...is pretty much everything in the Empire, actually
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"If there are further assurances you would have of me that I understand the importance of extraordinary caution, and will exercise it, I am happy to offer them. I cannot in good conscience talk to one person, no matter how honorable, and arrive at any confidence that I" am not being misled "have the context I need to do my work. You have dissuaded me from giving the speech, or any other."

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"I am pleased to hear it. Nonetheless I believe you would do better consulting military men who have experience of their own in Oppara before attempting to carry out further interviews here, and I strongly urge you to depart immediately to join your subordinates, who I have no doubt are in dire need of your oversight, given, as you say, the critical situation on the front."

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She instinctively parses that last sentence as mockery, though on reflection she does not think he means it that way. The ways in which the situation is dire will not remotely be improved by her presence. This is the place where things will have to change, for there to be any hope. 

 

"I thank you for your time and your counsel, and expect you are correct in it." She bows. She thinks that doesn't cross the line into actually implying she'll immediately leave.

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Sigh.

No, no it doesn't.

"I take it, then, that you do not desire a courier pass, and I do not have your assurance that you will depart immediately?" He pulls a cord connected to a tiny bell elsewhere.

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"I will not refuse a courier pass, if it's not offered in exchange for my immediate departure; but if it is then, no, I mean to tour the city and attend some sermons and avoid stirring up trouble and arrive at greater confidence in the wisdom of your counsel, at which time I'll leave."

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He fundamentally doesn't trust her not to get into extremely stupid trouble.

A clerk comes in, and he makes an eye motion; the clerk leaves.

Six armed and armored men come in.

"In that case, I am placing you under arrest on suspicion of heresy. Will you go quietly?"

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What.



She'd started to feel suspicious, as he insisted more intensely that she not even look around the city, as is the right of any Imperial citizen who can pay the toll, as she could obviously have done before she came to him if she hadn't been trying to avoid injuring the Church's interests (it is as a product of that feature of the situation, and only that one, that she feels betrayed) -

 

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- but she isn't sure what this says, about her suspicions, she'd need to think through half a dozen things, and it doesn't matter anyway as there are no circumstances under which she'd draw weapons on the Church's people following lawful orders the only problem with which is their participation in an error that will end the world. 


(Also it wouldn't work.)

(It's not decisive but she does calculate it.)

 

You could have just told me that I was in fact obliged to leave!

There is no point in saying that. There is no point, particularly, in saying anything, except that at some point she should clarify the standing of her staff in the city. 

 

Aroden, if there is some better thing - and there has to be some better thing - let us see it!

"Yes, Praepositor," she says, and raises her hands in one of the fashions that unambiguously isn't spellcasting. 

 

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They are going to be very polite, when they take her away. They don't mean to throw her in some grimy cell, and if she will give her parole they will happily give her a nice pleasant room. They will take her weapon and write her a receipt for it, and promise to return it.

And meanwhile Praepositor Emilian will write a message for General Arnisant, to be delivered via Sending or scry, that his rogue paladin showed up in Oppara and they got to her before she committed treason and he should send someone to pick her up.

Seriously, Praepositor Emilian doesn't add. This is the ninth one this year.

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"You told me, when we spoke of your plans for the off-season, that you intended to spend it recruiting. I have been troubled by that, since Oppara wrote to me. Did you intentionally elide your destination?"

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"No. Never. I had been thinking about hitting Andoren province. I'd been planning to do Oppara next year, once I had more experience. And then - the situation deteriorated, and I realized I wasn't sure there would be a next year. Sir, are you sure there'll be a next year?"

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"No."

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"Then why aren't you in Oppara explaining to them -"

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"Knight Commander, what you did was very dangerous and very stupid, and this conversation is about how culpably so. My political decisionmaking is the subject of a different conversation, ideally one you would have had before you went and tried this. Don't ask further questions unless you fail to understand mine."

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"Yes, sir."

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"When did you decide to go to Oppara?"

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"I came to Kerse, and they were celebrating our great victories, and I went around asking questions, and - I realized that everybody had no idea what was actually happening, and put it together with what I had witnessed already, and figured that - it wasn't that the Emperor is indifferent, or at work on some plan slow to fruition, but that the Emperor probably did not realize that everything was at stake and soon it'd be too late. So I decided to go to Oppara."

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"What did you do when you arrived in Oppara?"

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"I went to the Church and asked to get on the channel and spell schedules, find lodging, and get recommendations on who to speak to for advice on my speech explaining that we are losing the war. They said the speeches would need approval, and referred me to a man, so I went to him."

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"Did you understand that the speeches were accusing the army, and me personally, of treason."

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"That interpretation of them had occurred to me. It's why I wanted advice on them. I did not and do not believe you were betraying the Emperor..... and also every representation that anyone has made to Oppara about the situation is a lie and I hoped that someone would know how to - say that, cause them to know that, while causing as little collateral damage as possible."

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"Were you intending, planning, or hoping that the Emperor would appoint you to run the Crusade after all your superiors were revealed for traitors and the stakes unimaginably high?"

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"- no. I - no. That didn't even occur to me. I couldn't do it. We would die even faster. You are much better at your job than I would be, and I did not in any sense want you removed from it. But you can hardly go to Oppara and say 'everything I told you about the war for the last eight years wasn't true'."

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"Was it among the matters of law and honor that you considered, as you planned this, that it would be betraying me?"

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