446 lines
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446 lines
24 KiB
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\hypertarget{villainous-interlude-coup-de-thuxe9atre}{%
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\chapter*{Villainous Interlude: Coup de
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Théatre}\label{villainous-interlude-coup-de-thuxe9atre}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{villainous-interlude-coup-de-thuxe9atre}} \chaptermark{Villainous Interlude: Coup de Théatre}
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\epigraph{``Never hold anything in a cage you can't put back in, should it
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get out.''}{Dread Emperor Terribilis II}
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Akua had spent most of her thirteenth summer pouring over all the
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writings authored by Dread Empress Malicia and her Calamities.
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Neither Assassin nor Captain had ever put their name to anything, which
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had narrowed the field somewhat. Scribe, who could be considered an
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honorary Calamity of sorts, had written a single piece on organizational
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principles which had never been published and only ever circulated
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privately among high-ranking Legion officers. Some of what the woman had
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jotted down on the subject of redundancy in essential systems was
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useful, but none of it was ground-breaking. It confirmed Heiress'
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personal belief that the Scribe was a very talented administrator but
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not a threat independently of her master. Warlock had been the most
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prolific author, but all of it was related to either anomalous sorceries
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or broader magical theory. The sheer spectrum of experiments the man had
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been able to afford doing did indicate he had access to more wealth than
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was openly known, which was\ldots{} interesting. It meant there was a
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material power base to attack, if she ever needed to distract him.
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Unfortunately, none of it gave any insight into the way the Sovereign of
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the Red Skies thought. Still, ultimately the stewards of the path Praes
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had taken over the last forty years were Dread Empress Malicia and her
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Black Knight.
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Those had been the papers she'd sought the most ardently, though she'd
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not been the first Praesi aristocrat to seek insight into their ruler
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and her right hand. Lord Black had penned a handful of treatises on
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tactics, though they were not personal thoughts of his: merely reports
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of what techniques had and had not worked during the Conquest, as well
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as what made them fail when they did. There was a paper on the influence
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of the original Miezan legions on the Praesi ones, and why some of the
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leftover practices needed to be abandoned -- it had, however, been
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written before the Conquest. All the suggested changes were long
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implemented. The only knowledge she'd gotten of that was that the man
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tended to focus on underlying structures when making changes: whatever
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he made, he built to last. \emph{He dislikes retreating}, her mother had
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said. The last paper she'd gotten her hands on was the after-action
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report from his fortnight in Stygia. Not the censored one he'd given the
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Chancellor's office at the time but the one he'd smuggled to Malicia --
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then still a mere concubine.
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Managing to have a copy transcribed had cost her a small fortune and the
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lives of seven family agents in the Tower but she'd found the prize
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worth it. Contrary to popular belief in the Wasteland, Black had
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apparently not gone to the city with a plan in mind. He'd found the weak
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points in the Stygian power structure, used Assassin to trigger a
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collapse and then ruthlessly played factions against one another until
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they were weak enough for him to impose the outcome he'd desired: a
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ruling Magister from the faction friendliest to the Empire. The
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assertion that he'd done the entire thing drunk she could safely dismiss
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as a jest to amuse Malicia, for his predictions of enemy moves had been
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too consistently accurate. Back then Akua had simply noted that Lord
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Black was as dangerous when improvising as he was when operating
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according to a set plan, but now? Now she saw the pattern.
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\emph{Foundling works the same way.} The two of them knew they were more
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skilled at exploiting chaos than their opponents, so they created chaos.
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Whether it harmed their own side did not matter, so long as it also hurt
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the enemy equally -- the comparative advantage they gained from disorder
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still swung the balance in their favour.
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Malicia's works were the most interesting, all in all. In her concubine
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days she'd written a history of the War of Thirteen Tyrants and One
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displaying a great deal of political acumen -- as well as access to the
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private Imperial library, which was much more unusual. Members of the
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seraglio did not get passes unless they were nobly born, and Malicia's
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birth was as common as it came. The treatise on international politics
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she'd penned after her ascension to the throne was arguably the most
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important piece to be found and it was, in Akua's opinion, an
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abomination. Titled ``The Death of the Age of Wonders'', it laid out
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what Malicia believed the Dread Empire's stance abroad should be for the
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next few decades. Some of it was common wisdom: the application of
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political pressure in the Free Cities was an old favourite of Tyrants.
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But the rest, like reaching out to the Thalassocracy? Whether or not
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there was a need for a ``counterweight south of Procer'' was irrelevant:
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Ashur stood on the side of Good. No amount of shared interests would
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ever fill that gap. The need to keep Principate divided as she'd
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outlined was self-evident, but it was Heiress' belief that Malicia's
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ironclad avoidance of direct conflict had led the Empire directly to its
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current weakened position.
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The Legions should have marched across the Vales decades ago instead of
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resting on their laurels, to burn Salia to the ground and permanently
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sunder the principalities.
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The entire treatise had left Akua uneasy, and it was only years later
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she'd understood why. Malicia looked only forward, to a future she could
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shape with her own hands. The past glories of the Empire she dismissed
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as irrelevant at best and a hindrance at worst\emph{. She thinks near
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all Tyrants before her were fools, as if she were the only clever woman
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to ever hold the Tower.} Akua Sahelian had been born to the ruling line
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of great and ancient Wolof, the only Imperial city never to be occupied
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by foreigners after the Declaration. As a child she'd played in the
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temple-mazes where her ancestors had sacrificed greenskins to the Gods,
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she'd grown a woman in the shade of the baked mud pyramids where rituals
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as old as Calernia still took place. Her very blood was running with the
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history of Praes, its madness and greatness both. To even entertain the
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pretence of wiping the slate clean with a new reign was to spit on all
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the Tower stood for. \emph{We are the last of our breed, Malicia. The
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last great villains of Calernia, perhaps in all of Creation.}
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The drow of the Everdark had collapsed into bickering tribes unworthy of
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the ruins they haunted. The Chain of Hunger was nothing more than a
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horde of starving rats, as incapable of villainy as any other animal.
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The Dead King, that famed monster who'd turned his entire kingdom into
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undead and invaded the very devils who'd thought to trick him, had not
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stirred from beyond his borders in centuries. That the Lycaonese had
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been able to participate at all in the Proceran civil war was a sign of
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how far the lich had fallen -- in olden days they would not have dared
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to strip even a single man from their walls. Stygia and Bellerophon had
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been muzzled by the other cities in the League, reduced to petty border
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disputes, and the same city of Helike that had broken the Principate's
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back under the Unconquered now flinched in the face of Procer's
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displeasure. All that was left was the Dread Empire, the Tower flying
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the black banner promising death and ruin to all who thought themselves
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beyond humbling. And now Dread Empress Malicia would have them turn
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their backs on that inheritance. It was enough to make a woman's blood
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boil.
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But Akua remembered, and from this she drew strength. Dread Empress
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Triumphant -- may she never return -- had been born in Wolof, and had
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kept Wolofites close during her reign. She had not trusted them, but
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perhaps distrusted them less than others. Even as Praes collapsed in the
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face of the retribution wrought by an entire continent and two foreign
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empires besides, her ancestors had retreated beyond the high walls of
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their city and hoarded secrets now forgotten by everyone else. And so
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now Akua stood in the hills south of Marchford, the very city her rival
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was marching on after her victory against the Silver Spears.
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Heiress had not bothered to bedeck herself in plate, though she owned
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several sets. That kind of cumbersome protection was hardly needed: the
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Soninke was a skilled swordswoman but it was a skill she'd acquired more
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to prevent a weakness than acquire an asset. She preferred for others to
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shed the blood for her, and had picked her entourage with that
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preference in mind. Her lacquered armour of overlapping steel scales was
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styled in the ancient style of Taghreb warriors, the skirt of scales
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making up the lower part splitting over her knee to reveal hardened
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leather boots. The rounded helmet protecting her head was wrapped by a
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scale aventail she'd covered with a red silk shawl, leaving an opening
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that revealed only her face. The entire set had been tailored and
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adjusted for her, of course -- her curves were not easy to fit under
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such apparel, even after binding. Reining up her horse, the dark-skinned
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aristocrat stopped to survey the temple she had come to find.
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It was a small and wretched thing, even if it had been built in stone.
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The single company of Proceran mercenaries she'd brought with her had
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taken it without any trouble, falling on the unwary sentinels by
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surprise. The building did not appear on any maps, for it was not a
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place of worship -- it was a prison, one designed by the provincials to
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keep one of the Hell Eggs forever unhatched. Barika rode up to her side,
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her ornate robes a ridiculous affectation in this barbarous country. The
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spells woven into the cloth made it hard as steel should anything strike
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the other woman, as the spells in Akua's own armour made it resistant to
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both extreme temperatures and foreign magic, but while such elegance
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would have been duly appreciated in Praes it was wasted effort out here.
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Callowans were a people of mud and shit, fit only for toiling fields
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save for a few superior breeds like the Deoraithe. Of all the members of
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Heiress' inner circle, Barika was the least valuable in and of herself:
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she was not as powerful a mage as Fadila, not a skilled warrior and
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leader of men like Ghassan and not an inherently valuable piece like
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Chider. She wasn't even particularly clever, though she was by no means
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stupid. \emph{She is my most loyal, though, I will give her that.} The
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two women watched in silence as Commander Chider dragged the priest of
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the temple and slit open his throat with obvious relish, red gushing all
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over scarred hands as the undead goblin smiled.
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``Whatever the necromancer did to bring her back,'' her childhood friend
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finally said, ``it left\ldots{} marks.''
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``Savagery can be useful, if properly leashed,'' Akua replied.
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And there was no denying she held Chider's leash. The necromancy that
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bound the goblin's soul to her corpse and the enchantments that allowed
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the charred husk to actually move existed only as long as she allowed
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them to. Undeath, while technically granting magical properties to a
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corpse, did not allow individuals who'd lacked the talent before their
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demise to use sorcery. Chider had been born without he gift and so had
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no way to influence the magic that kept her in Creation. In the
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distance, Heiress glimpsed the man in command of her Proceran
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footsoldiers stalk towards her. Large and fierce, Arzachel of Valencis
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had proved himself when her host had taken Dormer by sneaking in under
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cover of night and opening the gates. The man moved with the fluidity of
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a large cat, and his hand was never far from the hooked falchion at at
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his belt. From the moment she'd first met him there had been desire in
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his eyes when he looked at her, though Heiress was not inclined to
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indulge him. There were more suitable men if she felt like sharing her
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bed with anyone.
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``The temple is secured, my lady,'' he announced, his Lower Miezan
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softly accented. ``There were few with the priest, only old men and
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green ones.''
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``Good,'' Akua replied. ``Have your soldiers clear the grounds. If
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anyone tries to enter\ldots{}''
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``I know the drill, Lady Heiress,'' he grinned. ``Corpses all around.''
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The Procerans had been a good investment, she decided. Former soldiers
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from the warring principalities, they'd been exiled from the Principate
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for banditry and hostage-taking -- something she'd found an asset more
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than a black mark. They had a talent for finding gold that had come in
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useful in southern Callow: she'd already made twice as much as she'd
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spent hiring them by pillaging rebel holdings. The Stygian slaves had
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proved to be less resourceful, but then she'd not expected initiative of
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them when buying their leash. Dismounting gracefully, Akua left behind
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the mercenaries and passed the two columns that marked the entrance to
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the inner temple. Barika followed cautiously, her unease at the thought
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of what lay inside all too visible. The structure was short compared to
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the high-ceilinged Houses of Light the provincials were so fond of
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building, hidden away between hills so it could not be seen from a
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distance. She found the inside to be miserably bare, all naked stone
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with only dirty beddings to decorate. The living conditions of dead men
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did not interest her, though.
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What she'd come for was in the centre of the room, surrounded by
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markings of powdered chalk: a large standard plunged into the ground,
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pitch black with golden snake swallowing its own tail embroidered into
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the cloth. It moved to a breeze that did not exist, even contained like
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this. Before Triumphant -- may she never return -- the Empire's armies
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had merely been known as the Legions. The terror in the name had been
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earned by artefacts like this one, the vanguard of armies that had
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subjugated all of Calernia for the first and only time in its history.
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``A Hell Egg,'' Barika said, catching up to her. ``Gods, I never thought
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I'd see one.''
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``There are none in the Wasteland. She let all the demons she'd bound in
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Praes loose when the army of heroes assaulted the Tower,'' Heiress
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replied. ``There is one another left in Callow, according to my records,
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and a handful in Procer.''
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What the greatest of the Tyrants had wrought was not easily undone. If
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it were the Sky Breaker and his wife would not still be bound at the
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summit of Cloudreach Peak, one cursed with endless hunger and the other
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with endless healing. It was said that the howls of anguish coming from
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them both still troubled the sleep of all who dwelled in the
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Titanomanchy, a reminder to the giants that defying Praes was never
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without cost.
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``You'd think that a hero would have broken the bindings and killed the
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thing, after all these years,'' Barika said. ``They're not limited the
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way villains are.''
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Demons were born of Evil, and so Evil could not destroy them -- or so
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went the theory. Only the lapdogs of the Heavens had been gifted the
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ability to truly destroy a demon instead of merely jailing them or
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sending them back to the Upper Hells.
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``I chose this one for a reason, Barika,'' Heiress smiled. ``A demon
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alone would be a great and mighty threat, yet Squire might be able to
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contain it until reinforcements came. But a demon from the Thirteenth
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Hell \emph{and} a battalion of devils? That is another thing entirely.''
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Devils grew stronger as they grew older, more cunning and more vicious.
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\emph{And these have been bound on Creation for over eight hundred
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years.}
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``Thirteenth Hell,'' a third voice mused. ``Corruption, isn't it? Well,
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that's going to be a fucking mess.''
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Akua's sword cleared the scabbard before the first word was finished.
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Barika's hands wreathed themselves in roiling shadow, barely contained.
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A woman was leaning against the wall in the back, a silvery flask in
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hand and a lute hanging off a leather strap going across chest. Taghreb?
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No, Ashuran. Heiress had met some of their kind in Mercantis. Not one of
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Squire's known associates. Lord Black's? \emph{Wrong direction, this is
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Callowan holy ground.} There was one known heroine part of the Lone
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Swordsman's crew who was from the Thalassocracy -- the Wandering Bard.
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That could be a problem, she thought coldly. All the Bard variations
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were more dangerous than their commonly ascribed ineptitude would have
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one believe. They were harder to kill than cockroaches, for one, and
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their entire Role family instinctively understood things about the way
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Creation worked that even archmages could only grasp at. One of the
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running theories as to why even villains who should know better let them
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talk was that they practiced a softer form of Speaking, one that
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influenced instead of commanded.
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``Impressive stuff, ladies,'' the hawk-nosed woman praised them, ``but
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it won't do you any good.''
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``And why,'' Akua asked softly, ``would that be?''
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The dark-haired stranger wiggled her eyebrows.
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``Because I'm invincible, of course,'' she informed them cheerfully.
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The Soninke aristocrat kept her face blank, resisting the urge to cast a
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worried glance at the standard. That kind of talk was like sending a
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written invitation to the Gods to make the opposite point. And yet,
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nothing happened\emph{. If a villain had dared to say that, the roof
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would have collapsed on their heads.}
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``You're the Bard,'' Barika said suddenly, finally catching up. ``The
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one that was in Summerholm with the Lone Swordsman.''
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``That's me,'' the heroine agreed. ``Almorava of Symra, at your service.
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Well, not really since you're dastardly villains, but you get my
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meaning.''
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``I commend you on passing Arzachel's picket,'' Heiress said, ignoring
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the digression, ``but you seem to have squandered the element of
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surprise.''
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The woman chuckled and wiped her mouth on her sleeve after taking a long
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pull from her flask. Akua sneered at the lack of manners.
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``Didn't walk here, sweetling. I try not to think about how that works
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too much. But you know us Bards,'' Almorava smiled. ``We Wander into all
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sorts of places.''
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``And you mean to stop us?'' Barika snorted. ``You overestimate the
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strength of your Name, singer.''
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``Wow,'' the heroine huffed. ``Rude. What is it with villains and
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getting personal? I'm not even here to get in your way. You finally
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decided to get plot relevant so I'm having a look, is all.''
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``You would stand aside and let us free a demon on Callowan soil?'' Akua
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asked sceptically.
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``Pretty much,'' Almorava shrugged. ``I mean, it's a shit plan so why
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would I stop you? I'm a little surprised, though, I'll admit. Foundling
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thinks with her fists and Willy thinks three days after the battle's
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over, so by default you're supposed to be the mastermind of this story.
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But \emph{clearly} there's no way letting loose a personification of the
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concept of corruption could ever backfire, right?''
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``What you westerners know of demons could not even fill a thimble,''
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Akua replied flatly, then immediately clamped down on her temper.
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An insult this puerile should not have been able to get under her skin,
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but the casual disrespect she was being offered had her taken aback.
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Even Foundling, irreverent guttersnipe that she was, had learned to
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watch her mouth around her. The Bard raised a hand in appeasement as she
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polished off another part of her flask. Heiress frowned -- how much
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alcohol could there possibly be in a receptacle that large? Had the
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flask been made bottomless? \emph{That would be absurd. A working that
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rare and powerful would cost a fortune, even in Praes.}
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``No need to get all offended,'' the heroine said. ``I'm just wondering
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what your deal is. Like, what is it you \emph{do}? Being rich and pretty
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isn't actually a magical power, sweetheart.''
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``It seems your own deal is being a drunken twit,'' Heiress smiled
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pleasantly.
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``Oooh,'' Almorava purred. ``You're one of \emph{those}. Old school
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Praesi villain, with a closetful of self-importance and megalomania. At
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least that finally explains why your schemes are so terrible.''
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These were more familiar grounds. This was close enough to court
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intrigue Akua could glimpse her opponent's intent, and the attempt being
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made was feeble.
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``This would be the part where I lose my temper and reveal all my plans
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to you, I imagine,'' Heiress noted calmly.
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The Bard grinned. ``Can't blame a girl for trying. But I was actually
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referring to your little operation in the south.''
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``You mean our \emph{victories} in the south,'' Barika corrected
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sneeringly.
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``You know what's not going to be a great victory?'' Almorava said.
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``Allowing two thousand slaves to come into contact with a hero. In
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private Willy's got all the charm of kettle of fish, I'll grant you, but
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out in the field? You don't need to be a Bard to predict how that's
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gonna go.''
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``Slavery is illegal under Tower law,'' Akua replied. ``They are all
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free men.''
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The heroine rolled her eyes. ``I'm sure they volunteered to fight a war
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on foreign soil because you asked nicely. Well, you girls have fun with
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your hilariously ill-advised plan. The battle's about to start, so I'm
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needed elsewhere.''
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The shadows still wreathing Barika's hands formed into long whips and
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she stepped forward.
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``I think not,'' the mage said. ``You'll be our guest for a while,
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Bard.''
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``Nice delivery,'' Almorava praised. ``Way to work that sinister
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intonation. But I see you your creepy shadow tentacles and raise
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you\ldots{} \emph{the Sands of Deception}!''
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Shoving her free hand in a pocket, the heroine took out a handful of
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sand and threw it in Barika's face. The mage coughed and lashed out
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blindly with the shadows while Heiress carefully stepped out of the way,
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unsure what the effect of the artefact would be. When she went to flank
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the Bard, though, she found the irritating wretch was gone.
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\emph{Outside my line of sight for the blink of an eye, and she
|
|
disappears. That is a very, very dangerous ability}. There had to be
|
|
limitations: Names were never this generous without taking a toll of
|
|
some sort, or adding restrictive clauses to how the power could be used.
|
|
Barika allowed the shadows to lapse when she realized they were now
|
|
alone in the temple, picking the grains out of her robes.
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|
|
|
``This is just regular sand,'' the mage noted, confounded. ``\ldots{}
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|
Wait, is \emph{that} the deception?''
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|
|
|
Akua had never more keenly understood the age-old Praesi tradition of
|
|
summarily executing one's subordinates. She let out a slow breath and
|
|
mastered herself. This entire interlude had been somewhat frustrating,
|
|
but ultimately it changed nothing.
|
|
|
|
``She's right, though, isn't she?'' Barika spoke hesitantly after a
|
|
moment. ``Why did you leave the Stygians with Ghassan if you knew they'd
|
|
have to fight the Lone Swordsman?''
|
|
|
|
Heiress walked up to the standard, idly smudging the protective powdered
|
|
chalk patterns the priests had been making for centuries with her foot.
|
|
That should weaken the pattern enough that the demon would break out
|
|
within the next two days -- already she could feel a presence inside the
|
|
artefact stirring awake, tasting the damaged holding spells. It would
|
|
not do to linger here.
|
|
|
|
``For the same reason we play shatranj, you and I,'' Akua finally
|
|
replied.
|
|
|
|
Heiress had never enjoyed the game. It was horridly simple, two sides
|
|
with equal capabilities taking each other's pieces in a slaughter
|
|
without elegance. And yet she was known for playing it, because she had
|
|
willed it so. As a youth her mother had introduced to \emph{baduk}, a
|
|
game from the kingdom beyond the lands of the Yan Tei, and this one
|
|
she'd actually come to enjoy a great deal. Baduk was not about a limited
|
|
handful of sequences, it was about positioning. The word meant
|
|
``encircling game'', and Akua had not played it once since she'd come
|
|
into her Name. \emph{For the same reason you don't know I'm a better
|
|
mage than you are, Barika.} So long as everyone else thought they knew
|
|
what game she was playing, they predicted her moves accordingly and
|
|
thought they understood her designs. Her enemies had yet to grasp the
|
|
most salient of all truths: in games as in all things, the only move
|
|
that mattered was the last.
|
|
|
|
She'd been setting up hers from the moment she'd first laid eyes on the
|
|
Squire.
|