer.
|
|
|
|
``It begins now, our war,'' the Prince of Brus said.
|
|
|
|
That claimed their attention.
|
|
|
|
``We will march south,'' Frederic Goethal said. ``Through Bremen and
|
|
Neustria, through my own Brus in time, but though battles await us on
|
|
that path it cannot be called a campaign.''
|
|
|
|
He smiled.
|
|
|
|
``It is a \emph{muster},'' the prince said. ``The last muster we have in
|
|
us, the last gasp of Procer. And you all know where we will strike, once
|
|
the strength of the east and the west is gathered.''
|
|
|
|
The Kingfisher Prince raised his sword, pointed it east. Where, beyond
|
|
mountains and lakes and clouds of poison, lay the Crown of the Dead.
|
|
Keter, the Hidden Horror's seat of power.
|
|
|
|
``You call it fleeing,'' the Kingfisher Prince laughed, ``but you should
|
|
know better, Fredda. Today, at long last, we begin our march on Keter.''
|
|
|
|
And inside of him the wings ceased fluttering at last, a smile from
|
|
Above, as all around him backs straightened and stares hardened.
|
|
Frederic had not lied, after all. The dead would chase them south
|
|
relentlessly, until the time came for the last battle of this war.
|
|
Frederic Goethal watched the corpses fleeing below one last time,
|
|
fingers tight around his sword. Doom had come for the Principate of
|
|
Procer, doom as no realm of man had ever known before.
|
|
|
|
They would meet that end, the Kingfisher Prince swore, straight-backed
|
|
and proud.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The blow had split open her helm.
|
|
|
|
A shallow cut, she'd been lucky, but head wounds always bled ugly.
|
|
Rozala Malanza, Princess of Aequitan, ripped off the straps of her
|
|
helmet and tossed it away. It was useless now anyway and shaking free
|
|
her sweaty hair was a small pleasure. Irritated at the delay, she glared
|
|
at the priest laying his hands on her back.
|
|
|
|
``Hurry up, would you?'' the dark-haired princess bit out.
|
|
|
|
A cleared throat followed and she glanced guiltily at Louis Rohanon, the
|
|
former prince of Creusens who was now her formal secretary. And
|
|
something rather more thrilling, in private, though that was best kept
|
|
quiet.
|
|
|
|
``It would be easier if you dismounted,'' Louis mildly said.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not sure I'll be able to get back on my horse if I do,'' Rozala
|
|
admitted.
|
|
|
|
Russet eyes narrowed, but he knew better than to argue against her
|
|
getting back into the thick of the fight. The Princess of Aequitan was
|
|
not the kind of general that shied away from the melee: it was why men
|
|
followed her into the dark. She asked them to brave no peril she was not
|
|
willing to risk at their side. Louis simply nodded, even though he
|
|
disapproved, and she felt a sudden swell of affection. He was a
|
|
wonderful lover, but she had often thought he could be more should
|
|
politics allow. Perhaps even if not. She had come to suspect there might
|
|
be\ldots{} other considerations. The dark-haired princess laid a hand on
|
|
her belly. It was still too early to tell, but there were signs.
|
|
|
|
``The Levantines are still holding strong out west,'' Louis told her.
|
|
``But the Red Knight sent word that the Hawk has been nipping at them
|
|
all afternoon. Lord Yannu took an arrow but he still lives.''
|
|
|
|
Rozala grimaced, the Light wielded by the priest at her side finally
|
|
reaching her scalp. The wound began to mend.
|
|
|
|
``Someone really needs to kill that thing for good,'' Rozala cursed.
|
|
``And the eastern flank?''
|
|
|
|
``Still harassed by skirmishers, but the Cleven horse is scattering
|
|
them,'' Louis said. ``If we can push through to the south, we have our
|
|
path to Peroulet.''
|
|
|
|
Where the last line of defence for the principality of Cleves would
|
|
stand. How quicky the wind had turned against them, Rozala thought. But
|
|
a few months ago she had triumphed at the Battle of Trifelin then
|
|
resisted the siege that followed in the victory's wake. Even the opening
|
|
of the Hellgate had not been enough to dislodge her. Yet the Hidden
|
|
Horror, while losing battles, had found ways to win the war. As he had
|
|
done to the Lycaonese up north, he had done to her here in Cleves: when
|
|
the neck did not bend, he had struck the ribs. Rozala had lost the
|
|
western coast while pinned in Trifelin so and seen herself at risk of
|
|
being surrounded should the city of Atandor fall.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia Hasenbach had sent the order to retreat south to Peroulet
|
|
before she could even consider a stratagem to turn this around. And
|
|
though part of her had wanted to fight the First Prince's command to
|
|
retreat, Rozala had known it to be the right decision. Cleves was good
|
|
as lost and there would be no reinforcements coming until it was far,
|
|
far too late. It had been good that she'd not dallied out of pique, for
|
|
Atandor had fallen earlier than anticipated and the army that'd taken it
|
|
had swung north to attack her from behind as she already led her armies
|
|
into a fighting retreat. For three days now her forces had been fighting
|
|
the dead in heavy skirmishes, the Hidden Horror trying to mire her out
|
|
here in the open instead of behind the walls of Peroulet.
|
|
|
|
She would not give the old monster his wish.
|
|
|
|
``Find me a helmet,'' Princess Rozala asked her lover. ``And a fresh
|
|
lance. We must pierce through, else half of us will be corpses come
|
|
morning.''
|
|
|
|
``Both are already on their way,'' Louis replied, ruefully smiling.
|
|
|
|
Rozala almost leaned down to kiss him, holding herself back at the very
|
|
last moment. His lips quirked anyway. Rising her saddle, caressing her
|
|
charger's neck, she turned her gaze to the field in the distance. They
|
|
would make it to Peroulet, that much she would swear to any Gods that
|
|
cared enough to listen. After, however\ldots{} That fortress would be
|
|
the last holdout before the hordes of the Dead King broke into the
|
|
plains to the south. \emph{And if they do then Principate is dead},
|
|
Rozala thought. It was a harsh thing, to realize that she had already
|
|
given all the ground that she could afford to give. The moment she
|
|
raised her banner over Peroulet, Rozala Malanza's back would be to the
|
|
wall. And the terrible truth was that, beneath all the oaths and
|
|
speeches, the Princess of Aequitan was not sure she could hold the city.
|
|
|
|
No, that was a lie. She knew she would lose those walls. It was only a
|
|
question of how long she could eke out before she did.
|
|
|
|
Breathing out, Princess Rozala Malanza accepted the helmet her lover
|
|
pressed into her hand, setting it atop the crown of her head. A lance
|
|
filled her hand, familiar weight, and she looked up at the sunny
|
|
afternoon sky. They must first survive today, she reminded herself,
|
|
before being troubled by tomorrow.
|
|
|
|
``One miracle at a time,'' Rozala murmured into the wind, and rode back
|
|
to war.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The First Prince thought it would look much like this, if an empire
|
|
could see the headsman's axe coming down on its neck.
|
|
|
|
The Morgentor had fallen. Rhenia had fallen. Bremen was halfway into the
|
|
grave. The sole major military force left in northern Procer, under the
|
|
command of the princes of Brus and Bremen, was fighting through the
|
|
horde so it could make it to the temporary safety of Neustria. Cordelia
|
|
had done all she could to evacuate her people further south, into
|
|
Segovia, but many had stayed. Too many. Lycaonese, she should have
|
|
remembered, were a stubborn lot. They were not retreating, not leaving.
|
|
They would fight the dead fiercely for every league of stone, every
|
|
river, every hill and forest and muddy road. It was the old fight, the
|
|
old duty. The walls must hold, lest dawn fail.
|
|
|
|
That pride might yet kill them all, and with every passing day Cordelia
|
|
Hasenbach could do less to ward away that fate.
|
|
|
|
Cleves was holding better, but barely. A ring of forts had been raised
|
|
along the line drawn by Peroulet, after Cordelia drew from the refugee
|
|
camps for labour. Food and places on carts headed south for the families
|
|
of those who accepted had earned her enough volunteers that pits could
|
|
be dug, palisades raised and stones stacked fast enough it could almost
|
|
be called a miracle. The First Prince knew better. If there was one
|
|
thing the Principate still had plenty of, it was hands that could be put
|
|
to work. The entire effort had felt much like raising a sandcastle to
|
|
stop the tide, but the fair-haired princess had gritted her teeth and
|
|
seen it done regardless. Despair was not worth a whistle. If Cordelia
|
|
failed, it would be after she had moved Heavens and earth trying.
|
|
|
|
Even from Hainaut the news was grim. General Abigail had been dislodged
|
|
from the Cigelin Sisters by an enemy offensive, though she'd retreated
|
|
in good order to Lauzon's Hollow after covering her retreat with swaths
|
|
of goblinfire. The White Knight's crushing victory at Juvelun had
|
|
secured the eastern passage, for now at least, but all of Cordelia's
|
|
generals agreed it was now only a matter of time until the Army of
|
|
Callow was pushed back to the old defence lines at Neustal. And once
|
|
that was the case, once all that stood between Procer and annihilation
|
|
was forts from the hills of western Cleves to eastern Hainaut, then it
|
|
would be the beginning of the end. The Dead King would hold the shores
|
|
of the lakes and be able to cross unimpeded.
|
|
|
|
Looking at the grey stealing inch after inch of the exquisite map at the
|
|
heart of the Vogue Archive, Cordelia Hasenbach could almost hear the
|
|
whistling sound the axe was making as it came down on the neck of the
|
|
Principate of Procer.
|
|
|
|
Though tastefully clothed and as rested as she could afford to be,
|
|
Cordelia could not help but feeling worn to the bone. It showed, too, in
|
|
some ineffable part of her. She'd glimpsed it in her looking glass, that
|
|
subtle quality that came from a tool being worked `til it was near
|
|
breaking. Yet the fire in her belly would not let her close her eyes,
|
|
not when every missed opportunity was a few hundred more of the people
|
|
in her care sent to the grave. The First Prince heard the Forgetful
|
|
Librarian approach, recognizing the footsteps, and afforded the other
|
|
woman a questioning glance.
|
|
|
|
``Word from the Dominion just came,'' the Damned said. ``It worked.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia did not hide her surprise quite quickly enough.
|
|
|
|
``They agreed to the oaths?'' she pressed.
|
|
|
|
``Every major line of the Blood swore oaths that the seneschal of
|
|
Levante is to hold the city until the end of the war, when the Majilis
|
|
will convene to settle the succession of the Isbili,'' the Librarian
|
|
confirmed. ``The peace-oaths were not as widespread, but the rumours the
|
|
Circle seeded seem to have moved public opinion where you wanted.''
|
|
|
|
This time it was a smile she hid. Cordelia had ordered that word be
|
|
spread the Grey Pilgrim had died wishing for peace between Levantines
|
|
before his sacrifice at the Battle of Hainaut, which would have meant
|
|
little in Procer but carried a great deal of weight in the Dominion. He
|
|
had been revered as half a god, in those parts. There would still be
|
|
bandits and raiders that took advantage of the chaos, but the spectre of
|
|
the Peregrine's disapproval would stay many a hand. Perhaps, if she were
|
|
lucky, enough that the Dominion of Levant did not collapse into utter
|
|
anarchy. Methodical anarchy, at least, she would be able to prop up for
|
|
a little longer still.
|
|
|
|
Long enough that if she no longer could, it was because Cordelia could
|
|
do nothing at all.
|
|
|
|
``We can turn our attention to the League, then,'' the First Prince
|
|
said. ``Have our envoys to Bellerophon sent word back yet?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' the Librarian grimaced. ``That they have yet to be received by
|
|
the expedition's generals.''
|
|
|
|
The Republic of Bellerophon had, to almost universal surprised,
|
|
succeeded at assembling an army and sweeping over the last holdings of
|
|
Penthes. Unfortunately, the victorious citizen-soldiers had then begun a
|
|
siege of the city-state that they were very unlikely to be able to carry
|
|
out successfully. Cordelia would have had little issue with this, had
|
|
General Basilia not been leading a coalition army east with the
|
|
intention of besieging that very same city only to find that there was
|
|
already an army camped beneath its walls. Given that Basilia had bought
|
|
dwarven engines so that she would at least be able to breach the walls
|
|
of Penthes and put an end to the war she'd begun, this was a\ldots{}
|
|
frustrating situation.
|
|
|
|
The Secretariat of Delos had invited her to mediate a peace between the
|
|
parties involved, but while Helike and its vassals were amenable the
|
|
Republic was proving to be rather more obstinate. The People had voted
|
|
that Anaxares the Diplomat yet lived, and so was still Hierarch of the
|
|
League of Free Cities. As a consequence, it was illegal for them to
|
|
receive foreign envoys. The situation in the south had therefore turned
|
|
into a farce of standoff under the walls of Penthes, General Basilia
|
|
having refused to give battle and instead sent war parties to pillage
|
|
the Penthesian countryside. She was, Cordelia suspected, trying to earn
|
|
back what she had spent on those dwarven war engines.
|
|
|
|
``Then we lean on Atalante,'' the First Prince said. ``If they consent,
|
|
Delos could at last call a formal session of the League of Free
|
|
Cities.''
|
|
|
|
The end of hostilities that entailed could be used to force Bellerophon
|
|
back to its territory, given that the republic still claimed to be loyal
|
|
to its lost Hierarch. If General Basilia could steal a march on
|
|
Bellerophon when hostilities resumed after, she could claim the siege
|
|
first and finally bring the civil war to an end. Beginning to consider
|
|
how the ruling priests might be convinced to end their self-imposed
|
|
isolation, Cordelia ceased when she saw a messenger come for her. She
|
|
glanced at the Librarian, who snorted before taking the offered scroll
|
|
for her. It was given unto her afterwards, however, and she frowned. The
|
|
head of the Circle of Thorns, Louis de Sartrons, claimed he had urgent
|
|
news.
|
|
|
|
And to think she had almost begun to find a silver lining to the cloud.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia wasted no time in heading towards the salon where her spymaster
|
|
would be waiting. The conversation would trouble her carefully arranged
|
|
schedule if it ran for too long, and she had an obligation that could
|
|
not be put off later that evening, but she would have to adapt. Louis de
|
|
Sartrons was not the kind of man to call anything \emph{urgent} without
|
|
good reason. Within moment of sitting across from him and taking a
|
|
polite sip at the served tea, the skeletally thin older man spoke a
|
|
sentence that chilled her blood.
|
|
|
|
``The Dead King is looking for the ealamal.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia carefully set down the cup, painted porcelain of exquisite
|
|
delicacy. She did not ask whether or not her spymaster was certain, as
|
|
it would be an insult to the both of them.
|
|
|
|
``Has he found it?'' she asked instead, forcing calm.
|
|
|
|
``I believe not,'' Louis de Sartrons replied. ``A Revenant was caught in
|
|
southern Lyonis and another was seen in Lange, but the facility in
|
|
Brabant has not been breached.''
|
|
|
|
It would not be catastrophic even if it were, Cordelia reminded herself.
|
|
Brabant had been judged too close to the enemy, and so the weapon had
|
|
been moved into southeastern Aisne.
|
|
|
|
``Destroy it,'' Cordelia ordered. ``We must be sure the Enemy learns as
|
|
little as he can.''
|
|
|
|
``I will see it done,'' her spymaster agreed, then thinly smiled. ``It
|
|
may very well be only a matter of time until it is found regardless of
|
|
any measure, Your Highness. Unless we let Chosen see to the defences-''
|
|
|
|
``We will not,'' the First Prince sharply interrupted.
|
|
|
|
She would not let the White Knight usurp control of the weapon. It had
|
|
been made of the corpse of an angel of Judgement, there could be no
|
|
pretence of Hanno of Arwad not becoming its master as soon as he laid
|
|
hands on it -- and he would, if any of the Chosen took up guarding the
|
|
ealamal. The loyalty of the heroes went first to their champion, and the
|
|
White Knight had already proved himself untrustworthy in the Arsenal.
|
|
Cordelia would not make the same mistake twice.
|
|
|
|
``Then the best we can deliver is delay, Your Highness,'' Louis de
|
|
Sartrons blandly said. ``And I would consider Sister Alberte's proposal
|
|
that a limited test be attempted. Otherwise we know too little of the
|
|
weapon for it to be considered usable, in my opinion.''
|
|
|
|
The First Prince hesitated, staying silent. It had been the question
|
|
that plagued them all ever since the Salian Peace. What would a weapon
|
|
made of a fallen angel of Judgement do, if Judgement was kept silent by
|
|
a madman? The Hidden Horror himself had claimed that the Tyrant of
|
|
Helike had spared them all a great doom by arranging for the Hierarch to
|
|
do this, and the secrets unearthed in Levant last year had borne this
|
|
true in part. If the Intercessor truly could influence angels, using the
|
|
ealamal would have been a mistake. It would have given that enigmatic
|
|
monster power of life and death over half of Calernia. Yet with the
|
|
Hierarch staying true to his course of obstruction, the situation had
|
|
changed again.
|
|
|
|
If the ealamal could be used without the Intercessor's meddling, then
|
|
Cordelia still had a way to prevent the fall of Calernia. If. Only none
|
|
could tell her what the weapon might do without the guidance of angels
|
|
behind it, and there was no known precedent to draw on. What way but a
|
|
test was there to gain an answer? A small use, limited in scope, but
|
|
still a use. The First Prince was inclined to agree with her spymaster
|
|
of the necessity, but it was not so simple as that. There was another
|
|
crowned head whose assent must be gained before that, lest in chasing
|
|
ghosts Cordelia make an enemy of the living. Catherine Foundling had not
|
|
been shy in voicing her disapproval of the entire affair, and absurdly
|
|
enough the Black Queen was now Cordelia's closest and most important
|
|
ally.
|
|
|
|
``I am to speak with the Black Queen tonight,'' she finally said. ``The
|
|
subject will be broached.''
|
|
|
|
``That is all I can ask, Your Highness,'' Louis de Sartrons said, bowing
|
|
his head.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The parlour had been refurbished from floor to ceiling when it was first
|
|
dedicated to a new purpose, that of serving as the scrying room the
|
|
First Prince of Procer would use to speak with the Queen of Callow. An
|
|
entire wall had been covered by a beautiful silver mirror while the
|
|
plush sofas had been replaced by a beautiful yet severe set of Lycaonese
|
|
armchairs and tables. Bureaus had been filled with papers which might be
|
|
of use in discussion, the latest reports and predictions, while the
|
|
walls were covered with maps and tapestries. Every detail had been
|
|
tailored according to what her agents believed to be the preferences of
|
|
Catherine Foundling.
|
|
|
|
Though Cordelia doubted their common amiability could be traced back to
|
|
these changes, it had to be said that at least the change of furniture
|
|
had ensured that the Black Queen would no longer eye the more elaborate
|
|
Alamans furnishings with barely veiled disdain. The First Prince was in
|
|
some ways rather amused by the other royal's disdain for luxuries,
|
|
considering that for all her severe inclinations she was likely one of
|
|
the wealthiest women in all of Calernia these days.
|
|
|
|
The First Prince of Procer poured herself a cup of mead and set the
|
|
pitcher down on the table before slipping into the armchair --
|
|
discreetly made more comfortable with cushions -- and allowed herself to
|
|
take a sip. Unlike the Black Queen, who usually guzzled wine as if it
|
|
were water while they talked, she moderated herself. It made it all the
|
|
more frustrating that the drink usually came to redden her cheeks before
|
|
it did the other ruler's, to be frank. Before she had even set down the
|
|
cup, the surface of the mirror before her rippled. It took a moment for
|
|
the wizards of the Observatory in Laure to bind her to the Hierophant's
|
|
spell in Praes, but hardly more than a few breaths.
|
|
|
|
On the other side of the mirror the Black Queen, looking as tired as
|
|
Cordelia herself felt, offered her a lopsided grin.
|
|
|
|
``Your Highness,'' Queen Catherine of Callow said.
|
|
|
|
``Your Majesty,'' First Prince Cordelia of Procer replied.
|
|
|
|
Catherine Foundling could be striking on a good day, but this did not
|
|
seem to be one of them. Her clothes were ruffled, her expression drawn
|
|
and there was no sign of the ruinous charisma that had drawn so many to
|
|
her causes -- fair and foul. The cloth covering the eye she'd lost in
|
|
Hainaut was slightly askew, which made her shark cheekbones stand out
|
|
more than usual. Cordelia almost wished she had not taken the time to
|
|
put on a fine dress in Rhenian blue herself, but only almost. Even if
|
|
Foundling noticed the difference between them, which a slight frown told
|
|
Cordelia she had, the queen was was always easier to deal with when the
|
|
Lycaonese princess was dressed becomingly.
|
|
|
|
The Black Queen's wandering eye was well-know, and Cordelia had not
|
|
gotten where she was by refusing to use the arrows in her quiver.
|
|
|
|
``A trying day?'' the First Prince asked.
|
|
|
|
The tanned woman -- even darker of skin, now that she campaigned under
|
|
the Wasteland sun -- barked out a laugh.
|
|
|
|
``In a way,'' the Black Queen said. ``I have what I came for: High Lord
|
|
Sargon's granary and his treasury are secured and ready to be moved. I
|
|
can begin heading south for a decisive battle.''
|
|
|
|
``A great victory,'' Cordelia said, meaning every word.
|
|
|
|
The city of Wolof was famous even in her native Rhenia, known as a great
|
|
fortress that'd broken the same armies that had taken Ater and brought
|
|
down the Tower. That Foundling had beggared it without even having to
|
|
storm the walls or losing more than a handful of men was the kind of
|
|
feat a reputation could be made of, were the Black Queen's own not far
|
|
beyond such tales nowadays.
|
|
|
|
``So they tell me,'' Catherine Foundling tiredly said. ``Akua Sahelian
|
|
left my camp two days ago. Our spies in Wolof tell me she has entered
|
|
the Empyrean Palace.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia, knowing the Doom of Liesse to be a thorny matter, took a sip
|
|
from her mead as she chose her words.
|
|
|
|
``Her desertion is as you predicted,'' the First Prince said. ``And
|
|
planned for.''
|
|
|
|
The other woman winced.
|
|
|
|
``If I might give you a word of advice?''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia cocked a brow but nodded.
|
|
|
|
``I wouldn't ever say anything that could be construed as a variation on
|
|
`just as planned','' the Black Queen said, and she seemed completely
|
|
serious. ``That never ends well.''
|
|
|
|
The blonde princess leaned back into her seat. It was absurd enough
|
|
advice, on the surface, but it was no fool giving it.
|
|
|
|
``One of the obscure rules of\ldots{} Named, I take it,'' Cordelia said,
|
|
deciding using Chosen or Damned would be undiplomatic.
|
|
|
|
``More for villains than heroes,'' the Black Queen said, ``but it's best
|
|
steered clear of across the board. Sharp irony tends to ensure.''
|
|
|
|
``I will keep it in mind when dealing with Named,'' Cordelia replied.
|
|
|
|
It was useful information and there was no denying that in these matters
|
|
Catherine Foundling was a great deal more learned than Frederic Goethal,
|
|
who Cordelia had attempted to learn from only to find his knowledge of
|
|
the affairs of Chosen to be rather shallow. The likes of the Peregrine
|
|
and the Black Queen seemed, unfortunately, to be quite rare.
|
|
|
|
``Might be useful for you to keep in mind period,'' the queen drawled.
|
|
|
|
``While I appreciate the implicit compliment, I am not Chosen,''
|
|
Cordelia flatly said.
|
|
|
|
The other woman leaned back into her seat, inside that campaign tent of
|
|
hers. She took up a goblet of what looked like that truly horrid orcish
|
|
liquor -- aragh -- and knocked it back, offering a toothy smile
|
|
afterwards.
|
|
|
|
``Maybe not right now,'' the Black Queen said. ``But I wouldn't bet on
|
|
that staying true forever. Vivienne tells me you've gotten Levant back
|
|
into a semblance of order.''
|
|
|
|
The heiress to Callow would have read the report earlier. It seemed an
|
|
odd change of subject, but likely wasn't. These little detours were a
|
|
staple of conversation with Catherine Foundling, she had learned.
|
|
|
|
``Lady Itima's contributions were key,'' Cordelia said. ``But I will
|
|
agree that the Dominion has somewhat stabilized.''
|
|
|
|
``Yeah,'' the Queen of Callow drawled, rolling her eye. ``I'm sure
|
|
\emph{Itima Ifriqui} was the one who came up with that oath and
|
|
propaganda plan. Seems right up her alley, that play.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia's lips thinned.
|
|
|
|
``You have a point, I imagine?''
|
|
|
|
``You got Levant in order,'' the Black Queen said. ``You're keeping
|
|
Procer from falling apart and taking the lead in the fight against the
|
|
Dead King. There's a title for someone who does that, Hasenbach.''
|
|
|
|
Ah, were they now dispensing with titles? Foundling usually on began
|
|
that a few drinks in.
|
|
|
|
``Is there?'' the First Prince replied, skeptical.
|
|
|
|
``Sure,'' Foundling shrugged. ``Warden of the West. What a fun
|
|
coincidence that you happen to already bear it.''
|
|
|
|
``That door lay open before me once,'' Cordelia coldly said. ``I did not
|
|
step through the threshold. It is not a choice I regret.''
|
|
|
|
``You didn't take the Name, maybe,'' the Black Queen said. ``But the
|
|
Role, you made it yours anyway. There's not a pie west of the Whitecaps
|
|
you don't have your finger in. Might take a year, might take twenty, but
|
|
Creation will answer to the truth of that.''
|
|
|
|
She smiled, looking fearsome and sympathetic both.
|
|
|
|
``You can swim against the river all you like, Cordelia Hasenbach,'' she
|
|
said. ``It won't get tired before you do.''
|
|
|
|
The genuine sympathy in the other woman's voice made it a harder blow
|
|
than if she'd been cruel. It sounded like something she truly did
|
|
believe. And though this talk of Name and Role was\ldots{} esoteric,
|
|
there seemed to be some manner of logic to it. However tortured.
|
|
\emph{And though you are a madwoman}, \emph{Catherine Foundling},
|
|
Cordelia thought, \emph{you might just be the cleverest madwoman alive.}
|
|
This was not an assertion to be lightly dismissed.
|
|
|
|
``I will heed your warning,'' the First Prince said, politely calling
|
|
the subject to a close.
|
|
|
|
Foundling nodded, looking almost nonchalant. She was\ldots{} loose
|
|
tonight, Cordelia decided. Less controlled than usual. And for all her
|
|
drinking and seeming carelessness, the Black Queen usually kept close
|
|
mastery of herself. This, though, seemed unguarded.
|
|
|
|
``Does Sahelian's betrayal truly trouble you so?'' the fair-haired
|
|
princess quietly asked. ``You told me of its coming months ago.''
|
|
|
|
``It stings,'' Catherine Foundling artlessly confessed. ``I didn't think
|
|
it would. Wasn't sure it would, maybe.''
|
|
|
|
``And still you went forward with this scheme,'' Cordelia said. ``Why?
|
|
There are less convoluted ways to take revenge, Foundling. And I did not
|
|
question your plans, for this is an affair of Named and Callowan
|
|
besides, but I will admit I find what I know of this to be baffling.''
|
|
|
|
The one-eyed queen's lips quirked. That had, somehow, pleased her to
|
|
hear. She truly took as compliments the strangest of things.
|
|
|
|
``It's not just about revenge,'' the Black Queen said. ``It's\ldots{}
|
|
hard to articulate.''
|
|
|
|
Cordelia was not so sure. She thought it might instead be that it was
|
|
the simplest thing to articulate in the world, but that the queen across
|
|
the mirror would resist speaking those words to the bitter end. It was a
|
|
shocking thought, that Catherine Foundling might have affections for the
|
|
woman that'd destroyed Liesse, but in a way fascinating as well.
|
|
Cordelia was not certain whether it was the tint of tragedy to the whole
|
|
affair or simply that she had never before met someone with such
|
|
spectacularly terrible taste in women before, but the perhaps the truth
|
|
lay somewhere in the middle.
|
|
|
|
``A strange revenge indeed, to return her home and to the Tower's
|
|
service after having been one of your inner circle,'' Cordelia mildly
|
|
said. ``Unless you have sabotaged her prospects?''
|
|
|
|
The Black Queen grinned, a vicious slice of ivory.
|
|
|
|
``Oh, not at all,'' Catherine Foundling said. ``She is going to get
|
|
everything that she ever wanted.''
|
|
|
|
The queen poured herself another cupful of liquor.
|
|
|
|
``But that's the thing with Praes, see,'' she continued. ``You get
|
|
whatever you want, but never the way you want it.''
|
|
|
|
``It is your campaign to lead,'' Cordelia finally said. ``And I cannot
|
|
gainsay your results so far.''
|
|
|
|
``It'll be a battle next,'' Foundling opined. ``A convergence. The fate
|
|
of Praes going forward is going to be wrestled over. And after
|
|
that\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``Ater,'' the First Prince completed.
|
|
|
|
``It ends there,'' the Black Queen said. ``I'll get it done, Cordelia. I
|
|
know the stakes. I'll muster the East and we'll come with its full array
|
|
of war.''
|
|
|
|
And the truth was that the First Prince believed her. Because the two of
|
|
them had grown beyond enmity, even as enemies, and though they were not
|
|
friends -- would never be -- a trust had grown between them. You could
|
|
only share the burden of the world on your back with someone for so long
|
|
before you took to them, even a little.
|
|
|
|
``We don't have long left,'' Cordelia quietly admitted. ``We are giving
|
|
ground on all fronts now. And the southern principalities are beginning
|
|
to buck my authority, slowly but surely. I expect there will be
|
|
defections before you return.''
|
|
|
|
There was only so long people were willing to have the lifeblood
|
|
squeezed out of them to support a war they'd never seen with their own
|
|
eyes. And though Cordelia had pushed through the Highest Assembly
|
|
measures that would buy the realm a few more months, the hard measures
|
|
she'd relied on to see it done had made her enemies.
|
|
|
|
``You're keeping up the sky with your back, Hasenbach,'' the Black Queen
|
|
replied, tone oddly gentle. ``I don't expect the impossible of you. If
|
|
it were anyone else in your seat, this war would already be lost.''
|
|
|
|
``We might lose it anyway,'' Cordelia said, and hesitated.
|
|
|
|
It was now, she thought or never.
|
|
|
|
``The ealamal,'' the First Prince said. ``I want to find out what it
|
|
does with Judgement silenced. In case\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
In case they lost the war, she left unsaid. The Black Queen grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``You want a test,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
Cordelia nodded. Added nothing more.
|
|
|
|
``Fuck,'' Catherine Foundling cursed, leaning back into her seat.
|
|
|
|
There was a long moment of silence.
|
|
|
|
``Crows take me. \emph{Do it}.''
|