610 lines
24 KiB
TeX
610 lines
24 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-25-wake}{%
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\section{Chapter 25: Wake}\label{chapter-25-wake}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Only heroes get to have the torch handed to them. Villains must
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take it from their predecessor's corpse.''}
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-Dread Empress Malicia, First of her Name
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\end{quote}
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Morning Bell wouldn't be sounding for another hour but I was already up
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and about. I'd long gotten used to seven hour nights and the occasional
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shorter rest when the Legion's pace demanded it, but not even my Name
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was enough to tamp down the horrible weariness in my bones. It'd been a
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while since I'd taken a beating this bad: the only one I could recall
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that topped it was my first run-in with William. I was in no danger of
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ever forgetting that fight, or its aftermath. \emph{Pulled levers, and
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twenty-five Callowans died.} I still felt a flash of anger at the
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memory, though the executions themselves did not trigger the worst of
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it. That role was shared between the Lone Swordsman for having meddled
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with my mind and Black for having Spoken at me. I'd grown to like my
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teacher more than I'd ever thought possible, but the denial of my free
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will was not something I would ever just \emph{get over}.
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The previous night I'd put off Archer's initial request for the transfer
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of her colleague to be done immediately, not that she'd fought me very
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hard on the subject. After having made her initial impression she'd
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seemed pretty nonchalant about the task she'd been entrusted with. That
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was rather telling, though I lacked information to draw conclusions from
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it. The internal politics of Refuge were opaque to me, and everyone else
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for that matter. The one undeniable fact was that Ranger, formerly of
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the Calamities, ruled the city. And yet the polity was not aligned in
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any way with the Empire. It was considered a dwarven protectorate, if
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anything, though the Kingdom Under disliked making definitive
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commitments to anyone on the surface. I would have thought a independent
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city ruled by one of elven blood would have drawn the Golden Bloom's
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attention, but that did not seem to be the case. Ranger herself might be
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a half-elf, but she'd not been spared by the elven lack of interest in
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anything going on outside their borders.
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When I found the Lady of the Lake's envoy, she was seated in a small
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anteroom close to where we were keeping Hunter, legs crossed as she sat
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in an armchair and chatted with an interested-looking Apprentice. The
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bow from last night was nowhere in sight and neither was the coat,
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leaving her in that pale mail. The dark linen that had covered her lower
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face had been turned into a makeshift scarf.
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``- some of the Unseelie, though they're careful about where they
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emerge. There are things in the woods not even the Fae would cross
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lightly,'' Archer said, sipping at a cup.
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I glanced at the contents, noting she was already on hard liquor.
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\emph{Gods, not even the Praesi like their drink this much.} I'd myself
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broken my fast with a pot of tea and sweetened porridge I'd found
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already waiting when I'd emerged from my bed because Hakram was a living
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treasure.
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``There must be several gates, then, spread across the Waning Woods,''
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Masego replied, tone enthusiastic. ``Few of them have the ability to
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actually cross from Arcadia into Creation.''
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``Squire,'' the stranger of the two greeted me when I came in.
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``Archer,'' I replied. ``Is that aragh in your cup?''
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``It's noon in Ashur,'' she explained easily.
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Masego frowned.
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``No it isn't.''
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The ochre-skinned girl sighed.
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``It's an expression, love,'' she told him.
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``An inaccurate one,'' the mage muttered under his breath, much to my
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amusement.
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I cleared my throat.
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``He has this thing about being exact,'' I informed her.
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Archer cast a sceptical eye on the mage, then shrugged.
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``Us poor bastards raised by Calamities tend to pick up quirks, I've
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noticed,'' she commented, then drained her glass. ``That aside, I
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suppose I should get around to checking on Tinkles. Shall we proceed?''
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I was about to agree when I processed what she'd just said.
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``\ldots{} Tinkles?'' I prompted, smothering a grin.
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Archer gestured towards her hair.
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``It's all those bells he wears for some reason,'' she said. ``Worse
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fashion choice than the tattoos, and that's saying something.''
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I snorted.
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``There's nothing wrong with ornamenting your hair,'' Apprentice
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intervened defensively, fingering one of trinkets adorning his own
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dreadlocks.
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``There is if you're supposed to go around quiet-like,'' Archer
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retorted, rolling her eyes. ``Some Hunter he is.''
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``He's a regular devil with the spear, I'll say that for the man,'' I
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conceded.
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``No one who studied under the Lady of the Lake would be allowed to
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leave Refuge if they couldn't take care of themselves,'' the envoy
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dismissed. ``He's still the weakest of her pupils by far.''
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After last night's lovely interlude, I had no problem buying that. Even
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if I'd been a functional cripple for the duration of the scuffle, she'd
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still handled Hakram and Masego like they were bumbling children.
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``Let's get to it, Apprentice,'' I finally said. ``Raising the spell
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shouldn't be a problem, right?''
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``No.~It was designed with that in mind. Probably best we get to that
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sooner than later, anyhow,'' the mage noted. ``I'm not comfortable
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leaving any magical effects lying around when there's a demon of
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corruption on the loose. Should they come in contact the effects could
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be\ldots{} unpredictable.''
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Archer's eyes sharpened at the mention of the demon, though she passed
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no comment. Behind the drinking and the easy grins she didn't miss much,
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this one. How much of the cheerful façade had been carefully crafted to
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make us underestimate her, I wondered? We stepped into the room where
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Hunter was being kept and I dismissed the tenth of guards that kept a
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weapon on the hero at all times. Normally it would have been a full
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line, but twenty legionaries just wouldn't fit in the available space.
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The one-handed hero had been put on a bed, though that was as far as his
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comfort had been attended to. There were sets of bindings keeping his
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arms and legs tied together, not that they would have done much good if
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he were awake and trying to escape. I hadn't needed Black's tutelage to
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know that keeping heroes imprisoned rarely ended well for a villain.
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``He doesn't look in pain,'' Archer noted.
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``No reason he should be,'' Masego replied.
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The dark-skinned mage walked up to the sleeping hero and shoved a hand
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under the pillow his head was resting on, blindly groping for something.
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After a moment he took out a small sculpted rock covered in runes,
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crushing it effortlessly in his hand. I raised an eyebrow. \emph{That
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wasn't strength, he hasn't the brawn for that.} He blew the dust on
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Hunter's face and carefully lay a finger between the man's eyes.
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``Wake,'' he ordered.
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My brow raised higher. That hadn't been Speaking, not exactly, but there
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had been power layered behind the word. Nothing happened. Archer cleared
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her throat.
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``Is this going to take a while?'' she asked. ``Because there's a bottle
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with my name on it in the other room.''
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``Should be any moment now,'' Masego replied.
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It took maybe another thirty heartbeats before Hunter began to stir. He
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yawned, and I saw his muscles tense as he went to cover his mouth but
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found his arms had been bound. A moment later his entire body moved as
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if to reach for a weapon that wasn't there, to the amusingly feeble
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result of him wiggling like a tied hog.
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``Tinkles,'' Archer barked. ``Stop making a fool of yourself.''
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Hunter's eyes swept the room, immediately finding his colleague then
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moving on to glare at Masego and I.
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``Archer,'' he finally said. ``What are you doing here?''
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``Taking custody of you,'' she grunted, unsheathing her longknife and
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and reaching for his binds.
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I clicked my tongue against the roof of my mouth, then spent a heartbeat
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surprised at the typically Praesi gesture coming from me. When had I
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picked that up?
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``He's not getting out of those before I have an oath he's not gonna
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fight me and mine,'' I stated flatly.
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``He's my responsibility now. If he does, I'll put him down myself.''
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``\emph{Archer},'' the hero burst out. ``She's a \emph{villain}.''
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``She's a villain who spared your sorry arse,'' she spoke sharply. ``So
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watch your bloody mouth. Your entire little stunt abroad has been an
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embarrassment to the Lady, John. Refuge is going to have to pay
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reparations to the Tower.''
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``Lady Ranger is blinded by sentimentality in this,'' Hunter bit back.
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``Callow deserves to be free, even if it's run by her old friends.''
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``Funny how William's crew always talks about freedom,'' I spoke softly.
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``Like it's going to feed the country when Praes burns the whole place
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to the ground on the way out. Like those pretty words assure you a
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victory instead of a field of corpses from Dormer to Vale.''
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``You are a traitor to your blood, Squire,'' the Hunter sneered. ``All
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you deserve is-``
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Archer slapped him.
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``I don't give one damn what flag flies over Callow, John,'' the Named
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said calmly. ``And neither should you. You know what I do care about?
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Following Refuge's only law. Remind me what that law is, Hunter?''
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The hero looked mulish.
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``I asked you a question. \emph{What is that law, Hunter}?'' Archer
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repeated harshly.
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``Whatever the Lady says goes,'' he muttered.
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``And what did Lady Ranger say about the Empire?'' she prompted.
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``Here there be monsters,'' Hunter quoted. ``Leave it alone.''
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``But you didn't leave it alone, did you? So you lost a hand and
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embarrassed us publicly. A shame you can't tattoo yourself better life
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choices,'' she continued cuttingly.
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``They're tribal,'' Hunter defended himself.
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``Lots of tribes in Vale's merchant quarter, are there?'' Archer said,
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rolling her eyes. ``I've had tea with your parents, John. They're
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drapiers, lovely old couple. The only thing they did wrong was switch
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you too infrequently.''
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I was not above admitting to myself that I was finding this entire
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conversation delightful. A mocking grin tugged at my mouth, though I
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stayed out of it. For all that Archer was falling on him like a
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rockslide, he was still one of hers. Adding a few swings of my own might
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prompt retaliation.
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``I officially surrender custody of him to you,'' I contributed. ``I
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suppose you'll be taking him back to Refuge?''
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``Eventually,'' Archer agreed. ``He's to stand judgement before the
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Lady.''
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``I did nothing wrong,'' Hunter growled.
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``I'd plan my defence better if I were you,'' the woman snorted. ``She's
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already pissed she actually has to rule the city instead of leaving it
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to function on its own, so your case isn't looking good.''
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I hummed noncommittally.
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``You'll be staying in Marchford, then?''
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Archer sighed. ``Anybody ever tell you you're not great at subtlety,
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love?''
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``Arguably that's her trademark,'' Masego grinned. ``That and setting
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things on fire.''
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I shrugged. I'd never intended to dance around the subject: with what
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was coming, uncertainty about my guest was not something I could afford.
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``We'll be under attack in a matter of days,'' I said. ``I doubt devils
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or what's left of the Silver Spears after the demon's through with them
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will care about your diplomatic credentials.''
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``A demon?'' Hunter spoke, tone aghast. ``Gods, Squire, what did you
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summon?''
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``This wasn't my doing,'' I retorted sharply. ``I'm just cleaning up the
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mess, and I'd rather not lose ten thousand innocents in the process.
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Apprentice and Adjutant can only do so much, and I'm still wounded. An
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additional Named might make the difference.''
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``I'm not sure I could kill a demon,'' Archer admitted.
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I frowned. ``You're a villain? I'd assumed otherwise.''
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``Not all Roles are so clear cut,'' the stranger replied.
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``Well, that explains everything,'' I commented drily.
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``If we're still in the city when the assault comes, we'll help,''
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Archer finally said.
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``\emph{We}?'' Hunter spat.
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``We,'' the woman replied softly. ``You need to consider very carefully
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whether you want to fight me on this, John. My patience is running
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thin.''
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That muzzled him effectively enough.
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``I'd appreciate it if you informed me if you intend to leave,'' I told
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her. ``If not, we'll brief you before the fighting begins.''
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``A briefing. How very formal,'' Archer drawled. ``Tell you what, love.
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Find us an empty room with a sturdy bed and you can \emph{debrief} me
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all you want.''
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I looked her up and down, a little surprised. She \emph{was} pretty,
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that much was obvious now that her face was visible. Delicate features
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and beautiful eyes, not to mention she seemed to be hiding away very
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healthy curves under that mail. Maybe a year ago I would have taken her
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up on it, but things had changed since then.
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``Flattered, but taken,'' I said.
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The ochre-skinned woman grinned the single naughtiest grin I'd ever
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seen, eyeing me up and down in turn.
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``That doesn't have to be a hindrance. The more the merrier,'' she
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winked.
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Well, she certainly didn't lack for confidence.
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``I'll leave you to your heartfelt reunion,'' I replied instead of
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humouring her. ``Apprentice, we're about due our meeting with Hakram.''
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He nodded. ``I'd like to pick your brains on a few things later,
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Archer,'' he said.
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``Sounds fun,'' she dismissed.
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He turned to follow me out of the room but paused and squeaked as he
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passed her by.
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``She pinched my ass,'' he told me in a bewildered tone.
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Archer's laughter followed us all the way out.
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---
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``It took most of the night, but we have the census you asked for,''
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Hakram announced, unrolling a thick leather parchment that presented a
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map of Marchford.
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It was covered in red ink dots, which had the orphan in me twitching.
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Maps like this cost a fortune, and while this one had likely been looted
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from the Countess' manor it was still ruining an outrageously expensive
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item.
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``Hard numbers?'' Masego asked.
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``Under two thousand hearths,'' the orc replied. ``For further details
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I'll wait on Kilian, since she supervised the effort.''
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The redheaded Senior Mage entered the inn common room we'd commandeered
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a moment later, gracing me with a smile as she did. After the last few
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days I could honestly say I didn't give a single fuck about decorum, so
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I crossed the distance between us in two strides and dipped her for a
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kiss. She was just a little taller than me, so this tended to work best
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when we weren't\ldots{} occupied on a bed. Or a table. Or once on the
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desk in Juniper's office, when my legate had been late for a meeting.
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Her eyes flew open in surprise, but they closed with mine and within
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moments I had an armful of warm Kilian nestled against me.
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``I'm glad to see you too, Cat,'' she spoke breathlessly when we broke
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apart.
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``Mhm,'' I replied, eloquent as always.
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Masego cleared his throat. ``Yes, we're all aware \emph{that's} going
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on. If we could attend the matter at hand?''
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``Give them a moment, warlock's get,'' Hakram rumbled.
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He was smiling softly at us, the sight made slightly horrifying by the
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sharp fangs displayed. Considering the trove of romance novels under his
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bunk I wasn't supposed to know about, I wasn't surprised. I shook myself
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out of my pleasant daze.
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``Right. So hearths. We have a bunch of them lying around the city. Why
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is that important?'' I asked.
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``A hearth is the magical symbol of a home,'' Kilian explained. ``That
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has weight, in matters of sorcery.''
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``The Senior Mage is correct,'' Apprentice said. ``Though it goes deeper
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than that. A home is a boundary -- tales about vampires in the Wasteland
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being unable to pass a threshold are largely false, but they have a
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source of truth to them. Hearths are metaphysical anchors.''
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``An anchor is meant to weigh something down,'' Hakram grunted. ``I was
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under the impression our problem was that we lacked the kind of power
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that would need one of those.''
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``You're thinking in terms of creating something,'' Masego replied,
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sounding excited. ``Which we will, to an extent, but that's not the core
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of what we're setting out to accomplish. What you have to keep in mind
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is that neither devils nor demons are born of Creation. They do not, on
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a basic level, belong here. That's why they have to be summoned in the
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first place.''
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I frowned.
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``You're implying that what keeps them out of Creation is essentially a
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threshold,'' I guessed.
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``Exactly,'' Apprentice smiled.
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``There are extensive records showing that devils are more sensitive to
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thresholds than any creature borne of Creation, and even the Fae,''
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Kilian said. ``Demons are another matter, but theoretically the same
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reasoning applies.''
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``The central tenet of diabolism as a magical discipline is that
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sufficiently strong bindings can force anything to obey your will,''
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Masego informed us. ``Even demons, though that's justly been compared to
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riding a tiger with a bridle made of straw.''
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``So we can turn individual houses into strongholds that'll keep devils
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out,'' Hakram frowned. ``That's not enough for a coherent defence,
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Apprentice.''
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``You're thinking small, my friend,'' the dark-skinned man replied
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cheerfully, pushing up his glasses. ``I did say we were going to create
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something, did I not?''
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I took in a sudden breath.
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``You want to set up a threshold covering all of Marchford,'' I grasped.
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``A surprisingly accurate guess, for someone with no schooling in
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sorcery,'' he approved.
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``Just don't talk magical theory at her, she'll fall asleep faster than
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if she'd drunk a potion,'' Kilian murmured.
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``That was once,'' I protested. ``I'd had a long day.''
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``Catherine's stubborn ignorance aside,'' Masego continued, ignoring my
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objections, ``linking a sufficient amount of hearths through ritual
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would allow me to set up a threshold covering up to the city
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boundaries.''
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``How many is sufficient?'' Adjutant asked. ``We'll need local
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cooperation for that, and that's a mixed bag at best.''
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``Twenty-four,'' Apprentice assessed. ``We could link more, but we'd be
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trading power for precision.''
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I did not think it a coincidence that the Twenty-Fourth Hell marked the
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transition from demons to devils.
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``That's a pattern,'' I said. ``What do you need to power it?''
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``For the initial phase I'll need half a dozen mages per hearth, and
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myself at the centre to guide the working,'' Masego replied. ``After
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that, we'll need to keep a fire running in every hearth.''
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``That sounds easy enough,'' I frowned.
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``This is not something we can afford to mishandle, Catherine,'' the
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bespectacled mage replied. ``A ritual is not a permanent ward, and the
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fires will be the component that allows it to keep functioning. If a
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single hearth stops burning for even a heartbeat, the entire ritual will
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collapse.''
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``If it does,'' Hakram asked quietly. ``What happens to the magic that
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was in the ritual?''
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``Every other hearth will blow up and devour everything within thirty
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yards, at least,'' Masego admitted. ``I could have made this more stable
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given time, but slapping together a ritual at the last moment always
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carries certain issues.''
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I remained silent, clenching my fingers and unclenching them.
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``And this threshold will keep the devils out?'' I asked.
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``Yes,'' he agreed, meeting my eyes squarely.
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``Then do it,'' I ordered. ``But I want you to leave one part of the
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city uncovered.''
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I traced a rectangle with my finger on the city map, facing the hills
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where the demon dwelled.
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``I'll need more mages to set up artificial boundaries, but it can be
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done,'' Masego frowned. ``May I ask why?''
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I half-smiled. ``You ever read the ``Commentaries on the Campaigns of
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Dread Emperor Terribilis the Second''?''
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Hakram let out a chuckle.
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``Armies are like water,'' the tall orc quoted. ``They take the path of
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least resistance.''
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``That's our killing alley,'' I grunted. ``It's where they'll attack,
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and it's where we'll bleed them.''
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Apprentice's eyes glittered with something like savage joy. ``I think I
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can do a little better than that, actually. I'll need to run the numbers
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first, so we can discuss it later.''
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I nodded.
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``There's one last matter,'' I said.
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There was no sign of surprise from anyone at the table, which got a
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raised eyebrow from me.
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``You've been looking like you're sitting on something,'' Hakram said.
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Huh. I'd need to work on that, it was something of a liability.
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``When you first met Hakram, you could tell he was about to come into a
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Name,'' I told Masego.
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``My glasses have several enchantments on them,'' he explained.
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``Father's work.''
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``And what do those enchantments tell you when you look at me?''
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``That you're on the edge of your third aspect,'' Apprentice replied.
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``I thought as much,'' I grunted. ``But I can't afford to wait around
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for it. Black did this thing, in Laure, that had me go into a lucid
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dream.''
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``Ah, \emph{that},'' Masego grimaced. ``Yes, I could trigger the
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epiphany early. I would not recommend that, however. It's one thing to
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give a Name an early start, another to force an aspect. It will be
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weaker than if you'd waited for it to coalesce in due time.''
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``Last time I fought the devils, I broke an arm and leg,'' I said. ``The
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demon will be in a whole other class. I doesn't matter if I'm weaker in
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the long term if I don't \emph{get} to the long term.''
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``There are risks, Catherine,'' the mage cautioned me. ``If we're
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already being affected by the corruption, a failure in your dream could
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be nothing short of disastrous.''
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``I beat odds, Masego,'' I replied honestly. ``It's what I do. It's the
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talent that got me this Name in the first place.''
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The bespectacled mage stirred.
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``That kind of talk,'' he spoke softly,'' has me worried.''
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``Our life isn't for the faint-hearted,'' I reminded him.
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``Risk doesn't worry me unduly,'' he replied patiently. ``But this isn't
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a villain's risk. Charging in without a plan and trusting your power to
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see you through is how heroes operate. Villains wait, accumulate power
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and engage when it is most advantageous to them. Otherwise we
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\emph{lose.}''
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``If we tread carefully now, if we turn timid, we've lost,'' I said.
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``Make no mistake, Masego: as things are now, we are \emph{fucked}. We
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still have the numbers on our side, but not by much -- and we're facing
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a creature that makes a mockery of the kind of warfare we're trained in.
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If we don't grasp for every advantage in reach, we'll die. And not the
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pretty, noble kind of death. Our corpses will be puppet for an
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abomination that'll try to spread across the surface of Creation before
|
|
enough people step in to kill it.''
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``Disperse it,'' he replied automatically. ``I'm not saying I won't do
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it, Catherine. But this is reckless.''
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I passed a hand through my hair. ``I know. Believe me, I know. But we're
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running out of cards, and the enemy hasn't even shown half their hand.''
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He sighed. ``Fine.''
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``I know you don't have a sword,'' I said. ``So you can use mine.''
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He blinked. ``A \emph{sword}? Why would I need that?''
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``To\ldots{} stab me?'' I spoke hesitantly.
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|
``Uncle Amadeus just ran you through with his,'' Masego guessed,
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morbidly fascinated.
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|
I rubbed the bridge of my nose. ``He didn't need to do that, did he?''
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|
``Just physical touch from another Named is enough,'' he snorted.
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|
``Gods, he's always so melodramatic.''
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|
``Tell me about it,'' I muttered.
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|
I glanced at Kilian, whose face was lined with worry. There was
|
|
something heart-warmingly straightforward about that. There was no
|
|
complication there, no myriad of different interests and loyalties at
|
|
play. The longer we stayed together, the more I found that attractive
|
|
about her. I still wasn't in love with her, and to be honest I didn't
|
|
know if I'd ever be. But she was a\ldots{} companion. Someone I was
|
|
comfortable spending time with, trusting my secrets to.
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|
``I suppose it'd be too much to ask you to be careful,'' the redhead
|
|
said.
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|
``Wrong girl for that, I'm afraid,'' I smiled.
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|
She let out a long breath and rested her chin on my shoulder. Lightly
|
|
she kissed the side of my neck and stepped away.
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|
``Try not to get yourself killed, at least,'' she commanded.
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|
``Centrepiece of my plan,'' I informed her, then stole a quick kiss.
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|
I turned to Apprentice.
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|
``All right, Masego,'' I spoke. ``Let's get-``
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|
The last thing I saw was an index finger headed for my forehead before
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darkness took me.
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