381 lines
18 KiB
TeX
381 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{red-skies}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Red Skies}\label{red-skies}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{red-skies}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Red Skies}
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\epigraph{``This eye for an eye business is horridly proportional. I assure
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you, if I'm losing an eye then so is everyone else.''}{Dread Empress Sanguinia II}
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``So you're going to be fighting this Warlock, I take it?'' Tikoloshe
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said.
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The incubus was lounging in a camp chair, something Wekesa had believed
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to be physically impossible before being presented with the current
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evidence. The devil looked like a man in every way, the deception
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perfect unlike with some of his less cunning kindred: smooth dark skin
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and closely cropped hair, an intelligently angular face and smiling
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eyes. When he'd first summoned the devil Apprentice had admittedly been
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curious about what appearance he would take. Incubi formed their looks
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around the deepest desires of the individual who'd brought them into
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Creation, though they could discard that shape at will if they so
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wished. There'd been no oiled-up muscles or revealed hairless chests:
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Tikoloshe had come through dressed neatly and almost conservatively, his
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tastefully embroidered tunic topped by a collar that rose up almost up
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to his chin. It had surprised Wekesa, but somehow it felt accurate.
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There was a reason incubi and succubi were often summoned by
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practitioners seeking to perfect their craft: learning what they truly
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found attractive allowed them to discover something about themselves in
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a subject matter where humans were in the habit of lying to themselves.
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To know yourself was to know your power.
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``That is the plan,'' Wekesa agreed, pouring himself a drink from the
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carafe on the table.
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His tent in the camp of Malicia's rebel army -- officially the actual
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rightful Legions of Terror, though that would have to wait on a final
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triumph to become reality -- was a little to the side of the others,
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warded heavily and under instructions by Amadeus not to be disturbed.
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Apprentice had managed to accumulate a few creature comforts during the
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campaign, like a real table and a steady supply of wine, but bare
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necessities like a bed that wasn't a glorified block of wood or a real
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bathtub still escaped him. At least a few stone candles topped by blue
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mage fire made lanterns and their greasy scent unnecessary. Not that mud
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and greenery mere a much better scent, admittedly.
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``\emph{Plan} is not the word that comes to mind,'' Tikoloshe spoke
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idly. ``You are still young, and this Warlock is in the fullness of his
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power. I detect the hand of your vicious little confederate at work in
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this.''
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Amadeus had made no mystery of his opinion that the incubus should be
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forced to cough out all his tricks and secrets and then put down like an
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animal, a position that had not endeared him to Tikoloshe. Wekesa
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disagreed, as it happened, and his friend trusted his judgement enough
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to let the matter lie. The devil was too interesting to be wasted in
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such a manner.
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``He actually tried to convince me to delay the fight until we could
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catch him without support,'' Apprentice said. ``Something about hounding
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him until he was too weak to put up a fight, then striking the finishing
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blow.''
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``I suppose even that man can be right, once in a while,'' Tikoloshe
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conceded easily. ``Pour me one as well, would you?''
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Wekesa raised an eyebrow in surprise but complied, handing the devil the
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goblet after it was full. Their fingers touched when Tikoloshe took the
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cup and just that was enough to raise the tension in the tent by a
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notch. It would have been easier to ignore the attraction, Apprentice
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knew, if he hadn't been so certain the bindings on the incubus were
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perfect. That near-certainty that the sex would be fantastic made it
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even worse.
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``I know for a fact devils do not need sustenance while in Creation,''
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Wekesa said, watching the other man sip at the wine.
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``We don't,'' Tikoloshe acknowledged. ``I do, however, quite enjoy the
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taste of wine. The Praesi stuff is vastly inferior to the vineyards from
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the west, but it makes for an acceptable table vintage.''
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``So you can differentiate between specific kinds of tastes,''
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Apprentice said, eyes sharpening as he leaned forward.
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The eighth of the twenty-three bindings the incubus was under prevented
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him from ever lying, one of the many reasons the devil was such a
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fascinating source of information.
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``\emph{I} can,'' Tikoloshe said, hand rising to indicate an
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equivocation. ``A consequence of both the length of my existence and
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what you might call my\ldots{} nature.''
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``Lust,'' Wekesa said.
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``Desire,'' the incubus corrected. ``Lust is such a limited concept, and
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I am a most complex creature.''
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``You are an entity driven by an absolute,'' Apprentice said.
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``Absolutes are, by their nature, simple. They would not function
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otherwise.''
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Tikoloshe smiled. It was not patronizing or mocking: it was the smile of
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an educated man enjoying a lively conversation. Wekesa sipped at his
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wine to distract himself. He'd always had a weakness for clever men.
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``Desire is to \emph{want},'' the incubus said. ``I want all things,
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Apprentice. The pleasures of the flesh issome of the most instinctual
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desires to your species, so they tend to be the strongest desire in my
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kind as well. But I've been around for a very long time, and I've
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learned to be\ldots{} discerning in my own desires.''
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``Like wine,'' the dark-skinned mage said.
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``Fine meals, enjoyable conversation and even such small things as a
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bath at the perfect temperature,'' Tikoloshe said. ``I find beautiful
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calligraphy as stirring as bedsport, in its own way.''
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Wekesa eyed him thoughtfully.
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``How old are you, Tikoloshe?''
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The devil laughed. ``I was first called into being when the witch-queen
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of what you would now call the northern Principate became dissatisfied
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with her husbands. I was no longer young when the Miezans first came
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upon the shores of this continent, blown by a storm.''
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\emph{At least a millennium and a half}, the dark-skinned mage thought.
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Humbling, to think that the incubus would likely exist long after all he
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knew had crumbled to dust.
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``Seen it all before, have you?'' he said.
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``The Dread Empire always wounds itself, left to its own devices,''
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Tikoloshe said. ``This scrap is but a pittance compared to the War of
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Thirteen Tyrants and One.''
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``We'll be different,'' Wekesa said. ``When we win.''
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The incubus laughed softly.
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``Will you? Why? I've seen your leaders, Apprentice. Seen what they
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desire. You're lucky the pale boy isn't the one aiming for the throne --
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he'd murder every child in this nation with his bare hands, if it got
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him what he wants. Not that your `Malicia' is much better. The woman
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craves control the way a starving man craves a meal.''
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Apprentice leaned back in his seat. ``And me? Have you see what I
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desire?''
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Tikoloshe raised an eyebrow. Such a human gesture on such an inhuman
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creature. His kind really were the most skillfully deceptive devils
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could get. The impersonation was flawless.
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``You know my bindings prevent me from doing so.''
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``I'll just tell you, then,'' Wekesa chuckled. ``I want to do magic.''
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The devil cocked his head to the side.
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``Simple, isn't it?'' the dark-skinned mage said.
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``I wouldn't say that at all,'' the incubus replied softly.
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``All of this\ldots{}'' Wekesa gestured broadly. ``The backstabbing, the
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politics, the war. It \emph{bores} me. I want to dissect the world,
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Tikoloshe. To open up Creation and see where the Gods traced their
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boundaries in blood and power.''
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``How blasphemous,'' the devil said delightedly.
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``We will be different,'' Apprentice said. ``For the same reason we keep
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beating opponents out of our league. They think they're strong because
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they've accumulated power and we haven't, but that's a fundamental
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misunderstanding. We've never used our own strength: we let Creation win
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for us.''
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``You seem remarkably lucid, for a madman,'' Tikoloshe noted.
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``I might still die tomorrow,'' the mage said. ``Which is why I need to
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ask you two questions\textbf{. I compel you to answer.} Were you trying
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to seduce me throughout this conversation?''
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``No,'' the incubus replied.
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``\textbf{I compel you to answer},'' he spoke again. ``Are you attracted
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to me?''
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``I am attracted to everyone,'' Tikoloshe said.
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The dark-skinned mage drained the rest of his wine, then rose to his
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feet. Wekesa unbuttoned the top button of his tunic. He raised an
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eyebrow at the incubus.
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``Well?'' he said. ``What are we waiting for, then?''
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---
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When the High Lord Duma had ordered a fresh set of forts built in the
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northern reaches of his demesne, it had been met with a degree of
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surprise by most. The High Lordship of Aksum covered a third of the
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Wasteland but it had not been under threat by anyone in a long time:
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though Dread Emperor Nefarious had become a reclusive hedonist, the
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Empire was still largely at peace. Amadeus had recently told Wekesa it
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hadn't actually been the High Lord's notion at all. The refusal of the
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Clans to pay their owed tributes to the Tower had pushed the Chancellor
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-- who'd effectively ruled Praes, in those days -- to consider war with
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the greenskins. Though Wolof stood between Aksum and the steppes, the
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latter was still the last line of defence between the orcs and the Green
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Stretch. The Empire's bread basket had to be protected at all costs, if
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it came to war. Widespread food shortages caused by rampaging greenskins
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would lead to the kind of unrest that had toppled Tyrants so many times
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before.
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Now those same fortifications served to hinder the advance of a rebel
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army , though admittedly its ranks were filled with greenskins as had
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been feared. Amadeus had a way with them, especially the orcs, and the
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Chancellor had forced the entire species to take sides through the
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famous debacle that was the Night of Red Winds. A costly mistake,
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thinking that wiping out an entire clan would cow the rest. Now that act
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of treachery was the battle cry of ten thousands of angry orcs, all of
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them fighting for the rights of Dread Empress Malicia as the rightful
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ruler of Praes. Under Amadeus and Grem One-Eye the rebels were flying
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from victory to victory, and Alaya was using that as leverage to bring
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the fence-sitters among the High Lords to their side. Already Nok had
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declared for them, and word was Kahtan might do the same soon. All very
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promising, if hopelessly uninteresting to Apprentice. He had more
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practical matters to concern himself with, anyway. Such as the
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fortifications ahead.
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The hillfort in front of him was the northernmost in the defensive lines
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of Aksum, and every attempt by their little rebellion to even assess
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what forces were inside had been met with abject failure. Scouts who got
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within half a mile were made into desiccated husks by spells coming from
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inside, a ritual Wekesa was rather familiar with. He'd learned the
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underlying concepts of it, when he'd been one of the many apprentices
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assigned to the Warlock. Before the man had tried to kill him and then
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sent monsters to hunt him when Wekesa managed to escape. Before he'd
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fallen in with a strange Duni boy who wanted to change the Empire one
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corpse at a time, before he'd met a sly-humoured waitress who would be
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forced into the seraglio by the whims of a broken madman. He'd occurred
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a debt, when he'd left the Warlock's tutelage, one that predated the
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family he'd found since. This was his account to settle and he'd looked
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forward to it for a very long time.
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Apprentice had garbed himself in a well-fitted set of clothes for the
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occasion. A traditional Soninke \emph{agbada}, though cut a little more
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closely than was currently the fashion. The garb came in three parts: a
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pair of loose dark grey trousers that narrowed around the ankles, a
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long-sleeved shirt of the same colour and the garnet, open-stitched
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sleeveless gown worn over them both. Effectiveness and appearance should
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be married when feasible, such was the Soninke way. There was a hint of
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golden embroidery on the gown, the patterns arcane and hard to make out.
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The patterns strengthened the shield amulet he wore under his clothes,
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which was quite necessary: he'd sunk a lot of power into the defence,
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but his opponent was in another league entirely. Wekesa had always known
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he was strong in sorcery, abnormally so for one not born to a cultivated
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bloodline, but inborn talent was no match for decades upon decades of
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accumulated power and infernal pacts.
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The fort was basic, he saw, likely because High Lord Duma had skimmed
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off the top of the funds provided to him by the Tower for their
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construction. A single ring wall stood close to the summit of the hill,
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with a squat tower inside. Wekesa was close enough to make out the
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silhouettes on that wall now, the two dozens of mages flanking the
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middle-aged Taghreb with a prominent hook nose he'd once looked up to as
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a teacher. Twice on his way down the dirt path the amulet under his
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clothes had warmed against his skin, a sign the Warlock had tried and
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failed to evaporate all the water inside his body. Apprentice strolled
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up to the fort, only stopping thirty feet or so away from the gates. The
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Warlock looked like he was about to talk, so he fished out the stone in
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his pocket and threw it in the man's direction. It bounced off an
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invisible wall, getting lost somewhere on the battlements.
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``A tracking charm,'' the Warlock sneered. ``That's what you're bringing
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to the table?''
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Wekesa took out his dragonbone pipe, casually stuffing it with bangue.
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He struck a match and lit it, inhaling the herbs with a small sigh of
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pleasure.
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``I'm out of juice,'' Apprentice replied honestly. ``Couldn't even light
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this pipe with a bit of flame if I wanted to.''
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``Disappointing,'' Warlock said. ``Though you were ever a
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disappointment.''
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``Why?'' Wekesa asked. ``Because I wouldn't let you feed me to a devil
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so you'd get a cut of my magic?''
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``A bargain was struck,'' the older Named said. ``And I will yet get my
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due. Did you think just a shield would be enough to stop me? It may have
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been crafted skilfully, boy, but my power has grown since we last met.''
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``I can feel your minions probing it,'' Apprentice noted. ``I imagine as
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soon as they find the fault lines you'll start hammering at them.''
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``That was always your weakness, Wekesa,'' the Warlock said. ``You're
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too feeble on the offensive. So much raw power at your disposal and you
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chose to specialize in an inferior branch of sorcery.''
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``Wards are the purest form of sorcery there is,'' the dark-skinned mage
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disagreed, inhaling the smoke and blowing it out. ``Wards are
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boundaries, and when you look at it with clear eyes Creation is nothing
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but a set of interlocked boundaries set by the Gods.''
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One of the minions leaned close to the Named, whispering. Warlock pushed
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the woman away.
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``You really are powerless,'' his old teacher said. ``You come to fight
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\emph{me} incapable of casting?''
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``Well, I've already cast three spells today,'' Wekesa mused. ``I can
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only wring out so much power out of this body without getting wrinkles
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and who wants \emph{that}?''
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``Lord Warlock,'' another minion called out. ``Look up.''
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Apprentice did not have to look to know what they'd noticed. Red skies
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as far as the eye could see. The third spell he'd cast that morning was
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beginning to take effect, right on time. Already drops of liquid fire
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were starting to rain, pattering against his shield. One of the minions
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was set aflame and began screaming as the hellflame spread all over his
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body and consumed him in a matter of moments. The others hastily put up
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shields of their own.
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``Is this all you could manage?'' Warlock mocked. ``A meagre rain of
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flame? I taught you better than that. Shaping a spell like this will
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drain your power for an effect any half-baked practitioner can protect
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themselves from. Only worth using against the giftless.''
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``I didn't,'' Wekesa said. ``Create a hellstorm, that is.''
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The older Named looked taken aback.
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``You lie,'' he said, beginning to smell the rat.
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Apprentice blew out a stream of smoke, smiling serenely.
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``You said it yourself, Warlock,'' he replied. ``I'm just a ward
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specialist. Fighting you in a casting war was always doomed to failure
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-- you have reserves of nastiness you haven't even begun to tap into,
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I'm sure.''
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``You broke a boundary,'' the Taghreb cursed.
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``Weakened,'' Apprentice corrected. ``Temporarily, and only for entities
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meeting certain parameters. Still took everything I had left.''
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In the distance a chunk of flaming rock the size of a small house hit
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the ground with a sound like thunder, spreading waves of hellflame on
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impact.
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``And you were wrong, by the way,'' Wekesa continued. ``Earlier. It
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wasn't a tracking charm. It was a homing one.''
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The stone that was passing into Creation from one of the lesser Hells
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was the size of a fortress this time. Apprentice had aligned the
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boundaries so it would be just above the hillfort, and ensured it would
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hit with the homing charm. The Warlock crushed the pebble he'd thrown
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into dust with a single word, but it was too late for that to change
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anything. Now the laws of Creation were ensuring the trajectory. Maybe
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if they'd seen the stone coming sooner they might have managed to stop
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it, but the only mage with the talent to do that was the Warlock -- and
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Wekesa had kept him talking, knowing the older man would not be able to
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resist gloating.
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So now, watching the other Named invoke half a dozen devil pacts to try
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to break the trajectory and fail against the weight of thousands and
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thousands of pounds of rock, Apprentice continued smiling and enjoyed
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his pipe. His own shield, designed over months of careful work until
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he'd finally granted it power into it that morning, had been crafted to
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keep him safe specifically through this event. Howling winds and
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eldritch fire blew around his protective bubble but he was safe
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underneath, watching his enemies be crushed by what was effectively a
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small mountain of rock and unholy fire. Eventually he was able to see
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again, and he felt his Name fill like a glass of wine. As far as he
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could see, in all directions, this corner of Creation had been turned
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into a hellish wasteland of stone and flame.
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Casually emptying his pipe on the ground, Warlock began the trek back to
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camp.
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