348 lines
17 KiB
TeX
348 lines
17 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-31-high-noon}{%
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\chapter{High Noon}\label{chapter-31-high-noon}}
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\epigraph{``My dear friends, I have a confession to make. Some creative
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reframing of the truth may have taken place during the planning of this
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coup.''}{Dread Emperor Traitorous, addressing the Order of the Unholy Obsidian
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upon successfully usurping the throne from himself}
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Now, in my experience planning the ending of a lesser god required three
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necessary steps. The first of them was, naturally, lies. Though this
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once I had found no make-believe prophecy to ensure this fight did not
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begin and end with my being incinerated, I \emph{had} prepared a few
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nasty surprises. The Summer Court didn't really bother to talk with
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mortals except to give them orders, as far as I knew, and that was going
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to come back to haunt them. The second step was a certain proficiency
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for violence, which between four battle-hardened Named we should have
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covered. There would be no talk of my taking on the Princess of High
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Noon by myself. That would return us to the whole incineration outcome,
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which I would confess I was less than fond of. Archer would have less of
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an impact using longknives instead of a bow, true, but with her and
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Adjutant at my side we might be able to keep the princess distracted
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long enough Apprentice could hit her with the good stuff. Well, Evil
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stuff. The labyrinthine mess that was adjusting my terminology now that
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I was consorting with the damned could wait to be sorted until there was
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less of a war going on.
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With a little luck, at some point in the next decade I'd have a day
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where no one was actively trying to invade Callow. That was the dream,
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really.
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The third step was having a \emph{right} to that victory. It was
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different than the false prophecy I'd used to kill the Duke of Violent
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Squalls. One was, as I liked to think of it, plausible deniability. It
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gave me an excuse to win, if I could manage it. After all, I'd still had
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to stab the bastard to get his stuff. Having a right was more like
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fixing the scales, the way Fate did for heroes. It was still short of
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providence, the golden luck that dropped the laurels in the lap of the
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Heavens' favourites, but it was close. When I'd fought Heiress and the
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Lone Swordsman in Liesse, I'd walked over two Named that were each a
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match for me on their own on my way to take the sword in the stone and
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my resurrection with it. The weights of the scale had been in my favour,
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then. It didn't guarantee victory, but it made it easier for me to win
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and harder for my opponents. The signet ring had done the same thing for
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the Duke of Violent Squalls. I'd `always had it', which at least in
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Arcadia had given me claim to the fae's power before it was physically
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on my finger.
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Finding an equivalent for the Princess of High Noon had been the hardest
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part of this. I couldn't just rely on the fact that she had invaded
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Callow: I was, however unwillingly, doing the same to Summer. That
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scratched off the mark on both sides of the slate, I was betting. There
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were dozens of stories about hard-headed young girls facing down gods
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for some cause or another, but all of them about heroes. I'd wiggled my
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way into that sort of role before, but only when standing for a greater
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cause than myself. I fell short of that here. They keystone would have
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to be found in the way that even with my Named companions I still stood
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hilariously outclassed. It was an old shape, that, the underdog
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triumphing over the unbeatable opponent. I'd chewed on that for days,
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pruning story after story until I returned to one of the oldest ones I
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knew. From before the House of Light, when Calernians had prayed to the
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Gods Above and Below but also made sure to give offerings to the ancient
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things that strode the world. Dread Emperor Sorcerous had once famously
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called usurpation the essence of sorcery. There was a deeper grain of
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truth in that, one broader in meaning. Transgression was the essence of
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what it meant to be Named. Breaking the rules for your own sake or that
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of others. And one of the most ancient of those transgressions was the
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blade meant to break the Princess of High Noon. \emph{The theft of
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fire.}
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Would it be enough? I could not know. Never did, until the blades were
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out and chaos reigned. But I'd gotten this far by doubling down whenever
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the stakes were raised, and I would not flinch today.
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The four of us had flown east, to where the fae clashed. Winter was not
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getting the better of it. The centre, where the Sword of Waning Day
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fought, had managed to gain ground. But the flanks were collapsing. The
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Riders of the Host had managed a harsh draw with the winged knights of
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Summer, but come out more bloodied and forced to retreat. To the sides
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the Summer regulars were driving back the Winter fae one step at a time,
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defeat already writ large. It would end with the deadwood soldiers an
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island in a Summer sea, collapsing when the winged knights returned to
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shatter their lines. While the lesser fae died in droves, the royalty
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that led them had fought just the same. There again, Winter was losing.
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The Prince of Nightfall now stood alone against the Princess of High
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Noon and the Prince of Deep Drought, the princess who'd been with him
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nowhere in sight. They were on the ground now, the armies giving all
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three of them a wide berth. I did not like the one-eyed prince. He'd
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been party to his king's playing of me, and been free with threats
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besides.
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Watching him battle two other royals, though, I felt a reluctant sliver
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of admiration. I'd not been wrong, in thinking him made for strife more
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than any other fae of Winter. The Princess of High Noon was more
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powerful., blatantly so. She moved like a storm unrelenting, howling
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winds stirring in the wake of every strike as she crushed everything in
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her way. The Prince of Deep Drought had been wounded, one of his arms
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held to his body only be strings of red, but he wove sorcery like an
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artist. Flame and light and dust, moving with Princess Sulia as if it
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knew her movements intimately. And facing that fury was a one-eyed man,
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clad in a long tunic of shade with a slender blade in hand. Trying to
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strike him was like trying to grasp a shadow, and though he was
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outmatched in every way he did not retreat a single step. None of the
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three paid us any mind when we took the winged horses down, dismounting
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more swiftly than gracefully. Hakram had been pale as sheet the whole
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ride, and was now visibly glad of being on solid ground. I glanced at my
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companions, then cleared my throat. I supposed I would have to say
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something before leading them into the storm.
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``So we're going to stab a god,'' I said. ``I mean, we've done it
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before. But this one is a few places higher in the pecking order of
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things not to trifle with.''
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Archer snorted.
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``But we'll win because we stand for something greater than ourselves?''
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I gallantly attempted.
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``We do?'' Apprentice asked, surprise. ``What?''
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``Violence,'' Archer suggested.
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``Peace, order and the Imperial way,'' Hakram offered, the filthy
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traitor.
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``We lie a lot,'' Masego mused. ``It could be lies.''
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``Lies and violence,'' Archer proudly called out, raising a fist.
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Apprentice did the same, apparently under the impression this qualified
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as a battle cry. I refused to grace the mutiny with a response.
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``Just don't get yourselves killed,'' I sighed. ``I don't want to have
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to train up replacements.''
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The fae royalty took notice when we joined their little tiff, the Summer
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fae breaking off and angling so we wouldn't be able to flank them. The
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Winter prince offered us a mocking salute with his sword.
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``I'm guessing the Princess of Silent Depths is dead,'' I said, not
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bothering with greetings.
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``That is mostly accurate,'' the Prince of Nightfall replied, because
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why would fae ever be anything but vague?
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``Can you handle the sorcerer?'' I asked, eyeing the Prince of Deep
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Drought.
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``He cannot,'' the Summer prince sneered.
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``Yes,'' the one-eyed fae replied with a nasty smile. ``You'll be
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dancing with Sulia?''
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``That's the idea,'' I agreed. ``I put together a crew of miscreants and
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everything.''
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The red-haired princess eyed me like I'd tracked mud onto her priceless
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carpet, or maybe like I \emph{was} the mud.
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``They have made an abomination of you,'' she said. ``More than mortal,
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less than fae. Destroying you will be a mercy.''
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``I get that a lot,'' I replied honestly.
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At least in Procer, the House of Light had apparently declared me
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anathema to the Heavens. I knew because Black had the report framed and
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sent to Marchford. It hung on the wall of my bedroom across from the
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bed.
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``Shall we begin, Granian?'' the Prince of Nightfall taunted his Summer
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mirror. ``I've been meaning to see how many limbs you can lose before
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dying.''
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The Winter fae's translucent wings burst into existence and he shot off
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into the sky. The Prince of Deep Drought looked at Sulia and she nodded.
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He followed, leaving the four of us facing the heaviest hitter the
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Summer Court had to offer short of its queen. Why had this seemed like a
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good idea again?
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``I played your role, for an evening,'' I told the princess. ``Was a bit
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of a bore. Had to liven it up myself.''
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``I was not made for intrigue,'' the Princess of High Noon said. ``This,
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however? I was born for it. From it. This was a blunder, Duchess. You
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are attempting a story, but that is worthless if you do not have the
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power to carry it out.''
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``You think you're my opponent,'' I smiled coldly. ``An interesting
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thought. Let's see where it gets you.''
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Three things happened in the heartbeat that followed. Princess Sulia's
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wings sprang to life. Adjutant and Archer charged forward. And I spoke
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one word.
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``\textbf{Take},'' I said.
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Two columns of fire erupted from my back, not concerned by the plate in
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the slightest. I screamed hoarsely, but this was a necessary sacrifice.
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If she went up, we were done. She could just stay up there and bombard
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us until there was nothing left but ashes, and trying to match her up
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there with the horses was a good way to get ourselves killed. If felt
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the Winter power in my veins reacting violently, even worse than when
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I'd stolen sorcery from the Duchess of Restless Zephyr. These were only
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wings, even if made of sorcery, but the power was so much \emph{purer}
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it felt a dozen times worse. I hastily discarded the power, heralding
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the first bet of this fight. What happened when I took something was
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still unclear in a lot of ways. Would she get the wings back even if I
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released them? I was hoping not, that my aspect severed the connection
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by appropriating what I took. If that wasn't the case, I was going to
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have to pull out an upset that I \emph{really} needed to come later. The
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flames gutted out and I let out a hiss of triumph when they didn't
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reappear on the princess' back. This might not be a permanent state of
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affair, but for now it was putting our foot in the door.
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Apprentice was incanting, the light of runes glinting off his
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spectacles. We needed to keep him uninterrupted long enough to make a
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difference. I'd never fought at Archer's side before, not with her using
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blades, but Hakram had felt like an additional limb ever since he became
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the Adjutant and he was used to her from all their sparring. Four blades
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struck as one and it felt \emph{right}. Like coming home. The fae's
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sword clattered against mine, beginning to carve through until ice grew
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to stop it. The princess ducked under the swing of Adjutant's axe,
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pushing me back effortlessly and smashing Archer in the belly with her
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fist. The other Named was thrown off, but she landed on her feet and she
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was back into the fray within moments. Heat pulsed off the princess and
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cold came from me too met it. Her power dwarfed mine, but she would not
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win this uncontested. The three of us pressed the offensive. Without
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even a word needing to be said, we fell into a rhythm. I forced a parry,
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setting the fae up for Adjutant's strike as Archer used the opening it
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made to attempt to draw blood.
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She was beating us anyway. Flame blew Hakram off his feet, charring his
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face, and without him to distract Archer was caught by the throat. I
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desperately wove ice and shadow around the princess' wrist, and the
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heartbeat it took for her to disperse it earned my companion just long
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enough to wriggle out of the grasp. Her breath was laboured, but at
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least her neck hadn't been snapped.
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``\textbf{Rampage},'' Adjutant growled.
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The orc charged back into the fight, his charred skin healing. Every
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strike was stronger and faster than the last, until even the Princess of
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High Noon had to take care.
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``\textbf{Flow},'' Archer managed to croak.
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It was almost hypnotic to watch her longknives move. There was no single
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blow, every attack coming from the last in an uninterrupted stream. She
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moves as she had when firing arrows, but that was comparing a candle to
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a bonfire. Between the three of us, we almost stood a chance. I turned a
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probe into a lunge that would have taken the princess in the neck, but
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she contemptuously moved an inch to the side and ignored it. I saw her
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sword rise to carve through Hakram's wrist and snapped my own, my last
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knife landing in my palm. I threw it at her head and the blade spun
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gracefully before being sliced cleanly through. The axe took her in the
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chest, breaking coloured mail but no skin. A boot to the stomach pushed
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the orc back, but he was still growing stronger. It did not slow him for
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long, and in the moment where the princess stood on only one leg
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Archer's longkives struck. The two blades came form opposite directions,
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one for the knee and the other for the neck. Without missing a beat
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Princess Sulia jumped and lay herself flat, strikes passing above and
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beneath her. She twisted sharply and a boot to the face shattered
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Archer's chin as she was sent sprawling to the floor.
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Breath caught in my throat, I adjusted my wrist and pumped the entire
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arm full of my Name. I hit her at rib-height, the strength of the blow
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sending mail rings flying, and she smashed into the ground hard enough
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the earth dented. Her eyes turned gold-red, the heat grew, and
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Apprentice finally finished casting. Twenty-three sigils of blue light
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came into being above the princess with a loud hum, though not loud
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enough to drown out her pained groan. Heat shimmered around her and one
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of the sigils popped. I glanced at Adjutant, panting. The skin that had
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healed was beginning to flake off, the burns returning if not as grave
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as before. Whatever power had possessed him was gone, though. Archer was
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back on her feet, but her lower face was one large and bloody bruise.
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Another three sigils popped. We didn't have much longer left.
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``Oh, \emph{oh},'' Apprentice said, watching the struggling fae with
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wide eyes. ``I was wrong, fundamentally wrong.''
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Shit. That did not look good at all. The bespectacled mage laughed,
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looking utterly crazed.
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``It cannot be quantified,'' he muttered. ``The method was erroneous
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from the onset. It is all made of the same building blocs, and those
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blocs are a \emph{figment}. Mysteries, miracles of smoke and mirrors.
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The godhead is not behind boundaries, it is a \emph{trick of
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perspective}.''
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Power rippled across his frame, his eyes glinting with a light that had
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a shiver going up my spine. One of the sigils formed again, though it
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popped moments later.
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``Apprentice,'' I said carefully, and he interrupted.
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``No no no,'' he laughed. ``Not that. Not anymore. Hierophant. Usher of
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mysteries. Vivisector of miracles.''
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Was that what this was? A transition in the making?
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``You are a god, yes?'' he smiled at the Princess of High Noon, pushing
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up his glasses. ``\emph{Show me a miracle, then.''}
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He waved his arm carelessly and Archer's jaw set itself back together
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with a loud crack. Fingers clutching something only he could see, the
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Hierophant brought his hands down. The sigils glowed so bright I had to
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shut my eyes in pain. \emph{Like a star being born.} For all that, the
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words that drifted to my ears were calm.
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``Everything burns,'' the Princess of High Noon whispered.
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Arcadia broke. The brightness passed, and I opened my eyes to a world of
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endless ashes. I'd called on something of the same breed, when defeating
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the Count of Olden Oak, but it had been nothing but a drop to this
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ocean. Princess Sulia stood with restored wings, hair of flame and eyes
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that burned with something \emph{more}. Above her raised hands hovered
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the sun. I could feel myself buckle from the pressure alone, my hair
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smouldering against my sweat-soaked scalp. Masego's spectacles shattered
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in his eyes and he screamed. Hakram wavered, then fell to his knees. The
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burns from earlier were spreading across his face. Archer's hands shook
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like leaves until she stabbed a longknife into her leg, the pain
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allowing her to not be swept away by the weight bearing down on all of
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us.
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``You may feel honoured,'' Princess Sulia said. ``I have ever only
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called on this to bring an end to Winter. The four of you will be the
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first ashes on this field formed of Creation.''
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``You're wrong,'' I croaked.
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``Will you try to take the sun from me, Duchess?'' she said, amused.
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``You will burn, one way or another.''
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She was right, of course. If I tried using Take I'd die before I
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finished speaking the word. I was the Squire, after all. No role stood
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behind me in this. But I'd meant it, when I'd told her I wasn't her
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opponent.
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``Not that,'' I grinned, all teeth and malice. ``There's not four of
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us.''
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Behind the Princess of High Noon a woman appeared, short-haired with
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blue-grey eyes. She wore loose leathers and her face was red with sweat.
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``Yoink,'' the Thief said, and stole the sun.
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