432 lines
19 KiB
TeX
432 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{background}{%
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\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Background}\label{background}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{background}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Background}
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\epigraph{``The true tragedy of Evil is that it is not absolute. That even
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the worst of men can love their children, be moved to kindness.
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Damnation is earned piecemeal.''}{King Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand}
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Hakram had grown to rely on the sharper perception his Name lent him.
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Often he used it in fights, to read the strikes of an opponent and
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brutally capitalize on them, but now and then it had more mundane use.
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Like telling when Archer was getting restless and about to `request'
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they spar. At the first sign tonight of it he'd immediately sought out
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Masego to suggest they play shatranj, giving him an excuse to avoid the
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solid hour-long beating that would have ensued otherwise. He wasn't
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particularly proud of it, but dignity was a worthwhile trade for lack of
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bruises. The tall orc glanced at the board and moved his chancellor to
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threaten a mage. The Soninke sitting across him radiated displeasure at
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the sight. It was somewhat amusing, Adjutant thought, that transitioning
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into the Hierophant had done absolutely nothing to improve Masego's
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skill at the game.
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``You're cheating,'' Hierophant accused, sounding deeply offended.
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Adjutant offered a mocking hint of fangs, knowing the other man would
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know exactly what it meant. The mage was familiar with orcs. That Masego
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was entirely convinced that his superior breadth of knowledge should
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make him the better player at what was widely considered a game for
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scholars and strategists was one of the orc's petty delights. He always
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took it so personally when he lost.
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``You should call it a draw then,'' Archer suggested eagerly.
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The ochre-skinned woman was messily sprawled across three armless chairs
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which she had very clearly stolen from Juniper's command tent. If she'd
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portrayed boredom any more clearly, it would have qualified as sorcery.
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``I'm not going to lose,'' Masego said through gritted teeth.
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``Of course not,'' Hakram said, fangs bared just a little more.
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Archer loudly sighed.
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``We're at war,'' she complained. ``How can this be so horribly dull?
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All we do is march all day.''
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``Isn't that what war is?'' Thief drawled. ``Months of tedium, then a
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day of terror.''
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The orc glanced at the fourth person in the tent. He'd been somewhat
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surprised, when she'd joined them. Since their conversation in Laure,
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the Thief had made a point of avoiding his presence. Only after Arcadia
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had she begun to shed the habit, occasionally joining these informal
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gatherings. She still gave him dark looks, when she thought he wasn't
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looking. That was fine. Given enough time, Catherine would pull her into
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her circle as she had the rest of them. Should this not occur, she would
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likely turn her blade on him first. As he'd meant to ensure, when
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putting fear in her. A little discord within their band was worth that
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additional precaution in case she turned on them. Hierophant moved
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forward a footman to protect the mage and Hakram snorted, taking another
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footman with one of his. The chain of captures that would ensure from
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that would leave Masego down a footman and with a rider unprotected.
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``Been in a lot of wars, have you?'' Archer challenged.
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Conflict, Adjutant had learned, was how the woman related to others.
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Considering some of the things he'd heard of Refuge and the nature of
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Lady Ranger's tutelage, there was sense in it. The Waning Woods saw more
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monsters than balls. Masego had passed whatever bar Archer set when
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they'd gone south to stir trouble for the Diabolist, though with how she
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picked on the mage it could be hard to tell. There'd been difference,
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though. She acted as a nuisance still, but the barbs were no longer
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probing. When it came to the orc himself, acceptance had come after the
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Battle of Marchford. He'd held in the face of the demon, which had
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gained him esteem. She thought much like an orc, in those matters. It
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made her easy to like. Thief, however, had never truly fought at their
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side. Her intervention in Arcadia, while crucial, had not been the kind
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of contribution Archer recognized. That would be trouble, he'd thought
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more than once. Thief was not a fighter, or even an assassin. Her
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talents were more indirect, and that perspective seemed bound to her
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Name. The Callowan would not change, and neither would Archer. He'd have
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to finagle a middle-ground for them to meet, before this became a true
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issue.
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``This makes two,'' Thief replied easily. ``Stuck to the last one longer
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than you did, the way I hear it.''
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On the other side, Hakram thought, but the woman had probably noticed
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that this kind of distinction didn't really matter to Archer. People out
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of Refuge did not seem to care about those lines, much as it was said
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the Lady of the Lake did not. They were islands unto themselves, bound
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to others only as long as it suited them. It still impressed the orc
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that anyone would have the balls to `retire' from the Calamities,
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considering the kind of monsters that made them up.
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``There's only so much in Callow to fight for,'' Archer shrugged.
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As good as a concession of the point, for her. The subject change that
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followed confirmed it.
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``What the Hells is Catherine doing, anyway?'' she asked.
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``Trying not to yell at her generals,'' Masego said, superbly tactless.
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Archer glanced at Hakram, and his brow rose to invite her to speak her
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mind.
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``Aren't you usually there for that stuff?'' she said.
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``Routine reports,'' the orc gravelled. ``We've yet to encounter any fae
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on our march south. This is more diplomacy than military matter. She
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grants them time to imply value.''
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The woman wrinkled her nose.
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``There has to be something at least vaguely interesting happening in
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those,'' she said. ``She doesn't let me come.''
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``She's afraid you're going to kill someone,'' Masego candidly said.
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Directed at someone else it might have been taken a slight, but Archer's
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pride let these kind of things slide right off and she laughed instead.
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It was, Hakram suspected, one of the reasons she was so powerful. Will,
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strength of belief -- these were the traits that strengthened Named. He
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was never so sharp and strong as when he carried out Catherine's will.
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She'd told him, once, that Lord Black had taught her it was certainty
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that set apart Named from mortals. He'd committed this to memory, as
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there were few in the Empire that understood namelore better than the
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Carrion Lord. Unshakeable pride was a different path to that peak, it
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was true, but the results spoke for themselves.
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``That commander from the Watch is bound to be pretty though,'' Archer
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mused. ``He could probably take a light spar.''
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\emph{No,} Hakram thought. \emph{He most definitely cannot.} He'd seen
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members of the Watch in combat, and they were not comparable to Named.
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They stood head and shoulders above even the strongest orcs he'd met,
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and were swifter than goblins on foot. But they were not match to even
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fledgling Named, as individuals, and Archer was no fledgling. Hakram
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glanced at the board, noting Hierophant seemed smug. Ah, he meant to
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trade a mage for a tower. The orc deftly moved the tower across the
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board, threatening the blind man's tyrant and pulling out the smugness
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by the roots. Ah, that never got old.
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``Duchess Kegan might take offense to that,'' Thief said. ``She's
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famously prickly, even for a Deoraithe.''
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Adjutant had never quite managed to nail down where her accent came
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from, in Callow. The intonation was too faint, as if she'd been trained
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out of it. That was interesting, in and of itself. It would mean she'd
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had a tutor, and this meant wealth or status. Now and then Thief slipped
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and spoke knowledge that was not common, as she just had. The Duchy of
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Daoine was deeply isolationist, and it was unlikely anyone but nobles or
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regionally-connected merchants would have heard rumours about the
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character of its duchess. She was not a well-known figure, in Callow.
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Archer fluidly rose and came to stand behind Hierophant, leaning her
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elbows on his shoulders. Her scarf dipped down, covering his nose. It
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was hard to tell whether the contact or the obstructed vision irritated
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him more. The Soninke's hand rose, sorcery flaring around it, but she
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batted it away.
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``Careful with the scarf,'' Archer said. ``It has sentimental value.''
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``So do my shoulders,'' Masego muttered. ``Yet you paw at them.''
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One of these days, Hakram though, he was going to realized she wouldn't
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do things like this nearly as often if he didn't keep being irked by
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them. Adjutant had no intention of telling him, though. He only had so
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many sources of entertainment.
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``Priest's threatening your knight,'' she said, pointing at the board.
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Hakram's eyes narrowed. He was certain Hierophant would not have noticed
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otherwise.
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``That's a mage,'' Masego said, but he was beaming.
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``In Praes, maybe,'' Archer replied, rolling her eyes.
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Thief moved to stand behind the orc. He did not tense, though this took
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an exertion of will.
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``The scarf,'' the short-haired woman said. ``Mercantis weave. Not
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common in Callow. Would fetch gold for sure.''
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``Not for sale,'' the other woman replied flatly.
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Hakram glanced at her, and took a footman while she was too distracted
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to advise Masego.
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``Sentimental value, huh,'' Thief drawled. ``Is Mercantis where you're
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from?''
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The orc kept his eyes on the board so he would not betray his interest.
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He'd never seen anyone with skin the same tone as Archer's, before
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meeting her. He doubted there more than a dozen across the entirety of
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Calernia. Her ancestors, if not her, must have come from across the
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Tyrian Sea. She was clearly not Yan Tei, so likely one of the Ashuran
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trade ships. No one but the Baalite Hegemony and the Yan Tei knew the
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route to safely cross the famously storm-prone sea. Not since the
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Miezans had been undone by the Licerian Wars, anyway.
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``You could say that,'' Archer said. ``It's the first thing I ever
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owned. A gift from the Lady.''
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The orc's fangs ground against each other, they way they always did when
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one spoke of slavery even in a way so indirect. It was an open secret
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that people were one of the many commodities that could be obtained in
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the City of Bought and Sold, though the consortium ruling it did not
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publicly endorse the practice.
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``Steady there, big guy,'' Archer said, tone almost fond as she looked
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at him. ``That score has long been settled.''
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``There should never have been a score at all,'' Hakram gravelled.
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``Every nation on Calernia practiced slavery at some point,'' Masego
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absent-mindedly said. ``I imagine Praes still would, if it had never
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come under Miezan occupation. The labour demanded of their subjects by
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the first Tyrants were essentially that, regardless. Father always said
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the true mortar of the Tower was hypocrisy.''
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The blind man paused.
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``It is a metaphor,'' he said, just in case anyone had thought
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otherwise.
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Hakram sighed. Behind him, the Thief snorted.
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``You're not very good at people, are you?'' she said.
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``I know more about anatomy than any of you,'' Hierophant replied,
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mildly offended.
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Three half-smiles bloomed, and for a heartbeat it felt like they were
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more than a set of strangers following Catherine Foundling. Then Thief
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drummed her fingers on his shoulder, and the orc's tongue ran against
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his fangs. Archer caught it, and grinned.
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``Oh my,'' she said. ``Someone's unsettled. Now there's a rare treat.''
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``It's like he's afraid to give me a chance,'' the Callowan drawled.
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``Keep playing, Adjutant. It's not like I'm going to \emph{choke} you.''
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Hakam's brow creased, and though he looked at the board his thoughts
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were elsewhere. She was, evidently, settling their earlier dispute. This
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seemed directed at him personally, and was being done in a manner Archer
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had made clear was acceptable within the bounds of their group. Thief
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was either clever enough to rebel in a way that was within the dotted
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lines, or she was getting comfortable enough with them to pursue a
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grudge. The former was a warning sign, but set forward cunningly enough
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there was little he could do about it. The latter was something to
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encourage. He somehow got the feeling that she'd been aware of the
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difficulty this would pose him before she'd even moved. Troublesome.
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Both Archer and Hierophant were, to put it kindly, less than socially
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adept. That had made it simple to gently steer them away from conflicts
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with each other. Thief would not be so straightforward to deal with, it
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seemed. It would not do to forget she had been part of a group of Named
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before, and stood one of its few survivors. The orc moved a footman
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forward. Masego reached for his mage, but Archer clucked her tongue.
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``You're opening a lane for his tower,'' she said. ``Move your footman
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instead.''
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The orc gave a hint of fangs again to unsettle Hierophant.
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``Is she playing, or are you?'' he asked.
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The Soninke's brows creased behind his cloth. Then he moved the footman.
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``You're trying to provoke me,'' he breathed, surprised. ``Archer, are
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we winning?''
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The ochre-skinned woman glanced at the board.
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``Kingtip in ten,'' she said. ``He got sloppy.''
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``Where did you even learn to play?'' Hakram said.
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``Hunter was mad for it,'' she said. ``Also terrible, and willing to bet
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taking off clothes.''
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``\emph{Hunter}?'' Thief said, sounding surprised. ``I don't meant to
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speak ill of the dead, but-``
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``Yeah, he was pretty fucking awful at it,'' Archer snorted. ``I had him
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streak through the woods once. Almost got eaten by basilisk, it was
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hilarious.''
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``You sound like you were friends,'' Masego noted. ``You're not angry we
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tried to kill him?''
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He paused.
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``Twice, I believe,'' he finished. ``I'm not certain if they count as
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separate attempts.''
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``He picked the fight,'' Archer shrugged. ``His fault if he lost. The
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Lady's always been clear that once we leave Refuge we're on our own.
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Some of her students have killed each other before, after getting out.
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She teaches heroes and villains both.''
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``Pragmatic of you,'' Thief said, and it did not sound like a
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compliment. ``Admittedly the Lone Swordsman's band was less than
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harmonious.''
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Hakram slid his chancellor across the board. Archer didn't even bother
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to ask before reaching over Masego and threatening his tyrant with a
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tower.
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``Never met him,'' she said. ``But Catherine says he was a real prick.''
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``He was not an easy man to like,'' Thief conceded. ``Whatever forged
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his Name must have been rather unpleasant, and left marks.''
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``I found the Bard the most grating,'' Hakram said. ``Smug. Like a
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goblin without the redeeming qualities.''
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The fingers withdrew from his shoulder. Interesting. They'd had word
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that Lord Black was fighting a Wandering Bard in the Free Cities, though
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she was said to have different appearance. Tension there? They'd never
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displayed any during their encounters, but as her Name stated the Bard
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came and went. She'd been noticeably absent at the Battle of Liesse, for
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one.
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``I hear she goes by a different name, these days,'' Thief said quietly.
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``Don't be fooled by the drinking and the jokes. She's dangerous. Got
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into William's head at the end, and not in a nice way.''
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``Father and Uncle Amadeus are fighting her,'' Masego said. ``She won't
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be the first bardic Name they kill.''
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``I'm not sure how doable that actually is,'' Thief said. ``Knew her for
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the better part of a year, and I never once saw her take a wound she
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wasn't directly responsible for.''
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That, Hakram thought, was disquieting. No Name could truly make someone
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untouchable, so there must have been flaws and restrictions, but it was
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still something of note. Something to plan for. They'd not seen the Bard
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since the end of the Liesse Rebellion, but that did not mean they never
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would. There were no true books of namelore, for no Named would
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everwillingly pen their own limits and weaknesses, but the orc had found
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legends of some use in this regard. It was difficult to obtain volumes
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while on campaign, but the war come to an end eventually. His aspect
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should allow him to Find something worth the perusal, given enough time.
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Adjutant felt a bundle of power kin to his own approach and turned to
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watch the tent's flap be pushed aside in time for Catherine to join
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them. It was always a surprise to see how short she truly was, though he
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knew better than to remark on it.
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Her skin, always tan, had grown darker during the march through Summer.
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Her face had been sharp since he'd first lain eyes on her, but it was
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even sharper now. Had been ever since she'd killed the Duke of Violent
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Squalls, and he felt the old well of pride whenever he thought of that.
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A few loose strands of hair swept over her forehead, and though the
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others would not have noticed he saw she was tired. It lay in the way
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her eyes were tighter, more guarded. As if she expected someone to take
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advantage of it. She was also in a foul mood, but that was made rather
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obvious by the way she glared at him and flipped him a golden aurelius.
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He caught it smoothly.
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``Don't be smug about it,'' the Vicequeen of Callow warned him.
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``You froze the table,'' he stated.
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``I froze the table,'' she sighed.
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Archer's snort echoed loudly.
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``I had it under control, before Masego did his heart shenanigans,'' she
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complained. ``Now it's like I'm starting from scratch.''
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``I deeply apologize for increasing your power tenfold,'' Hierophant
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huffed.
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Catherine's eyes swept around the tent, coming to rest on the chairs
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Archer had been lounging on earlier.
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``So that's where those went,'' she mused. ``Archer?''
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``It could have been Thief,'' the culprit protested.
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``If it was they'd be in the bag,'' Catherine said. ``Although, Thief,
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if I have to hear Ratface whine about the rate our paring knives are
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disappearing at one more time I will be \emph{cross}.''
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``I've too many anyway,'' Thief drawled, retreating from his back. ``A
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pleasant meeting, Squire?''
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She grabbed a chair and slumped onto it.
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``I swear, it's like the Gods made a fucking condescension tree and
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Kegan dropped from the branches fully grown,'' she savagely said. ``And
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Ranker's actually worse, if you can believe it. Not even Robber enjoys
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being a prick that much.''
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From the corner of his eye Hakram saw Thief hide a smile. Catherine had
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always had a way with words. The way Nauk told it, when they'd first met
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she'd been so bluntly insulting in Kharsum after he'd provoked her that
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he'd almost been speechless.
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``You should kill one,'' Archer suggested. ``People always get more
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respectful after that.''
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``Don't tempt me,'' Catherine muttered. ``What are we playing? And tell
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me someone has wine.''
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``Shatranj,'' Masego said. ``I am crushing Hakram.''
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The dark-haired woman glanced at the board.
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``Are you?'' she said. ``Can't tell. Never learned how to play.''
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``Would have thought the Carrion Lord would have slipped that in between
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lessons,'' Thief drawled. ``Seems up his alley.''
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``He actually hates the game,'' Catherine mused. ``Has a whole speech
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and everything.''
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``We can teach you, then,'' Adjutant said, and hastily began to put the
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pieces back to their starting position.
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Archer had been right. Another eight movements and he was done.
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Hierophant's immediate protests that he'd been about to win filled the
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room, though not as loudly as Archer's laughter. Thief produced a
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wineskin with a flourish of the wrist, and seemed deeply amused by the
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fact that no one bothered to ask where she'd obtained it. The Woe, was
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it? That could wait until the light of day. They were due, he thought,
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the occasional warm evening.
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