399 lines
17 KiB
TeX
399 lines
17 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-12-double-down}{%
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\chapter{Double Down}\label{chapter-12-double-down}}
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\epigraph{``It admittedly took me a few years to make my peace with the fact
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that Lady Foundling's take on diplomacy is essentially to bring a bottle
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of cheap wine and a sword to the table, then remind the interlocutor
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that while the wine might be awful it is still arguably better than
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being stabbed.''}{Extract from the personal memoirs of Lady Aisha Bishara}
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``You insignificant \emph{insect},'' the Duke of Violent Squalls barked.
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I smiled pleasantly. So it \emph{could} work. The Duke was addressing me
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directly instead of the role of the Princess of High Noon, which I
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needed him to do badly if my plan was going to succeed. Well, plan might
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have been a little too ambitious of a word. I was following my
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instincts, which while usually leading me to breaking someone's bones
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also tended to get me out of corners in more or less one piece. I could
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not win this if I played out their story, I knew. I would be quite
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literally fated to lose. Time to drive the cart off the road. Chaos had
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always been where I thrived, and no people were so ill-equipped to deal
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with it as the fae.
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``That hurt my feelings, it did,'' I replied, rolling my eyes. ``We
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going stand here trading insults all night, or we going to talk terms?''
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``You give me insult in my own home and speak of terms?'' the Duke
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hissed. ``I should destroy you where you stand.''
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I could feel wind starting up in the ballroom, the hem of my cloak
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stirring with it. There were probably Names that gave you a precise read
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on how much power an opponent could throw around, but sadly Squire
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wasn't one of them. All I got was that he was a glacier compared to the
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icicle of the average fae, not that far beneath the Prince of Nightfall
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himself. Joy. That was, I mused, the first hint that Duke or not he
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probably had a large role in the story of the Winter Court. Was the
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Winter King trying to use me as a catspaw to get rid of an enemy he
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wasn't allowed to touch? Unlikely, I finally decided. While I was
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supposed to get into conflict with this one, the dispute was also
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supposed to be resolved by champions. My hacking his head off wasn't
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supposed to be in the cards.
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``You won't, though,'' I said. ``Because I'm a guest and the lot of you
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are all about rules. That's a fairly big one, as I understand it.''
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``You will not be my guest forever,'' the Duke of Violent Squalls said
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coldly.
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The wind his cuffs were made of turned furious without his visibly doing
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anything to cause it. I'd need to have a talk with Masego about how
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having the aristocratic title to something something worked, practically
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speaking. Might be a way to sever that. Without his magic the fae was
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just a man in fancy clothes, and I wasn't above stabbing those when it
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got me what I wanted.
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``Somehow I doubt that getting into a pitched battle in the streets of
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Skade is going to go over too well with your king,'' I said. ``I'm
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\emph{his} guest too, remember?''
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``If you think that makes you untouchable, you are severely mistaken,''
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the fae said.
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``You'll still get a slap on the wrist,'' I smiled. ``And I get the
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feeling that a king's slap around here tends to\ldots{} leave marks.''
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Around all us, all the faces of the fae I could see were blank. They
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just stood there in utter silence, not so much as breathing as they
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watched it all unfold. It was like standing in a hall full of statues.
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``I'm a kind soul, though,'' I lied. ``So I'm offering you a way to seek
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redress that dodges the issue.''
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``A formal duel,'' the Duke said, pale lips stretching to reveal teeth
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of ivory. ``Yes, that would be acceptable. Crushing you under my heel
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will be most satisfying.''
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\emph{And now I have you}, I thought. No champions, just the immortal
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monster and me in a ring. With a little prodding he'd eagerly left
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behind the story of the Princess of High Noon becoming captive and
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walked into entirely uncharted territory. I did not pick that word by
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mistake: there was no map we were following, here. No story. Which
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meant, I figured, that I could insert my own. \emph{How do you beat
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someone you can't beat?} I mused, remembering rocky fields in a land
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that right now felt so very far away. More innocent days, those, when
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I'd been playing at war instead of waging it\emph{.} But I had not
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forgotten the most important lesson I'd learned from the War College:
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don't win according to the rules, win despite them.
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``So all that's left is settling on the wager,'' I said.
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The Duke's lips stretched even further into an ugly rictus.
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``If you lose, you will cede me the soul of everyone under your
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command,'' he said.
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``I'm not under her command, for the record,'' Archer called out from an
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upper level.
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I gestured rudely in her general direction without bothering to turn.
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``Sure,'' I agreed. ``What I want is-``
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``Yes, yes,'' the Duke said, waving his hand dismissively. ``The Summer
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fae can have their freedom.''
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``Those poor bastards aren't my problem in the slightest,'' I said with
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a raised eyebrow.
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I tapped my third finger, eyeing his own hand. The piece of jewellery
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responsible for the seal on the invitation I'd received could be
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glimpsed there, a ring of white wood set with a flat opal positively
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reeking of magic.
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``Your signet ring,'' I said. ``I want it. I also want to have always
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had it.''
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``That is a heavy price for you to demand,'' the Duke sneered.
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``You just asked me for a few thousand souls, jackass,'' I replied
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flatly. ``Don't whine about trinkets, it's unseemly.''
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``Your death,'' he said, ``will not be quick.''
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``I'm hearing a yes,'' I said. ``Anybody else heard a yes?''
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``I agree to the terms of this wager,'' the Duke spoke through gritted
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teeth. ``Since you are so eager to die, let us proceed. Will the
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ballroom suffice?''
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I grinned and wagged my finger.
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``I spent all day travelling,'' I said. ``A delicate flower such as
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myself needs rest before strenuous exercise. You wouldn't be trying to
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\emph{cheat}, would you?''
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I gasped in mock-surprise.
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``I thought better of you, Duke,'' I said solemnly.
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``Dawn, then, on the Fields of Wend,'' the fae replied with a sneer.
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``My honour will not suffer for a longer delay.''
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``You should put it out of its misery, if it's suffering that much,'' I
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replied, because I had never learned to quit while I was ahead. ``Still,
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I agree to your terms.''
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I mentally added to my list the need to find out exactly what those
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Fields were. Sounded like it might be important.
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``A spot of entertainment before Court,'' the Duke of Violent Squalls
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smiled. ``How refreshing.''
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I would have cast aspersions on a place that counted blood sport as
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entertainment, but considering I'd made more coin in Laure from the Pit
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than the Rat's Nest a saying about stones and glass houses came to mind.
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Although, frankly, someone who could afford to live in a house made of
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glass could probably do with a few rocks thrown at them. If
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\emph{anyone} got that rich there were bound to be a lot of peasants
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starving in the background. I had nothing more to gain from continuing
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the conversation, so I suppressed my urge to get the last word and
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strolled away. My pipe had gone out, I noticed with a sigh. Typical.
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Before I made it more than a few feet away all the fae around us started
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moving again, like a spell had suddenly been lifted. Whispers flared up
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immediately, but I wasn't intending to stick around and leanr what they
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were. I found Hakram hastily making his way down the stairs without
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needing to look for long, dragging a protesting Masego along as Archer
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watched on in amusement.
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``Well,'' Archer said. ``That certainly livened up the party.''
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``Glad I could be of help,'' I replied sardonically.
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``You were had,'' Adjutant gravelled.
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I raised an eyebrow. Masego let out a little noise of understanding.
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``Everyone under your command,'' Apprentice said. ``Given your position
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on the Ruling Council of Callow, that could be argued to apply to every
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soul in the former kingdom as well as the Fifteenth. Oh dear.''
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I blinked. \emph{Shit}. Hadn't thought of that. I'd been more or less at
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the head of Callow for a year now, but it had never quite sunk in that I
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wielded the bastard cousin of a queen's authority. I still thought of
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myself as Catherine Foundling, the Squire, not anything more.
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``He couldn't \emph{really} collect on that, could he?'' I said.
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``With that large of a debt owed him, the Duke could likely be able to
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come into Creation in the fullness of his power,'' Apprentice said.
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``After that, I have no real notion. It would be unprecedented as far as
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I know.''
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``The Calamities would smoke him before it got to that,'' I frowned.
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``And Ranger can take the Prince of Nightfall even in Arcadia, she could
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handle him.''
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``I'm not sure she would,'' Archer said. ``Depends on her mood at the
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time. A duke might not be enough of a challenge for her to bother.''
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``She'd just let a few million people get their souls stolen?'' I said,
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appalled.
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``You're the one who just wagered them,'' Archer pointed out. ``The Lady
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of the Lake is beholden to no one, Foundling. The suggestion that she is
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would go\ldots{} poorly.''
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Huh. I'd always like the stories about Ranger best when I was a kid, but
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that put them in a different perspective. I passed a hand through my
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hair.
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``I'm not going to lose, regardless,'' I said. ``So it doesn't matter.''
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``You have a plan,'' Adjutant said.
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``Something like that,'' I agreed. ``Need some time to set it in stone,
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hence why I delayed. We need to get back to the Still Courtyard.''
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``Already?'' Archer complained.
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``Actually, I have an assignment for you that doesn't involve,'' I said.
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``Sounds serious,'' she said.
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``Try to find out anything you can about the Duke of Violent Squalls,
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while you're drinking yourself to death,'' I told her. ``And I do mean
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anything you can. Even small details could be useful.''
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``That seems like something that should have been done before you threw
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a gauntlet at him,'' Archer noted. ``Though, praise where it's due,
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funniest thing that happened all night. And I include Adjutant's clothes
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in this.''
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``Glad to have you on this team,'' I said with a sigh. ``Masego, on our
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way out I need you to have a good look at the Duke. Pay close attention
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to what he looks like.''
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``I've seen him in my spectacles,'' Apprentice said. ``Anything more is
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unnecessary.''
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So those could do more than just see sorcery. That was useful to know.
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``Let's go,'' I said, giving the fae a last glance. ``We're wasting
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daylight -- and don't you godsdamned dare to correct me, Masego, it's an
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idiom.''
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He scowled all the way back to the carriage.
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---
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The moment a ward came down to prevent fae from eavesdropping on what
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would be said inside the library, I turned to my two companions with a
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winning smile.
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``All right, gentlemen, I have work for you,'' I said.
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Apprentice took off his spectacles, laid them on the table.
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``I imagine my task has something to do with why you asked me to look at
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the Duke,'' he said.
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He murmured a few incantations and tapped a finger against the left rim.
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A wispy image of the the Duke of Violent Squalls formed above the
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spectacles. With a flick of the wrist, he made it rotate. I leaned
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forward to have a closer look: I'd stood in front of that very fae, and
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I couldn't recall that much detail about the clothes he'd worn. I let
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out a low whistle.
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``That's something,'' I said. ``How good are you with illusions?''
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``Not my field of specialty, but anything possible with Low Arcana I can
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achieve,'' Masego replied casually, as if he hadn't just stated he could
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match the work of over nine tenths of the mages in Calernia in a fairly
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difficult branch of sorcery.
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``I need you to make me a glamour,'' I said. ``One I can wear.''
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``Now does not seem the right time for you to develop a sense of
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vanity,'' Apprentice said.
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``I need you to make me look like I'm related to him,'' I continued,
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ignoring the aside.
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He hummed.
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``I'll need an anchor to inscribe the Working on,'' he said. ``Using
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anything of Arcadia will make it particularly effective, which should
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improve the quality of the result.''
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``Get one of the servants to find you something, then,'' I said. ``A
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necklace, if possible, one I could wear under my clothes.''
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He nodded absent-mindedly, clearly already thinking of the logistics of
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what I'd asked him to do. Masego with a puzzle would not pause to ask me
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why I wanted to look like I was related to the fae I was going to kill,
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but I could feel Hakram's eyes on me even as Apprentice rose to his feet
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and left both the room and the ward behind him.
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``The signet ring, that you will `always have had','' he said. ``Looking
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as if you were a daughter of his blood. These are not coincidences.''
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``Which leads me to what I want from you. I need you to Find me a story
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about patricide in one of these books,'' I said, gesturing at the stacks
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around us.
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Hakram cocked his head to the side.
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``Daughter who never knew her parents kills a duke, only then realizing
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that the signet ring on her hand matches his livery,'' the orc said.
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``Fate led her to kill her father. A tragedy, but one that sees the
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daughter a duchess at the end in a hollow victory.''
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Ah, Hakram. If I had a hundred people with minds as sharp as his Callow
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would run itself.
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``That's the idea,'' I agreed softly.
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``The part I'm missing is why you would want to be a Duchess of
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Winter,'' he said.
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``We've gotten in a place where think that what we want out of Skade is
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to leave it alive,'' I said, plopping my elbows on the table.
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``Arcandia, it makes it seem like everything outside is distant. But we
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entered it for a reason.''
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``To shut down Winter's invasion of Marchford,'' Adjutant said.
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``Winter can't invade Marchford if Marchford is part of Winter,'' I
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murmured.
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``That's\ldots{}'' the orc began. ``Cat, there's risks. And there will
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be consequences. As long as you rule the city, it will have ties to a
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Court that places in Creation usually \emph{don't}. We have no idea what
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that could mean.''
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``We have a fucking portal spewing blizzard where my marketplace should
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be, Hakram,'' I replied tiredly. ``That ship has sailed. The fae are
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there and they're not going anywhere. If I'm one of their aristocrats,
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at least I get to make rules in my demesne.''
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``The Empress will have some things to say about one of her cities also
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answering to the King of Winter,'' he gravelled.
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``She won't like it,'' I agreed. ``But I think she'd like a slugging
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match with Winter even less. Praes can't afford that right now, not with
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Procer lurking at the gate. She's a practical woman, when it comes down
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to it. You've seen the kind of heavyweights Winter can deploy, if they
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need to. You really think the Legions can handle that?''
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``The Legions of Terror can kill anything in Creation or out of it,''
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Hakram replied without missing a beat.
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The ironclad certainty in that voice was a thing to behold. That was
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something I was only beginning to understand about orcs. I'd once
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thought that they just separated everything into ally or enemy and that
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it leant them a certain clarity, but it ran deeper than that. Orcs were
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slower to come to a belief than humans, but when they did that belief
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would not waver. Hakram had decided I was worth following, and that
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certainty had carried him all the way into a Name. Never mind that no
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orc had held in in over a millennium. Juniper also believed that the
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Legions of Terror could take on any opponent, and so she'd crushed
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mercenaries and devils alike with mere cunning and ruthlessness, playing
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them every step of the way. They were both exceptional individuals, but
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I could see a trace of what drove them in all the orcs I knew. I thought
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of what the Clans would have been like, at the height of their power,
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and almost shivered. A hundred thousand orcs, knowing deep in their
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bones that their Warlord could not be beaten. No wonder the Soninke had
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been terrified of them for centuries, that the Deoraithe had raised a
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giant wall spanning leagues just to keep them out.
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``But casualty rates would be high, until we found the proper method,''
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Adjutant finally conceded.
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``Hold on to that thought, Hakram,'' I said. ``When we get back home,
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I'm pretty sure we'll need to clear out the host of Summer.''
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``That'll be a fight to remember, when we're old and grey,'' Adjutant
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replied, baring his fangs.
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In that moment he reminded me acutely of Nauk, and I felt a pang. I
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missed them, I realized. My little band of misfits. Juniper and Aisha,
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Ratface and Pickler -- and Kilian, most of all. Hells, I missed Black,
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the man that was so very carefully not-my-father, whose approval I
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craved as much as I feared it. The sermons at the House of Light had
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never said Evil would feel like this. Like a family, the only one I'd
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ever had. Maybe that was how the Gods Below got you, I thought. They
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made you love people who could do horrible things just enough that you'd
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forgive them for it.
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``Let's make sure we live that long first,'' I finally said. ``The Duke
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is going to plaster me all over the floor if we don't cheat. Find me my
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story, Adjutant.''
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``And then?'' the orc asked.
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``And then,'' I smiled, ``we're going to bullshit so hard it becomes a
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prophecy.''
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