536 lines
23 KiB
TeX
536 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-12-reproval}{%
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\section{Chapter 12: Reproval}\label{chapter-12-reproval}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``There's a very important difference between a nice man and a
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good one.''}
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-- King Jehan the Wise
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\end{quote}
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So apparently all that was needed to change a rather nice stockroom into
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something sinister was clearing out the supplies, setting up a stone
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slab in the centre of it and shackling a prisoner to it. \emph{You learn
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something every day}. The combination of bare stone and simply-dressed
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young woman was lending this whole affair a particularly villainous vibe
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I wasn't really on board with, but I supposed that after getting shot by
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the Deoraithe once already Warlock wasn't in a gambling mood. Still, if
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\emph{I} got pissy every time someone put an arrow in me I'd have a
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permanent scowl on my face. Bad form, that.
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``I take it Masego won't be joining us?'' I asked.
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The handsome older man shrugged. ``He has no interest in matters like
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these. Neither do I, frankly, but rank tends to accrue tedious duties.''
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In a way it was comforting that he was more bored with the coming
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interrogation that being all creepy-expectant, the way villains usually
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were in the stories. Warlock had admittedly been nothing but polite to
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me so far, so I supposed I should have expected a departure from the
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mould in this too. The dark-skinned mage lay back against the wall and
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snapped his fingers nonchalantly, the prisoner stirring awake
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immediately. The archer had woken up a little earlier today, the eve of
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the furthest I could push back my departure, and promptly been put back
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to sleep until she could be moved to a more appropriate facility. At
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least the burns all over the stranger's body had been healed, though
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sloppily enough that if she tried to move too much it would hurt -- not
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a coincidence, I assumed. Her eyes blinked open, then widened when she
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realized where she was. There was a single spark of terror before she
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smothered it, schooling her face into a blank mask. \emph{She's been
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trained to deal with interrogation}, I noted.
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``I am an Imperial citizen being held unlawfully,'' she spoke up with
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that odd Daoine burr flavouring her Lower Miezan. ``If you do not
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release me immediately, there will be diplomatic consequences.''
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``I am shaking in my boots,'' Warlock replied drily.
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I sighed. ``You were caught participating in the activities of a group
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that's been convicted of high treason and seen attempting the murder of
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a member of the Dark Council,'' I told her. ``Both of those fetch the
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death penalty, and not one of those nice quick ones. You're not going
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anywhere.''
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She glared at Warlock before turning her stare to me, eyes lingering on
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my own obviously Deoraithe features. She said something in the Old
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Tongue, the scathing tone obvious regardless of the language barrier.
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``I don't actually speak that, except for a few curses,'' I informed
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her.
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``Probably best you don't,'' Warlock mused. ``And you should be ashamed
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of yourself, young lady -- I'm sure her mother was a perfectly nice
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woman.''
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Whether the prisoner had actually insulted whoever had given birth to me
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was up in the air, as far as I was concerned: I wouldn't put it above
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the Soninke to yank my chain for the sake of his own amusement. Still,
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if she'd wanted to hit a nerve then parents weren't really the way to go
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for me. I was perfectly fine with having no idea who my progenitors were
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-- parents were more of an abstract concept for me than anything else.
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If anything the closest thing I'd ever had to a father figure was Black,
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and wasn't that a terrifying thought?
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``Arch-traitor,'' the prisoner spat in my direction. ``I know who you
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are, Catherine of Laure.''
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I rolled my eyes. I'd already gotten this speech from William, and he'd
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delivered it better.
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``I'm not in the mood for this particular debate,'' I replied, ``so
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let's shelve the subject for now. Do you have a name?''
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She glared at me\emph{. Eh, I've had better}, I thought. \emph{That's
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barely a coercing-Morok level of spite.}
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``Why would I give you anything, \emph{uraind}?'' she sneered.
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``It'll make this conversation a lot easier if I can refer to you as
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something else than ``prisoner'' or ``you'','' I told her honestly.
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``I could rip it out of your mind, of course, but that tends to make a
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mess,'' Warlock spoke idly. ``Delicate thing, the human mind. Not
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telling what might break when I go fishing for what I want.''
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She held up admirably under the threat, her face betraying no sign of
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fear, but the way she'd gone still revealed exactly how terrified she
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was at the prospect. It sickened me a little to see it. Not at her for
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being afraid, but at myself for being part of the people inflicting that
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fear. I'd enjoyed putting the fear of me in my enemies before but that
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had been on the field, where we both had weapons. Not when they were
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chained in a dark room underground, trapped in a room with one of the
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greatest living monsters of the Empire and the apprentice of another
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one. \emph{But that's a child's way of seeing things, isn't it? If
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you're so insecure about your objectives that you feel the need to give
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the enemy a fair shot at you, then maybe you shouldn't be fighting at
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all.} It was not a game for the meek I was learning to play. I knew
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that, but it did not take away the sick feeling in my stomach.
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``Breagach,'' the woman said. ``That is all you will get.''
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``Cute,'' Warlock commented. ``Lying, is it? I didn't think the Watch
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was that self-indulgent.''
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I made a mental note to pick up a language primer on the Old Tongue
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before leaving Summerholm. Or, more realistically, tell Hakram to pick
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up one for me. I disliked missing context, and I'd gotten better at
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using my learning aspect anyway. Within a month or two I should be able
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to speak the basics and understand the rest.
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``I am not part of the Watch,'' Breagach replied calmly. ``A typical
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southerner assumption, to believe that any Deoraithe leaving the Duchy
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belongs to it.''
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``Well, let's find out if that's your first lie of the day,'' Warlock
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smiled.
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A dozen bars of red light came into being above the Deoraithe, connected
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by threads of gold. Breagach drew a breath in panic and struggled
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against her bindings but she was nowhere strong enough to burst through
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good goblin steel.
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``Do stop fighting it, it won't be painful if you remain calm,'' Warlock
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spoke absent-mindedly. ``Interesting breed you are, members of the
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Watch. Took me a while to figure out what made you tick.''
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``They're still regular humans, aren't they?'' I frowned.
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``When I first cut one open I found there was no physical difference to
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a regular Deoraithe,'' Warlock agreed. ``Which is fascinating, given
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what they can actually do. I theorized the modifications regressed upon
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death -- which, while an advanced piece of sorcery, is not impossible.
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Besides, their little club has existed for over a millennium in one form
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or another.''
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I got the feeling I wasn't going to like what followed.
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``Grem was kind enough to secure me a live specimen, but a living
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dissection yielded the same results,'' the Calamity continued in that
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same casual tone.
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I was glad he was facing away from me, unable to see the disgust on my
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face. My fingers clenched and unclenched, but I bit my tongue. I had no
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authority over the man, and making a fuss now wasn't going to bring
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anyone back to life.
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``It was Amadeus that put me on the right track, ultimately,'' Warlock
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said. ``When trying to understand someone look at their enemies, he told
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me. He's a font of useless sayings like that, but now and then they do
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come in useful. Who do the Deoraithe hate more than anyone?''
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Breagach let out a hoarse cry, then collapsed in exhaustion against the
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stone.
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``The elves,'' the dark-skinned man finished. ``Oh, how you despise
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those isolationist little bastards. Can't say I blame you -- even the
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other Good types can't stand them. Regardless, their entire species adds
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more weight to their presence in the Pattern the longer they live. From
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there, it was a natural leap to start examining your souls.''
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The red bars dropped down into the stone, digging into it, and the cords
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of gold thickened until they formed a ridge not unlike a painting's
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frame. No, I realized as the golden magic spread to fill in the circle.
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Not a painting, a lens. There were arcane runes forming and dissipating
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across the surface, though I did not know their meaning. Warlock clicked
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his tongue against the top his mouth.
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``Bad habit, lying,'' he commented. ``Though it's interesting you've
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only taken the first three Oaths: they don't usually send out anyone
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without at least five under their belt.''
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I frowned. ``She's tinkered with her soul?'' I asked. ``That seems
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incredibly dangerous.''
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``It would be more accurate to say they bind their souls to a source of
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power -- one I've yet to identify,'' Warlock explained. ``They use
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rituals called ``Oaths'' to tap into it according to set patterns. Night
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vision, accelerated reflexes, superior endurance and even an extended
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lifespan.''
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My frown deepened. ``Not the Gods, surely?''
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The dark-skinned man snorted. ``A little above their reach, that. It's
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not one of the angelic Choirs either, or anything demonic. My best guess
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is a nature spirit of some sort.''
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``There are things in this land older than you could hope to conceive,''
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Breagach gasped.
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``They always say that,'' Warlock mocked. ``Oh, our spirit guardian is
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beyond your comprehension! Its power is unrivalled, tremble and flee!''
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The second part was spoken in one of the worst imitations of the
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Callowan accent I'd ever heard.
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``There's a difference between Gods and gods, child,'' the Calamity
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murmured, ``and I've more than a few of the latter's corpses in my
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laboratory.''
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A shiver went up my spine at the words. Maybe if he'd sounded like he
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was boasting I'd have dismissed the claim, but he sounded so\ldots{}
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matter-of-fact. Like there was nothing particularly unusual about taking
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apart literal forces of nature to see how they worked. \emph{Monster}, I
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reminded myself. \emph{Polite and charming, but still a monster.}
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``Anyhow,'' the mage shrugged, ``We have what we need. The Watch answers
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directly to Duchess Kegan, meaning she knowingly broke the terms of her
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client state treaty with the Tower.''
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There wouldn't be war over this, I knew. The Empire wouldn't open a
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second front in the war over such a small incident. But there would be
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consequences.
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``The tribute this year is going to be particularly expensive, I
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think,'' I murmured.
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``Politics,'' Warlock dismissed, tone uninterested. The magic over the
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prisoner winked out a moment later. ``That's what Black and Malicia are
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for.''
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He turned his eyes to Breagach, who while visibly tired was still awake
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enough to look at us with undisguised loathing.
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``And you, my dear, are going back to sleep,'' he continued mildly,
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raising a hand.
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``Stop,'' I said.
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The stare the Calamity graced me with was mild, but I still had to stop
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myself from reaching for my sword.
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``Black mentioned a bloodline ritual,'' I said.
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``We already know she's Watch,'' Warlock replied impatiently. ``I tire
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of wasting time on this affair.''
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``You said it was odd she's only taken three of the Oaths,'' I pointed
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out, mind slowly catching up to what my instincts had latched on. ``If
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she was deployed even though she's not fully trained, there's a reason
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for it.''
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``And you think a bloodline ritual will explain that?'' the mage replied
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sceptically, though at least I had his full attention now.
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``If I were sending a representative into a war, it'd be someone I knew
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I could trust,'' I grunted.
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The Calamity's eyes narrowed. Ah, he'd gotten it. For all his flaws, the
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man was clever.
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``And who can you trust more than your own blood?'' he finished in a
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murmur, turning calculating eyes towards Breagach.
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She'd gone still again. Warlock tapped a finger against his belt and a
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previously invisible sigil lit up, dropping a slim knife into his palm.
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``Blood magic,'' I spoke flatly, not bothering to hide my disapproval.
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``Get over yourself, girl,'' he replied in the same tone. ``The same
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discipline is the only reason that scar across your chest didn't kill
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you. Besides, I just need a few drops.''
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I scowled as he walked up to the prisoner and cut on her upper arm as
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she tried to wiggle away, collecting a few drops and keeping them on the
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edge of the knife. He crouched on the ground and bright red flames lit
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up the tip of his index as he traced a pentagram of soot on the stone.
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He added a few runes at the tips afterwards, then traced a circle in the
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middle and flicked the blood into it. I couldn't quite make out the
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words he whispered afterwards, but I recognized the cadence: Mthethwa,
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an older dialect. He rose and took a step back.
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``And now?'' I asked.
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``By contracts made, I summon you,'' he replied, still looking at the
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pentagram.
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There was no flash of light or sudden smell of brimstone. One moment
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there was nothing, then a little creature stood inside the pentagram,
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sniffing at the circle. Its skin was a reddish grey, with its
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disproportionately large head sporting a pair of ears vaguely
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reminiscent of curved horns. Bat-like wings were coming out of its back
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and flapped as it chittered in a guttural language I'd only heard spoken
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once before. The Dark Tongue, what Captain had used to order the
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abomination that had taken us up the Tower.
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``It doesn't look sentient,'' I finally said.
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``It isn't,'' Warlock agreed. ``Blood imps are never particularly clever
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and this one's not even a decade old.''
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I shot him a quizzical look.
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``Devils begin as the personification of a concept,'' the Calamity
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explained with a sigh. ``The older they get, the more they can think
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independently of that nature. There are differences according to breeds,
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of course, with more abstract concepts resulting in greater
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intelligence.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``And what does that thing personify?''
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``Hunger for fresh blood,'' Warlock replied absently, eyes on the imp.
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I followed his gaze saw the devil was now licking Breagach's blood like
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a cat would a saucer of milk, making ugly little satisfied sounds as it
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did. The sight was nauseating.
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``Good,'' the mage smiled. ``And now for the pleasant part.''
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He raised a hand and closed it into a fist. The imp rose into the air,
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letting out shrieks of dismay, then an invisible force brutally squashed
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it. Not a drop of the reddish mulch it turned into splattered, forming a
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perfect sphere still hovering above. Slowly it descended and filled the
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circle. There was a heartbeat after that, then lines of red emanated
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from the circle to touch all the tips of the pentagram. The whole thing
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smelled like rotten blood. Letters in the Old Tongue started appearing
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on the stone, forming a family tree circling around the remains of the
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imp. I looked askance at Warlock, who was reading them intently.
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``Well now,'' he murmured. ``Someone's more important than they look.''
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He pointed out a pair of words close to the circle.
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``That's Duchess Kegan herself,'' he informed me.
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``And their relation is?'' I prompted.
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``Cousin's daughter,'' he replied. ``Late twenties in the line of
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succession, but she's still part of the ruling blood.''
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``If you think you can hold me-'' Breagach started heatedly, but the
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Calamity lazily waved a hand and she slumped down abruptly, unconscious.
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I let out a long breath. ``Well,'' I announced, ``that's that. You'll be
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keeping custody of her for now?''
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``Until it's been decided what will happen to her, yes,'' he
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acknowledged. ``You've secured the Hunter?''
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``As secure as a hero can ever be, anyway,'' I grunted. ``He's a
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liability. I don't suppose you've got a way to bind his Name?''
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The Calamity shrugged as we left the room, stopping only a heartbeat to
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incinerate the remnants of his ritual with a flick of the wrist.
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``It's possible to bind or usurp a Name, with the right tools,'' he
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agreed. ``But a proper ritual site is needed to manage it. The only
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usable one in Callow is in Liesse, which would make the matter rather
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tricky.''
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Ugh. It figured. I'd just have to put in place as many precautions as I
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could. We strolled out of the room to a smaller chamber. Someone had
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helpfully placed a pitcher of wine on the reading table by the window
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and I wasted no time in grabbing a cup and pouring me something to
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drink. I could use a little steadying after that whole affair -- the
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roof of my mouth still tasted like rotten blood. I poured Warlock one
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too after he gave me a pointed look, sipping at my own as an awkward
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silence took hold. He was the one to break it.
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``Later tonight,'' he spoke, ``my son will ask to accompany you on your
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campaign. You will accept.''
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``He's been dropping hints in that direction for a few days,'' I
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grunted.
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There was no denying that Apprentice would be an asset and I'd already
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intended to say yes, but being more or less ordered to do so rankled. I
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wasn't sure exactly where I stood to Warlock, when it came to the
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pecking order, but lower seemed like a safe assumption.
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``Yes, he has,'' the Soninke sighed. ``That was meant to indicate he
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would accept an invitation if you extended it.''
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I raised an eyebrow. ``Why didn't he just ask?''
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``Black needs to go over Name etiquette with you again,'' he replied,
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irritation colouring his tone. ``You are the Squire. The command is
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yours, which would make it extremely rude for another Named to simply
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invite themselves along. Villains have been killed for being that
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presumptuous.''
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I rubbed the bridge of my nose. Was it this complicated being a hero?
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Maybe it wasn't too late to switch career paths.
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``I'll explain the misunderstanding,'' I said, putting down my
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half-finished glass of wine. ``I can't say this was a particularly fun
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afternoon, but it was certainly educational. If you'll excuse me, I've
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got a general staff meeting in half a bell and more paperwork on the
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backlog than I want to think about.''
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``I do not excuse you,'' Warlock said mildly. ``There's still one thing
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we need to discuss.''
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``I'll make sure nothing happens to him,'' I said seriously, pretty sure
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I knew where this was headed. ``I know he's not used to military life.''
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``Oh it's not that,'' the man chuckled. ``You're a clever girl, I'm sure
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you're perfectly aware of what the consequences of allowing my son to
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die on your watch would be.''
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I frowned. ``Then what's this about?''
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``Before leaving Ater,'' he spoke calmly, ``you met with Malicia.''
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My blood ran cold, but I kept my face expressionless.
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``I did.''
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No point in lying about it. There was nothing uncertain about the way
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he'd phrased that. The Calamity smiled.
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``Allow me to share something about the rulers of Praes, Catherine. You
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see, both Amadeus and Alaya -- Malicia, as you'd know her -- see the
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Empire through the lens of how they operate.''
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The dark-skinned man sipped at his glass, eyes shadowed.
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``Amadeus thinks of it as a great machine, and so sees himself as a cog.
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An important one, but ultimately replaceable. A simple matter of fit and
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function.''
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I could buy that easily enough. Black was capable of great cruelty but
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he was not, I believed, a cruel man by nature. Violence was a tool to
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him, a way to reach an outcome. That did not make him any less
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dangerous, or make his actions excusable. But it did matter, even if
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only a little.
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``Alaya is a little trickier to grasp,'' Warlock murmured. ``She sees it
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as a weave, and herself as the weaver. She cannot choose the materials
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she was given to work with, be she \emph{can} choose what she makes with
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them. And if a particular thread runs out?''
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The dark-eyed man shrugged.
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``She merely has to secure a substitute, trusting that the work she'd
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already woven will be tight enough to hold.''
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``Why are you telling me this?'' I asked quietly.
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``Because they're both wrong,'' the Calamity replied. ``Praes isn't a
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machine or a tapestry -- it's a living, breathing organism.''
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I frowned. ``And what's that supposed to mean, exactly?''
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A hard smile split the mage's face. ``You can't rip out a creature's
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heart and just shove another in its place.''
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I kept my face blank. Warlock was Black's first companion, the dreams
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had shown me that much, and that he'd be my teacher's staunchest
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loyalist wasn't a surprise. But how much did he know? I hadn't agreed to
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Malicia's offer, not in so many words, and it concerned the far future
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anyway. Imehad told me to watch out for Scribe above the rest of Black's
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companions, but Warlock was the one sitting in front of me right now.
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I'd seen him in action when he'd been crippled by magical backlash and
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within moments of stepping onto the scene he'd incapacitated two heroes
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and casually slain another one. If it came to a fight against him, my
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chances of survival were\ldots{} slim.
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``You can stop panicking, girl,'' the dark-skinned man spoke coldly.
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``It is not my intent to kill you, though you'd be a fool to think I
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could not.''
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``I see no reason we should fight,'' I replied, as calm as I could
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manage. ``We're on the same side.''
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The mage laughed, the sound darkly mocking. ``You think the Empire is a
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single side? How delightfully naïve of you. We are not Callowans,
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child.''
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He leaned forward and there was nothing handsome about that face now,
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warped as it was by barely-contained power just itching to lash out.
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``We were tribes and tribal kingdoms, before the Miezans, and if you
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scratch under the surface we are still. I know who my tribe is,
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Catherine Foundling. I have fought with them, bled and wept with them.''
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``Yet another Praesi telling me I can't be part of their little private
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club,'' I replied, anger freeing my tongue. ``There's a shocker.''
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Because if the man thought I would just sit there and be castigated for
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something I hadn't done, wasn't even sure I should do, then he could go
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burn in the bloody Hells. Wasn't like he was unacquainted with the
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damned place.
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``Your birth has nothing to do with this,'' he said harshly. ``Neither
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Scribe nor Ranger are from Praes. Black barely is, by most of my
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people's standards. We are having this conversation because Malicia
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summoned you to the Tower and made you an offer.''
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``I didn't accept it,'' I spoke through gritted teeth.
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``You didn't refuse it,'' he replied. ``That is all someone like Alaya
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needs. She laid the seed, and in the coming years you will have to make
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a choice. As you are now, I know exactly which one you will make.''
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``You are,'' I spoke icily, ``assuming a great deal.''
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``Maybe you will prove me wrong,'' Warlock shrugged. ``I have been
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surprised in the past. But I speak to tell you this -- if you don't,
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there will be a price.''
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``Whatever happened to not making obvious threats?'' I spat.
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``I don't think you quite understand. I love Amadeus, you see,'' Warlock
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admitted casually. ``He is my oldest and dearest friend, a brother in
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all but blood. I don't care one whit for the Empire or Evil or all those
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carefully laid plans everybody seems to be following. So you can believe
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me when I say that if your knife finds his back, I will not kill you.''
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He leaned forward.
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``What I \emph{will} do is rip your soul out of that mangled husk you
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call a body, then cast it into the Void \emph{so you can continue
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screaming in unspeakable agony until Creation itself falls apart},'' he
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hissed.
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Stepping back, he smoothed his robes and smiled pleasantly.
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``I'm glad we had this talk. It's better to air these things out,'' he
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said as my fingers tightened against the grip of my sword. ``You are
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excused, Catherine. Have a pleasant afternoon.''
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Putting down his cup he offered me a friendly wave and strolled away,
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whistling the air to the Legionary song. I stood there for a long
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moment, allowing my breath to steady and the fear to recede. I closed my
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eyes and forced my fingers to leave my sword, exhaling slowly. Hakram
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would need to find me another book, it seemed. \emph{There's bound to be
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something out there about the best way to kill a mage.}
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