746 lines
35 KiB
TeX
746 lines
35 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-east-i}{%
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\section{Interlude: East I}\label{interlude-east-i}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``As a rule, principles are trouble. If you have them,
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unprincipled men will despise you. If you do not have them, principled
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men will despise you. My advice, my son, is therefore to choose terribly
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mediocre principles but keep to them religiously.''}
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-- Extract from the infamous `Sensible Testament' of Basilea Chrysanthe
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of Nicae
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\end{quote}
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``And the nature of her alliance with the First Prince?''
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Akua Sahelian had found that betrayal was not unlike putting on an old
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dress. The cut did not quite fit as it would have once did, but there
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was a certain comfort in the\ldots{} familiarity of the object. Sargon
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had been dear enough to grant her use of the family's finest scrying
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mirrors -- ancient artefacts, tall as a man and twice as broad -- so the
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illusion that she was seated at a table in the same council room as the
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Dread Empress of Praes was rather convincing. The clarity of the spell
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allowed for the game to be played as if they were in person, Malicia
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reading her face as she read Malicia's. It was rather invigorating to
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fence this way with a woman of the empress' calibre.
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``Largely a result of common interests,'' Akua said. ``There is a
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surprising degree of trust there, but that is not unexpected after
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Catherine's restraint during the Peace of Salia.''
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Callow had been well positioned to extort Procer when the time had come
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for bargaining. There was not much the First Prince could have afforded
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to do but bend, given the imminent collapse of her realm if she did not,
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but Catherine had instead chosen to court goodwill. Given how important
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the trust between the two greatest rulers of the Great Alliance had
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become, and the veiled frustration on Malicia's face when she spoke of
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Procer, Akua was inclined to believe it had been the right decision to
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make.
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``There has been some method to her recklessness,'' Malicia conceded.
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``Your opinion, then, on her relationship with Yannu Marave and Itima
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Ifriqui?''
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Oh my, she truly \emph{was} frustrated. Mentioning those two names --
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the two heads of the great lines of the Blood that were not Catherine's
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informal pupils -- was a tacit admission that Malicia was trying to get
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a peace here in Praes by getting the broader Grand Alliance to twist
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Callow's arm into accepting it. No doubt she'd already tried Cordelia
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Hasenbach and been rebuffed, so she was now looking for other angles of
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approach. Unfortunately for the empress, the Dominion was dead grounds
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in this regard.
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``She is highly respected, due to her role in the Grey Pilgrim's
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resurrection after the Princes' Graveyard,'' Akua said. ``I don't
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believe she has spoken much with the Lady of Vaccei at all, but she has
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a solid accord with Lord Yannu.''
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Akua decided to keep it up her sleeve that not a single one of the Blood
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would dare to cross Catherine at the moment. Not while she had the
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Barrow Sword at her side and they very much wanted to avoid her
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protection of him extending beyond the confines of the war. If she kept
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meddling in the politics of Levant that might change, but for now having
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both fear and respect at her back meant that Malicia would find no
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purchase with the Levantines. It might be amusing to see her fail in the
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attempt, however, so Akua offered her empress a pleasant smile instead
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of potentially useful information.
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``Her talent for ingratiating herself to key individuals is proving to
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be an obstacle,'' Malicia deplored.
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And perhaps Akua would have agreed, as a girl, when she could only think
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of strength through the Empire's conception of it. An outlook that would
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claim Catherine was ahead because of a superior quality. In this case,
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Malicia seemed to have decided it was talent for making alliances at the
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highest rungs of power. To triumph over her the Dread Empress would have
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to bring her own superior qualities to bear and decisively beat her
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opponent. Yet the old certitudes no longer rang so true. \emph{Praes is
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so deeply despised out west nowadays that Hasenbach could not agree to a
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bargain even if it were advantageous}, Akua thought. \emph{That is not
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of Catherine's making.}
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The Dread Empress had won too many battles, ceasing to question if they
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needed to be fought at all. Victory was a heady brew, Akua knew better
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than most, but she was surprised that Malicia would fall prey to such a
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mistake. The empress had always struck her as being an exquisitely
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self-controlled woman. Then again, the Carrion Lord was involved. It was
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always harder to see clearly when the cut was so close to the heart.
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Akua knew that too, and learned the lesson roughly enough it still left
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the edges of her raw.
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``The Dead King has forced together strange alliances,'' she simply
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said.
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Malicia looked amused, understanding the sentence for the veiled
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reference that it was.
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``How have you found the body?'' the empress asked.
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Akua closed the fingers of her right hand into a fist, enjoying the
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sensation of skin on skin. It had been almost overwhelming at first: her
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time as a shade had blurred the memory of what sensations actually felt
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like. Returning to the real thing after the pale shadow she'd lived with
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had needed some adjustment. There was an even greater boon attached, of
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course. Akua murmured a single word in the mage tongue, opening her hand
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into a flat palm, and a dot of hellfire bloomed above it.
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``More than satisfactory,'' she said. ``A princely gift, Your Dread
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Majesty.''
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``I reward loyalty, Warlock,'' Malicia smiled. ``And sometimes even the
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anticipation of it.''
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The Named being spoken aloud earned a small shiver from Akua every time.
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She was not a claimant for it, not yet, but Creation was recognizing
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the\ldots{} possibility. That the potential was there. Neither of them
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mentioned the spells Malicia's mages had hidden that would allow the
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empress to kill her with a word, though they both knew they were
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somewhere in the flesh. As always, the Dread Empress' words had two
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meanings: if loyalty earned reward, then disloyalty earned punishment.
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The mere anticipation of it would too, as Malicia had subtly warned.
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``I've no doubt ours will be a close relationship, Your Dread Majesty,''
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Akua lied.
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``Oh, I agree,'' Malicia lied back.
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The empress deigned to take a sip from her cup, some dark liquor cut
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with water.
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``My decision to place trust in you is why I have decided to assign you
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to the Black Knight's command for the coming battle,'' Malicia
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continued. ``Your unique insights into the adversary will be of great
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use, I am sure, but I most look forward to seeing your magic on display
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once more.''
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A transparent enough ploy, but that was on purpose: the empress was
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asserting control. As the first measure of that control, she wanted Akua
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to kill enough of the Army of Callow with sorcery that the bridge back
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to that side would be forever burned. There was not a ruler worth their
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salt on the continent that did not know Catherine Foundling loved her
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soldiers just as fiercely as they loved her.
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``Of course,'' Akua replied, not batting an eye. ``In that spirit, I
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would seek your permission to obtain artefacts from my cousin. The
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Sahelian arsenal is best put to your service, not left to gather dust.''
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``If he is amenable, I don't see why not,'' Malicia smiled.
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A lie, Akua decided. The answer had been too smooth, too unthinking.
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Sargon must have already been given strict instructions about the
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calibre of what he was allowed to lend her. The empress feared she might
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be able to slip the leash too early, then. Interesting.
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``My thanks,'' she said, bowing her head.
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``Think nothing of it,'' the empress dismissed. ``Are you confident,
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with such aid, of being able to match the Hierophant on the field?''
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``It would depend on the amount of magic he first ingests with
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\textbf{Devour},'' Akua said, feigning reluctance. ``I have not seen his
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upper limit as a thaumatophage. Placing mage circles under my command or
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moving me to Marshal Nim's side early so that I might begin preparing
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rituals would increase my chances.''
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She liked Masego. He was a fascinating conversationalist and Akua had
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something of an inherited fondness for tactless mages. It had been
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marrying convenience to her own preference to lie about his abilities.
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With the Tower under the impression that he could simply suck dry entire
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battalion of mages if they were in sight, he'd be treated as an entity
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to be avoided instead of a Named that could be fought. And if Malicia's
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most sensible answer to this was placing greater power in the hands of
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another special asset -- like an incipient Warlock, just for example --
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then was it not the best of both worlds? The Dread Empress studied her
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for a moment, then conceded with the slightest movement of the head.
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``I will speak with my Black Knight,'' Malicia said, committing to
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nothing. ``Expect to depart soon.''
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A moment passed.
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``Great gifts bring the expectation of great results, Warlock,'' the
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empress added.
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Meaning that should she be granted her request failure to match the
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Hierophant would have\ldots{} consequences. Ah, how very old-fashioned
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of her. Akua found it rather charming.
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``That is only natural,'' Akua easily replied.
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The empress chuckled. It was a languorous sound, and though it had
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little effect on her Akua could appreciate the artistry as a fellow
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seductress. Dread Empress Malicia was almost inhumanly beautiful, of
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course, but in truth that ran rather somewhat contrary to Akua's tastes.
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She had spent many years surrounded by the perfect and the splendid,
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eventually growing tired of the fare. She preferred character nowadays,
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the interestingly imperfect. The empress was simply too exquisite to
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qualify. Besides, women were rarely of interest to her. She could count
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on one hand the number she'd been attracted to. She caught the scent of
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smoke.
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Looking down Akua saw her hand had closed into a fist, smothering the
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hellflame. She'd not even realized she'd done it. The growing pains of a
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new body, she told herself.
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``I do enjoy conversing with you, Akua,'' Malicia lightly said. ``They
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are always interesting, our little talks.''
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``I aim to please,'' she replied.
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The empress smiled and Akua could feel the conversation was now to end.
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They had reached the end of their business for the day. And it was a
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whim, to ask, but she did not kill it when it rose. She had wondered
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from the moment she'd realized that work on the body awaiting her in the
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depths of the Empyrean Palace would have begun months before she ever
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set foot in Praes.
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``How did you know?'' Akua asked.
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The Dread Empress of Praes studied her with dark eyes. Not a speck of
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gold in them. Blood as muddy as the land she'd been born of, running
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through the veins of the longest-reigning tyrant in the history of
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Praes.
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``That I would turn on them,'' she said. ``I did not, until the very
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end. How did you \emph{know}?''
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Dread Empress Malicia's smile was sad, she thought, and perhaps the sole
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genuine emotion she had shown this entire conversation.
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``You came too late,'' the empress said. ``Even if some loved you, and I
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expect they did. You came to them too late, Akua. They were never going
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to forgive you for what they might have forgiven each other. There was
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no becoming one of the five.''
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Her face went blank, like she was some kind of tipsy debutante. It was
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still better than the spasm of pain that would have shown on her face
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otherwise.
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``In the end, darling, you were always going to come back,'' Malicia
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gently said. ``This is the only home you have.''
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Sorcery rippled across the mirror, turning it back to simple polished
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silver, and Akua was left to wonder whether it had been kindness or an
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assertion of power to end the spell on that sentence. Perhaps a little
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of both, she decided. Though the dark-skinned woman knew she could have
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risen to her feet and distracted herself with movement, with pouring
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herself a cup of wine from the carafe or biting into a pear -- the sheer
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pleasure of proper \emph{taste}, after all this time -- she did not.
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Instead she sat there and closed her eyes, thinking while it was all
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still fresh.
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She had just fooled the empress successfully for the first time, after
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days of being interrogated for every scrap of knowledge on the Army of
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Callow and the Grand Alliance that she cared to divulge, but it did not
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feel like much a victory. She would admit it had been enjoyable,
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sparring with the empress. Sharpening iron with iron, the two of them
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knowing a single misstep would be enough for the other to pounce. Yet
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now that it was over, looking at what had been done, it felt\ldots{}
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childish. Gaudy. No, neither of those were exactly right. More like
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she'd been indulging in something particularly-
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``Wasteful,'' Akua Sahelian murmured.
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Scrapping iron for no real purpose save vanity. What had been gained
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from it all, really? They had circled each other like crocodiles
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snapping at each other's tails, a triumph only of showing teeth. If
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instead they had sat and spoken plainly for even an hour, understood
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where they differed and where they might concur, would it not have --
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\emph{ah}, she thought. And there it was. That old Sahelian greed,
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whispering again in her ear: she had left the fire for the dark, but she
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wanted all the pleasures of both. Akua rose to her feet at last, drawing
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back the chair and gliding past the wine carafe. It was the long window
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at the back of the room she sought, great panes of glass that could be
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pushed open to pair a lazy evening breeze with the view. She leaned
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against the windowsill, enjoying to the touch of the wind on her face,
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and lost herself looking at the distant silhouettes of Zaman Ango. The
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ancient maze, the sloping pyramids of mud.
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Malicia had been right, she thought. This was home. The warmth of the
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fire had lulled her into indolence, but she'd snapped out of it at last.
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She would not forget that moment in the cave, where it had at last sunk
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in that \emph{nothing} would make a change. That Akua could turn on her
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family, on her people, on everything she believed in and had ever loved
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since she was a child, and still it \emph{would} \emph{not be enough}.
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Because her folly had been the doom of a city, of a hundred thousand
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souls, and while the Gods knew of forgiveness Catherine Foundling did
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not. Had that been the revenge, she'd wondered then? Making her\ldots{}
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and then ripping away the curtain, leaving her to look a merciless truth
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in the eye.
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Maybe it was. Dartwick had wounded more shallowly when she'd made her
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rip out the eye instead.
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And the worst of it was that, even now, part of her ached to leave. To
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return. It would not go without comment, her absence, and yet Akua
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thought she might be able to talk her way out of the worst of it. And
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she'd still have the evenings spent designing wards with Masego, the
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drinks and lurid gossip with Indrani. Even those cautious, almost Praesi
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talks with Adjutant -- who wanted to learn all she had to tell of the
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highborn of the Wasteland while giving back as little as he could for
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it. And another, of course, the one she'd left behind most of all.
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Akua had thought to kill Catherine Foundling, once. To slay her and
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claim all she had built, perhaps even wearing her face. When she had
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still been a prisoner of the Mantle of Woe, sent back to the maddening
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boredom of nothingness in between brief tastes of Creation. Ah, but what
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\emph{interesting} tastes they had been. Grandiose plans of war against
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half the continent, diplomacy with the most powerful people on Calernia.
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Then even more terrible sights, on the way to Keter. And even as she was
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dragged from wonder to wonder, there was the once-Squire in the middle
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of it all. Now a Black Queen, turned into everything Akua had thought
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she might become.
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Fascination had been the doom of many a Sahelian.
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``But it doesn't matter, does it?'' Akua said to the wind.
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There was no joy to chase at the end of that path. No long-awaited
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delight, nothing to suffer for. She would not be forgiven, and even a
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lifetime of saving strangers and helping fools would not see her
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redeemed in anyone's eyes. She had been chasing ghosts the entire time.
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So \emph{why} stay? Why not come back to the home she had sold for
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\emph{nothing}, to the destiny that had been taken from her? Warlock,
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yes, for that was Malicia's offer. But why stop there? Sargon wanted her
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to free him of the soulbox, and so she could use him to free this body
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from Malicia's yoke. Beyond the walls of Wolof, Praes was a cauldron
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about to tip over and in such chaos a clever woman could rise far. If
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she was to have a foot in the Tower, why not climb all the way to the
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top?
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If none of it mattered, why should Akua Sahelian not get everything she
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deserved?
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A voice she was learning to hate whispered that perhaps she already had.
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She ignored it. It was the voice of weakness, of the lion gone tame. She
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could see it in her mind's eye, the path up the stairs. It began with
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the Black Knight, Marshal Nim. The key to the Legions, not that Malicia
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seemed to have grasped that. Her only Black Knight before Nim had the
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loyalty of the Legions for having reformed them, but the bond ran deeper
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than that. Black Knights were the champions of the Tower, commander of
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armies and killers of heroes. There was a Role: Malicia had done more
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than simply name a new champion when she had recognized the ogre's
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claim. Should Marshal Nim prove less than utterly loyal, why, it might
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just be that the armies of Praes would split between following the old
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Black Knight and the new.
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Did that not simply reek of opportunity? Yes, she decided, it was the
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beginning of a plan. One that would allow her to sit on the sole throne
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in all of Praes, before all was said and done.
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So why, Akua Sahelian wondered, was she not hearing the song?
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---
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Amadeus had always enjoyed looking at the Hungering Sands as night fell.
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It was a pleasure to the eye, the way the sky turned to vivid purples
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and yellows with not a cloud in sight. The way the shadows lengthened
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among the dunes like slithering snakes. Even the coolness was pleasant,
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when wearing a cloak. That much had been a necessity, given that it was
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only feasible to meet the woman he'd come to see under some cover of
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darkness. He'd not seen her in at least fifteen years, by Amadeus'
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reckoning, but neither of them would forget the other. Lady Layan Kaishi
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had once been Commander Layan of the Third Legion, before she came to
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rule a prosperous little town at the outskirts of the Hungering Sands.
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She'd lost an arm at the siege of Laure, and not in a manner where it
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might be replaced, but the Legions had not abandoned her. When she'd
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sought a discharge and returned home to settle accounts with her family,
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`volunteer legionaries on leave' had accompanied her. Lord Kaisha had
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fallen down some stairs, as had his young wife -- Layan's own age, he'd
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heard -- whose luck in birthing a son possessing the Gift had first seen
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Layan given the choice of the Legions or the grave. Some of those
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legionaries had even returned after their terms were over, stayed on as
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household guards, and though the holdings of Lady Layan were not large
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or rich they were known to be orderly. It'd drawn people to her town, as
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safety always did in troubled times.
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Layan had not forgotten whose help it was that'd seen her made a lady:
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when Amadeus had contacted her, she'd agreed to lend a hand without
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hesitation. It had not been an onerous favour he asked for, anyway,
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simply the use of one of her family mages for a scrying ritual.
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Sometimes the dark-haired man wondered if anyone aside from Eudokia
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really grasped the sheer number of veterans he'd settled across the
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breadth of Praes. Most of them were not lords or ladies, of course -- a
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campaign to stack the nobility with his veterans would have caused
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rebellion -- but he'd seen to their livelihoods. Appointments in the
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local bureaucracies, free land leases in the Green Stretch, cushy posts
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in city guards or advantageous trade permits.
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The Legions of Terror had bled for him across a dozen fields. Amadeus
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would not let their legionaries tumble into destitution after they left
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the ranks. And now, in his own time on need, he had found many doors
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still open to him. It was not the same as when he had been able to call
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on the Eyes, when Eudokia and Ime had left no stone unturned and council
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unheard, but he'd learned he still had friends in many places. Not a net
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of them, but it was better that way. Ime would have been able to
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infiltrate an organized apparatus, but she could not track entire
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decades of friendships and loyalties forged through two wars. So long as
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Amadeus remained quick and careful, so long as he kept moving, the Eyes
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would stay one step behind. It'd be enough.
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In most fights, one step's worth of distance was all that he needed.
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Layan had aged gracefully, hair threaded with silver and skin wrinkled
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but staying fit in form. She'd come to him out in the sands with her
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mage, as the odds were good that there was at least one traitor in her
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keep, but when they met she had hesitated before clasping the arm he
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offered. Amadeus's lips quirked in amusement. She had not been the first
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of his veterans to react this way.
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``The beard?'' he teased.
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``And the grey,'' Layan admitted. ``Never thought I'd see you with
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either, sir. No offence.''
|
|
|
|
``None taken,'' he said. ``You'd be surprised how many reacted the
|
|
same.''
|
|
|
|
She snorted.
|
|
|
|
``With all due respect, sir, no I wouldn't,'' Layan said.
|
|
|
|
For all the levity, her eyes had sharpened when he'd mentioned others.
|
|
She hesitated, then spoke again.
|
|
|
|
``Is it true?'' Layan asked. ``That out west you made a claim on the
|
|
Tower?''
|
|
|
|
``Rumours fly far and swift, I see,'' Amadeus noted.
|
|
|
|
``Rashan up north was a captain in the Fifth,'' Lady Layan said. ``His
|
|
kid and one of mine are married. Lady Salah's husband, out in Jubar,
|
|
he's the brother of the Second's last quartermaster. We talk, sir. And
|
|
not just us. There's a lot who came home after the wars who're still
|
|
around. And a lot of us who have kin in the Legions and the Army.''
|
|
|
|
It still filled Amadeus with a rueful sort of pride, every time he heard
|
|
the army raised by Istrid's daughter and his own spoken of as a peer to
|
|
the Legions he'd given so many years of his life to.
|
|
|
|
``I spoke words at the Peace of Salia,'' Amadeus said. ``I stand by them
|
|
still.''
|
|
|
|
Layan Kaishi nodded, eyes hooded in the unfolding dark of the evening.
|
|
|
|
``There's a lot of us who'll come, if you call,'' she quietly said.
|
|
``More than you know. Not just veterans and our families.''
|
|
|
|
She hesitated.
|
|
|
|
``It can't go on like this, sir,'' Layan said. ``This \emph{chaos}.
|
|
Ashur burns our coasts and now we play parlour games pretending they're
|
|
allies?''
|
|
|
|
She spat to the side, into the sand.
|
|
|
|
``Fuck that,'' Layan cursed. ``And whatever the Hells is happening with
|
|
Sepulchral up north should have been stamped out years ago, not left to
|
|
burn for whatever scheme this is. The empress is getting lost in her
|
|
plots, sir. Doesn't matter she keeps winning, we're just \emph{tired} of
|
|
the games.''
|
|
|
|
And in a way, Amadeus thought, those few sentences he'd just heard were
|
|
the most damning a verdict passed on Alaya's reign he'd yet to hear.
|
|
Because when the Tower was losing people like Layan, who was neither
|
|
rebellious nor ambitious by nature, who most wanted out of a ruler
|
|
competence and order, something had gone wrong. \emph{Were you always
|
|
like this, Alaya, and I simply never wanted to see it?} No, he did not
|
|
believe that. They had lost perspective, over the years. He as much as
|
|
she. They'd spent too long sitting on high seats, forgot what the view
|
|
from the mud was like. Like all empires, like all rulers, they had
|
|
reached their zenith and begun to decay. Old mistakes were yet in need
|
|
of mending, and Amadeus of the Green Stretch would not relent until he
|
|
had laid them all to rest.
|
|
|
|
That much he owed, to all and to himself.
|
|
|
|
``I am already a rebel, Layan,'' he faintly smiled.
|
|
|
|
``We can be too, if you want,'' his veteran boldly offered. ``And
|
|
there's enough of us we can get High Lady Takisha behind you if you toss
|
|
her a few bones. It's not just us old hands who want an end to the
|
|
messes. We've got support.''
|
|
|
|
The High Lady of Kahtan would turn on him the very moment she felt she
|
|
was in a position to claim the Tower for herself, of course. They both
|
|
knew that without Layan needing to speak the words.
|
|
|
|
``Another banner raised won't end this,'' Amadeus gently declined. ``But
|
|
beyond your help tonight, there \emph{is} something that can be done.''
|
|
|
|
Layan Kaisha was almost seventy. She'd not been in the Legions of Terror
|
|
for over twenty years. And still, the moment he finished that sentence,
|
|
she snapped at attention like a cadet fresh off the College rolls.
|
|
\emph{Some things just stay with us, don't they?} he fondly thought.
|
|
Amadeus understood. He, too, had never quite shaken the stray dog out of
|
|
his bones. He still found it easier to bite than kneel.
|
|
|
|
``High Lady Takisha has gathered the nobles of the south to her court,''
|
|
he said. ``Do not let them disperse. Take them north: Ater is where this
|
|
all comes to a close.''
|
|
|
|
Layan slowly nodded.
|
|
|
|
``So long as the Grey Eyries are rebelling and Old Wither's holed up in
|
|
Foramen, many will balk at leaving the Sands,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``The Tribes won't move,'' Amadeus said.
|
|
|
|
It was not a prediction or a promise. It was a statement of fact. Her
|
|
eyes widened in surprise.
|
|
|
|
``Are they- no, best you don't answer that,'' she decided. ``They can't
|
|
get out of me what I don't know.''
|
|
|
|
It was rather heartwarming to see that the safety protocols Ranker had
|
|
designed were still being kept to. Her contributions to the Reforms had
|
|
been more discreet than his or Grem's, but no less crucial for it.
|
|
|
|
``I'll spread the word, sir,'' Layan said. ``We should have enough pull
|
|
for it.''
|
|
|
|
And Alaya would want the nobles close, even if she lost the battle
|
|
taking shape in the depths of the Wasteland. The starker her disarray,
|
|
the closer she would want them to the Tower: troublesome as they would
|
|
be in its shadow, it was nothing to the trouble they would make out of
|
|
her reach. So even if the Eyes learned he had a hand in this, and they
|
|
would, Alaya would allow it. She would trust in her mastery of the Court
|
|
to triumph against whatever scheme he might have arranged.
|
|
|
|
``There'll be a battle, before it ends,'' Amadeus said, offering his arm
|
|
to clasp.
|
|
|
|
``Then we'll meet again, sir,'' Layan smiled, taking it. ``I still fit
|
|
in my armour.''
|
|
|
|
She cast a look around, glossing over the young mage she'd brought as he
|
|
requested -- he had long prepared the ritual, needing only a word to
|
|
begin -- and casting about for another shadow in the gloom.
|
|
|
|
``I'd heard the Lady was with you,'' she said, a question in her tone.
|
|
|
|
``Ranger's out and about,'' he smiled. ``Checking to see if there are
|
|
any rats.''
|
|
|
|
``I pity them if there are,'' Layan muttered.
|
|
|
|
With one last glance they parted ways, Amadeus sliding down the side of
|
|
the hill to speak to the mageling in neat robes awaiting by a simple
|
|
scrying bowl laid atop a rock.
|
|
|
|
``I can begin at your pleasure, my lord,'' the young man said. ``Though
|
|
the key you gave me is utter nonsense, so it ought to do nothing at
|
|
all.''
|
|
|
|
``Then it will do nothing,'' Amadeus serenely replied. ``The spell,
|
|
now.''
|
|
|
|
Though somewhat put out, the young sorcerer duly spoke the incantation
|
|
and the spell shivered across the air. When the water's surface rippled
|
|
the mageling gaped in surprise. Amadeus' cool stare shook him out of it,
|
|
making the dismissal clear. He bowed, then ran off after his aunt into
|
|
the sands. The green-eyed man passed a hand through his hair, which he
|
|
decided was getting a little too long, and waited for the ripples to
|
|
cease. It took nearly a quarter hour for it to happen, and only then did
|
|
a face appear in the water. Deep-set yellow eyes and wrinkled skin that
|
|
looked like brown-green leather swam into focus.
|
|
|
|
High Lady Wither of Foramen, formerly Matron of the High Ridge Tribe,
|
|
looked highly irritated until she realized who it was she was looking
|
|
at. Then her face went blank, mouth closing shut with a snap.
|
|
|
|
``Good evening, Wither,'' Amadeus smiled, showing only the faintest
|
|
slice of teeth. ``It's been some time, hasn't it?''
|
|
|
|
The old goblin hissed in displeasure through her teeth, almost like a
|
|
whistle. Obtaining the key to her private scrying bowl had not endeared
|
|
him to her, evidently.
|
|
|
|
``Never long enough, Carrion Lord,'' she said. ``Come to threaten me
|
|
into changing sides?''
|
|
|
|
``I usually threaten only people I intend to later kill regardless,''
|
|
Amadeus noted. ``Fear is a poor incentive for alliance. I suppose I
|
|
could bluster a bit, if it will make you feel better about what is to
|
|
follow.''
|
|
|
|
``And what's that?'' Wither mocked, flashing her teeth mockingly.
|
|
|
|
``I am going to tell you a story,'' Amadeus amiably said, ``and you will
|
|
then give me what I politely ask for.''
|
|
|
|
``You're getting thick in your old age, Carrion Lord,'' Wither said.
|
|
``My defences are fine enough Ranger didn't even try for my life when
|
|
you two passed through Foramen. You have nothing to threaten me with,
|
|
and any offer you make the Tower will double without batting an eye.''
|
|
|
|
Ah, Wither. For all that she was the first Matron to truly enter the
|
|
highest reach of Praesi politics, she'd yet to learn to think beyond the
|
|
goblin conception of conflict. Amadeus had never attempted to lay a hand
|
|
on the High Lady of Foramen because what he'd come for had been of much
|
|
greater value than anything an assassination might bring about. The
|
|
green-eyed man had promised his old acquaintance a story, however, and
|
|
so he would tell it.
|
|
|
|
``After the fall of Summerholm, during the Conquest,'' Amadeus said,
|
|
``it took less than six hours for the first rebel group to form.''
|
|
|
|
Garrison soldiers and a hedge wizard that'd escaped the Fields of
|
|
Streges, planning to go to ground until most of the Legions left the
|
|
city and then strike out at the invasion's supply lines while the siege
|
|
of Laure began. It had been a reasoned and practical plan, in Amadeus'
|
|
opinion. He'd appreciated the professionalism of it. Unfortunately
|
|
Wekesa had spared the mage on purpose at the Fields, marking him with a
|
|
discreet tracking spell, so they'd all been executed after
|
|
interrogation.
|
|
|
|
``Three more emerged the following day,'' he continued. ``Even with
|
|
Scribe personally overseeing the Eyes in the city, it quickly became
|
|
clear that the situation was not tenable. Sooner or later we'd miss the
|
|
cabals and the push against Laure would be endangered. Something needed
|
|
to be done.''
|
|
|
|
Some had suggested mass executions of former soldiers, but Amadeus had
|
|
found that ill-advised. It would simply replace known possible
|
|
insurgents with military training for thrice their number in grieving
|
|
relatives inclined to methods of insurgency that were harder to put
|
|
down. If not worse. Callowans had long proven that they were perfectly
|
|
willing to torch their own towns and cities while invaders were in them,
|
|
should they be pushed far enough.
|
|
|
|
``The grey's brought rambling with it,'' Wither snorted. ``You're
|
|
turning into a joke, Amadeus.''
|
|
|
|
The dark-haired man's friendly smile did not waver.
|
|
|
|
``It occurred to me, then, that fighting the inevitable was pointless,''
|
|
he said. ``There \emph{would} be rebel cabals. This was not an issue,
|
|
however, so long as they were \emph{manageable} rebel cabals.''
|
|
|
|
``So you started making your own rebel groups,'' Wither dismissed.
|
|
``Where spies were in the ranks from the start. I know the tale, Carrion
|
|
Lord. It's an old one -- have you run out of cleverness, to be boasting
|
|
of tricks decades old?''
|
|
|
|
``Ah,'' the Carrion Lord said. ``So you \emph{do} remember.''
|
|
|
|
He cocked his head to the side.
|
|
|
|
``Why, then, did you old witches believe I wouldn't catch you out using
|
|
the same trick?''
|
|
|
|
Wither's face went blank.
|
|
|
|
``Come now,'' Amadeus murmured. ``Alaya never bothered to understand
|
|
your people beyond the levers that could be used to move them, Wither,
|
|
but I made a \emph{study} of you. Did you really think I wouldn't figure
|
|
out the Tribes have been making their own traitors for centuries?''
|
|
|
|
On the surface, the goblin custom of constant backstabbing and treachery
|
|
was remarkably similar to broader Praesi philosophies: iron sharpening
|
|
iron, echoes of jino-waza. But that was a surface resemblance only.
|
|
Goblins always preferred taking from outsiders than each other.
|
|
Competition was brutal within units -- within a family, a tribe, within
|
|
\emph{the} Tribes -- but unlike the governing philosophies of Praes the
|
|
Tribes did have a concept of the `common good' of their kind. They could
|
|
and did sacrifice, if not for each other, then for the sake of their
|
|
race. When the Goblin Rebellions became losing proposition, the Matrons
|
|
always made the same decision: one or more turned traitor, the rest were
|
|
butchered to appease the Tower.
|
|
|
|
There must always be someone in the Grey Eyries that Ater could deal
|
|
with, else the talk might turn to annihilation instead of vassalage.
|
|
|
|
``You are grasping at straws,'' Wither dismissed, ``your position has
|
|
become des-''
|
|
|
|
``It was cleverly done,'' Amadeus honestly praised. ``Whoever wins the
|
|
war, wherever the balance of power lies, the Tribes will gain. Either
|
|
Alaya keeps the Tower and you are confirmed the first High Lady of your
|
|
kind, or the Grand Alliance prevails and the Confederation of the Grey
|
|
Eyries is recognized as a sovereign nation by more than half the
|
|
continent.''
|
|
|
|
It had been, in that classically goblin way, a viciously executed
|
|
gambit. Because whether it was Wither that was the face of goblinkind
|
|
going forward or the Confederation, the `loser' would have to be drowned
|
|
in blood. The deception risked being found out otherwise, the truth that
|
|
the Matrons had planned this entire civil war of theirs from the start
|
|
and that Wither was still very much one of them.
|
|
|
|
``You have nothing,'' Wither said. ``Not a thimble of proof to back
|
|
this, because it is complete \emph{lunacy}.''
|
|
|
|
``You played it too straight, Wither,'' Amadeus told her, not unkindly.
|
|
``That is what gave you away. We came to Foramen and there was not a
|
|
\emph{single} secret line of communication between you and the
|
|
Matrons.''
|
|
|
|
He saw the realization sink into her, the way her large eyes narrowed in
|
|
dismay. They had overcorrected in cutting off ties entirely. The Matrons
|
|
\emph{should} have been secretly negotiating with Wither if this was a
|
|
genuine civil war. They'd wholly cut ties because they did not want the
|
|
Eyes to catch them talking and figure out the entire affair was a ploy,
|
|
which had been the very detail to confirm for Amadeus that it was all a
|
|
ploy. Alaya would understand it too, if it was brought to her. Wither
|
|
knew that.
|
|
|
|
And so she knew that Amadeus now had his fingers around a throat: hers
|
|
and all the Tribes'.
|
|
|
|
``You sat on that for more than a year,'' Wither finally said. ``You've
|
|
not simply been wandering around drinking and fucking the Lady of the
|
|
Lake.''
|
|
|
|
Well, he'd not done \emph{just} that.
|
|
|
|
``In the spirit of our understanding,'' Amadeus amiably said, ``I would
|
|
like to make polite requests of you.''
|
|
|
|
``What is it you want, Carrion Lord?'' Wither hissed. ``You've turned
|
|
the knife enough for a night.''
|
|
|
|
``I would like you to refrain from sallies outside your territory.''
|
|
|
|
``Fine,'' Wither said, with ill grace.
|
|
|
|
``I would like use of your smuggling routes into Ater.''
|
|
|
|
She began to speak, but Amadeus raised a hand to interrupt her.
|
|
|
|
``I know the Matrons' own were closed, but also Alaya left you your own
|
|
as a reward,'' he said. ``Don't bother.''
|
|
|
|
Wither grunted.
|
|
|
|
``Anything else?'' she mocked.
|
|
|
|
``Oh, just one last thing,'' Amadeus nonchalantly said.
|
|
|
|
The friendly smile turned thin and blade-like.
|
|
|
|
``I would like every last drop of goblinfire in possession of the
|
|
Tribes.''
|