though not as good as other days
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Valia Wain does not prepare spells on the morning of her trial, because after the trial they will put her to death, and Iomedae's resources are valuable, and there are no good uses of them available to her. It feels like a hole inside her, not having spells, but she ought to be willing to endure much worse, if it's the right thing to do. Was willing to endure much worse, when it was a bit more distant. It seems more difficult now that it's drawn near.

She wishes there wasn't the whole to-do about the trial, really. She feels sick at the thought of the crowd. It is their right, to see justice done. It is probably one of the six pieces that would need to work for Cheliax to have a real justice system that was really just. But in isolation it is just - a crowd of people who will go on to live in a Cheliax she can no longer have any hope of helping to fix, a people she cannot inspire, should not inspire, except by her example in renouncing the evils she has done and going obediently to judgment for them.

She is angry. It is a sort of futile swirling undirected anger, like a buzzing fly in the last hours of its life where it's clumsy and no longer any good at flying, and will launch itself noisily from surface to surface. She is angry at Elie Cotonnet, for hosting a constitutional convention, or maybe for hosting this constitutional convention. She is angry at the Queen, for leaving the Evil nobles in power, for deciding she'd rather kill every person who will will miserable certainty rebel against them for the rest of time than kill them. She is angry at herself, for coming here, for giving a speech, for not giving a better speech, for not understanding the mood of the people of Westcrown, for not having learned to read as a child, for not having known how to guard her thoughts and keep Victòria and Alicia safe. She is angry at Hell, for ruling Cheliax, and at everyone who acts like it would be profoundly uncivilized to dig such matters up and continue caring about them.

 

She is very, very afraid. She knows that they won't torture her. She thinks she has the impulse control not to channel and accidentally prolong her execution and perhaps she can expend the channels in advance, if she's still worried about it in the moment. She is not very afraid of judgment; she will go to Iomedae, who has never abandoned her. There will still be the war to fight, in Heaven. She is not sure what that leaves her to be afraid of, but she is so afraid that it makes every part of her feel very alive, and very numb. 


Some servants of the Queen come in, and fix her up with Prestidigitation, and make her change into clean clothes, and comb her hair. The anger buzzes around and settles on them, though this is stupid. 

And then she waits, and waits, and waits, for what feels like a thousand years.

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After getting diverted from his meeting with the queen by an unexpected meeting with the archmage Cotonnet, Alexeara makes his way to the palace prisons. The guards let him in.

"Select Wain."

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Pacing, praying, panicking - "Lord Marshal Cansellarion. - can you do the fear thing."

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"Of course." He does. "I was given a few messages to pass on to you. The first and most important is that your confession from the other day was thrown out for some reason. The prosecutors are probably going to try to get you to sign another confession, and I think it would probably be unwise to do so."

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" - the prosecutors said that the confession was helpful to the judge, for knowing what happened, so that everyone could learn from it and make sure it doesn't happen again, like the incident report the church is doing. They are also going to hang me with it but I don't think that's a reason not to - I didn't say anything that wasn't true."

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"The judge will ask you questions to learn what happened. You will be permitted to speak in your own defense and explain what happened for yourself. I think the confession only helps them hang you."

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"Oh. 

 

She also said that - if they had a confession then the Queen would be more likely to be lenient with Victòria and Alicia and the people who thought they were obeying me, because if I was cooperating she'd be less angry with me."

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"That was the second message I was going to pass on. Your allies - I wasn't given names, but I assume Victòria and Alicia - have been released on the recommendation of Captain Tauler. I do not think your confession had anything to do with it... I don't know if the queen is angry with you but she is at least acting as though she is not."

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Valia sighs a deep shuddering sign that feels like dying and being born again, or maybe just dying and waking up in Heaven. Everything is abruptly wholly bearable. "- oh. Oh. Thank you. Thank you." She is not sure if she's talking to him or to the Queen or to Iomedae. 

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"I have some other things I need to deal with before the trial, but - 

 

You will serve the Goddess better with your life than with your martyrdom. I wouldn't counsel doing anything illegal, or dishonorable, but - I think you should, as best you honestly can, argue for and aim for your own acquittal rather than your conviction."

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"- I understand. I - I don't think I really believe that the trial might find that I am innocent but I'm not a lawyer and Lluisa is and she thinks I'm innocent and - I will try to keep in mind that if I am innocent then it would be a miscarriage of justice if I were convicted. 

Are you going to be at the trial?"

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"I will be there. I have a speech planned for if you're acquitted, to hopefully quell any urges to more rioting. I hope to be able to give it."

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She probably does not need to tell an important senior paladin that it'll be fine regardless. If he looks like he needs it that's probably just her misreading him. "I hope so too. - and if not, we'll see each other someday. I'm not scared. I probably will be when you leave, but - please don't worry about me."

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"May the Goddess go with you."

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"And with you."

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About ten minutes later - "Valia?"

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Oh, it's good to see her. "Oh, hello! I wasn't expecting - I guess I should have been. The Lord Marshal said that the confession got thrown out for some reason."

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"It's because you confessed to treason. The Queen can't spare you, if it's treason, and - it was treason, but that wasn't really the most important part of the whole situation, was it? You intended some of the other things. You intended to inspire people to violence, you intended to denounce your enemies. You didn't actually intend to rebel against the Queen."

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"No, I didn't."

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"So the Queen doesn't want to see you die for that, though you still might for everything else, and asked that we get a confession without the treason."

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That's so reasonable. "The Lord Marshal thought that I ought not to sign another confession, though," she apologizes. 

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"Hmmm? He didn't talk with us about that. I can write him a letter, if you want, and explain why we need it. Everything you said in it was true, right?"

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"Of course. You can write him, if you want."

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She'll start doing that. "If it's true, why would a paladin not want you to say it? Surely he wouldn't ask you to lie to the court."

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"Of course not. But he thought - he thought that they could just ask me in court all those questions, and then I could give full answers, and the confession was really only useful for hanging me and not for finding out the truth."

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"That's not true at all, Valia. You know it's really important to me that we find out the truth. I would work some - much less awful job - if I didn't care about really getting to the truth of things."

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