And now, his greatest strength became his biggest weakness. If he was a more reckless man, he really would, he thought, have plunged forward, and claimed Oliver Patrick's head, and declared the Prince's death a mere accident for the war effort.
After all, if they thought in terms of the overall war, what was more important? That they preserve the life of one Prince, or that they preserve the life of the Emerson army, and see that they captured Ernest, so that they might reinforce the Pendragon armies and see Queen Asabel and Lord Blackwell overturned?
He knew the answer to that question himself, but he did not have the heart to overturn it. When it mattered most, when there were no other answers, he could only trust in those questions and morals that he'd picked up so long ago. There could be no changing now, as old as he'd become. A stellar career he'd served, and now, he thought, it was perhaps pastime that he was subjected to a degree of embarrassment.