452 lines
19 KiB
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452 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-37-procedures}{%
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\section{Chapter 37: Procedures}\label{chapter-37-procedures}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Truth and silence lie better than the silvermost tongue.''}
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-- Soninke saying
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\end{quote}
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It was a little odd to be half-naked in front of three people, but the
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only person that was feeling awkward about it was Hakram. The moment I'd
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begun unbuttoning my shirt he'd cleared his throat and looked away, and
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had been staring at the ceiling of my tent for a solid half hour by now.
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Considering I had it on good authority -- Robber, ever up for a bit of
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gossip if it was at someone else's expense -- that he was still sleeping
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around on the regular his prudery for this was pretty amusing. As for
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the other two, well, Masego couldn't have been any less interested in
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tits if he tried and this wasn't anything Kilian hadn't seen before. I
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shifted on the stool at the memory of some of the instances where she'd
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done a great deal more than just looking and Hierophant clucked his
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tongue disapprovingly.
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``Don't move,'' he said. ``This is delicate work.''
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I'd have to take his word on that, since I couldn't actually see what he
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was doing. He was prodding around the area of my heart with a long oaken
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wand covered in runes that was entirely ignoring my flesh, pausing now
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and then to look at the collection of hovering runes in the air by his
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side. Kilian was crouched at his side, forming a ball of light over her
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upturned palm. They'd said it was because they needed a `point of
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comparison', though they'd been vague about what exactly that meant.
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``It's not grounded in the heart,'' the Senior Mage frowned.
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``Agreed,'' Masego said, and I felt him poke something inside me.
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Runes shifted in the air and the redhead inhaled sharply.
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``That should kill a human outright,'' she said. ``It's enough sorcery
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to turn all the liquids in her body to ice.''
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``Named, Kilian,'' the blind Soninke reminded her. ``And this `moon'
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seems to have been purposed to regulate the energies.''
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I cleared my throat.
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``So you have answers for me, then,'' I said.
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``We can confidently say that your third aspect is bound to your title
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of Duchess of Moonless Nights and not the heart replacement the king
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forced upon you,'' Hierophant said. ``A fascinating piece of work,
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that.''
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``So when I get my heart back,'' I prompted.
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``You should keep the aspect, assuming you remain the Duchess,'' Kilian
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said. ``Though it will severely limit your abilities.''
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I met her eyes, but she turned to look at the runes.
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``The moon the King of Winter placed inside you serves two purposes,''
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Hierophant elaborated. ``The first it to mimic the role in your body
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your heart would. Fascinating, as I said. I did not believe the fae had
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so keen an understanding of human anatomy.''
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``And the second?'' I said.
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``You might consider it a heart in the magical sense,'' Masego said.
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``All the Winter power that you can bring to bear is siphoned into it,
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then released for your use natured in a way that lessens the damage to
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your body.''
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``That feels like something that's going to fuck me over when I get my
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actual heart back,'' I said.
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``Without that filter I'm not certain you will be able to use your third
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aspect,'' Kilian said. ``I've never seen the direct aftermath, but I was
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given to understand it is a domain?''
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``And I definitely know what that is,'' I lied. ``Pretty sure Hakram
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doesn't, though, so to be polite someone should explain.''
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``Actually,'' the orc began, but I shushed him.
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``It's all right, Hakram,'' I said. ``We're your friends. You don't need
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to pretend with us.''
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``I explained to you what that is mere months ago,'' Masego said,
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sounding surprised as he eyed the orc. ``Perhaps you should drink less.
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It's beginning to affect your memory.''
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Adjutant glared at me helplessly and I grinned.
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``I'll keep an eye on him, I promise,'' I told Hierophant.
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The dark-skinned mage nodded, then looked up at me through his eye
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cloth.
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``Creation is, in essence, matter with a set of rules imposed by the
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Gods upon it,'' he said. ``A domain is when an entity, in this case you,
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temporarily overlays different matter and rules over it.''
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Well, that sounded mildy blasphemous. And incredibly dangerous.
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``In your case, `Fall' appears to create a bubble of empty darkness
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where you may use Winter energies to lower the temperature beneath what
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should physically be possible,'' Masego continued. ``Unusually offensive
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in nature. Most domains provide different territory and a comparative
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advantage to the entity that creates it.''
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``It shouldn't be possible for a Squire to have a domain at all,''
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Kilian said frankly. ``Transitory Names are not strong enough. Domains
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usually belong to lesser gods, full-fledged Named late in their career
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or particularly ancient monsters.''
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``It's a rare ability even among heroes,'' Masego noted. ``Aside from
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the Champion lines in Levant and allegedly the Saint of Swords, there
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shouldn't be any other living human practitioner.''
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``Then how did I get one?'' I asked. ``I didn't exactly rub a lamp and
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make a wish to get this, Hierophant.''
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``Djinn were usually bound to urns, not lamps, and did not grant
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wishes,'' Masego replied absent-mindedly. ``It does occur naturally in
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some entities. Every dragon has a domain at their heart of their body,
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it's what allows them to breathe fire. And Father has theorized elves
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essentially become a living domain when they get old enough.''
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``You have a pretty good look at my body right now,'' I said, raising an
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eyebrow. ``See any scales or pointy ears?''
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``No,'' Hierophant told me seriously. ``And I would be able to see them
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even if they were invisible.''
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I saw Kilian's lips twitch form the corner of my eye.
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``Now,'' Masego muttered, ``this is not conclusive by any means but I do
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have a theory.''
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``All my ears are listening,'' I said.
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He stared suspiciously at me but I gave him my most innocent smile. His
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frown deepened, so maybe I needed to put some work into that.
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``I believe this to be a leash,'' Hierophant said. ``You are given
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powerful abilities, but to make use of them properly you must give the
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King of Winter foothold in your soul. Removing that foothold turns what
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was once an asset into a liability, giving you strong incentive to
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remain bound to him.''
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``There's more to it than that,'' Kilian said quietly, and Masego seemed
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surprised.
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The Senior Mage flicked her fingers and three rows of runes parted from
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the rest.
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``I've never had occasion to do a full mapping ritual on my father,''
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the redhead said, ``but this corresponds more or less to how his body
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reacted to fae sorcery as a halfblood. Higher tolerance, but there's no
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actual attempt made to make it \emph{harmless}. In someone born, that's
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only natural. But in an artificial construct?''
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``Power limiter,'' Hierophant said, glass eyes gleaming under dark
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cloth.
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``Your saying he screwed me,'' I said.
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I paused.
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``More than previously believed,'' I added.
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Kilian nodded slowly.
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``When you draw deep on the power, you must get backlash,'' she said.
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``My blood starts to freeze,'' I admitted.
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``You were crippled,'' Hierophant said bluntly. ``You have the power of
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a Duchess to draw on, but if you actually did so it would kill you. It
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explains why you were at such a disadvantage fighting that Summer
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duchess in Arcadia, when in theory you should have been on even
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footing.''
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``Countess at most,'' Kilian said. ``Your domain allows you to fight out
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of your league but the King made certain you would never be powerful
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enough to be a threat to him.''
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I clenched my fingers. This shouldn't have come as a surprise, even if
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it did. I'd been so focused on how the threat was my stolen heart that
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I'd never thought to question the additions to my power I'd discovered.
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Archer had told me that the Duke of Violent Squalls was supposed to be
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one of the big names in the Winter Court. Someone who was supposed to
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turn the story back to war if the fae that ruled Winter was trying to
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avoid it. There was power to that kind of role, and by taking his title
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even in a different form I should have swung a great deal harder then
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the average duke or duchess. I'd thought it was because I wasn't really
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fae, but evidently there was more to it than that.
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``Can you fix this?'' I finally asked.
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Masego smiled.
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``If I were still the Apprentice, no,'' he said. ``But such miracles are
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now within my purview. I will need preparations and the process will not
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be gentle, but it can be done.''
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``You'll still get backlash,'' Kilian warned. ``You're a mortal bearing
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a fae title, that much is unavoidable.''
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``The proportion of power than can be drawn before backlash could be
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increased tenfold, at the very least,'' Hierophant said. ``A Duchess in
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full. You've an unusually tough constitution, you should be able to
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weather it.''
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``Ominous,'' I said. ``Get this ready. The sooner we get it done the
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better.''
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``It could be ready tomorrow, but three days hence would be easier,''
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Masego said. ``For ritual purposes, the new moon will benefit me.''
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The mage got back to his feet, adjusting the black robes over his
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corpulent frame. Kilian followed suit, brushing back red hair in a
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gesture I followed with my eyes out of habit. Masego left the tent
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without bothering to excuse myself, entirely forgetting Hakram was still
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in here. The redhaired mage lingered for a moment.
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``Catherine,'' she said.
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I hesitated.
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``Dismissed, Senior Mage,'' I replied.
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Her face shuttered and she gave a stiff salute before leaving. I began
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to button up my shirt again, fingers almost shaking. That had taken more
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determination that I'd expected.
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``You decent?'' Adjutant asked.
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``Never,'' I drawled. ``Villain, remember?''
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``No one's a villain every hour of the day,'' Hakram grunted. ``And if
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you're being lippy about it, that's a yes.''
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I struck a suggestive pose when he turned, my top two buttons still
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undone, and he groaned.
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``Just too much woman for you, I understand,'' I said sympathetically.
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``You're barely half an orc,'' he gravelled.
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``I'm vicequeen of Callow, you savage,'' I grinned. ``That could be
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construed as treason.''
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``If you have me arrested, who will handle the paperwork?'' he said.
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``You have always been my most loyal,'' I hastily replied. ``Never
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doubted you a moment.''
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The orc snorted and reached for the carafe of wine Masego had refused to
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let me touch. He poured two glasses and pressed one into my hand. Oh
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dear. That was the herald to a serious conversation, wasn't it? The joke
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about his drinking habits died unspoken on my tongue.
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``We haven't talked about it,'' he said.
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``The heart?'' I said. ``It hasn't been a priority so far, to be honest.
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It was functional and there's other fires to put out first.''
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``Cat,'' he said flatly. ``You know that doesn't work on me.''
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My lips thinned. No matter how well it served me, there were times I
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wished he was just a little less perceptive.
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``There is nothing to say,'' I grunted.
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``It's a nasty habit you have,'' Hakram said. ``Thinking admitting
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something hurt you means you're weak.''
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``Already got that speech from Masego last year,'' I sighed. ``I cope.
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We're in the middle of a godsdamned war, in case you hadn't noticed.
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This is so far down the ladder of shit I need to deal with it's not even
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worth mentioning.''
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Hakram drank from his cup and I did the same.
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``You were happier, with her,'' he said. ``Everyone saw that.''
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``Happy doesn't come into this,'' I barked. ``I didn't sign up for
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\emph{happy ever after}. The colour of my cloak's a bit of hint there.''
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``Bullshit,'' Hakram said, and it was vehement enough I flinched.
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``That's an excuse and you know it. Fix this or don't, but do not
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pretend that being a villain means you have to be miserable. You know
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that's untrue.''
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``What the fuck do you want me to say, Hakram?'' I hissed. ``That I miss
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her? It's not exactly fucking riddle when I feel like I put a fresh
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knife in my ribs every time she's in the room.''
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``That is a start,'' the tall orc gravely said.
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``She wants to cross a line,'' I said tiredly. ``I can't stop her
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without doing the same. Talking's not going to change any of it, so this
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is just salting the wound.''
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``I understand she wants to do a ritual,'' Hakram said cautiously.
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``She wants to slaughter people like animals,'' I spat. ``To get rid of
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whatever it is that screws her up when she draws too deep on magic.''
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``Human sacrifice,'' he said. ``How many?''
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``I didn't ask,'' I said. ``It doesn't matter. One would be too much.''
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I eyed him, saw the lack of expression on his face.
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``Gonna take her side, are you?'' I bitterly said. ``Say I've done
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worse. That it makes me a hypocrite to find even the idea repulsive.''
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``You assume much,'' Hakram said. ``Do you think Callowans fed most the
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altars in Praes? Wars with the Kingdom came once a reign, Catherine. In
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peace they looked for fodder in the Steppes.''
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That have me pause, because he was right. I had assumed, deep down, that
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no one born on his side of the Wasaliti would really get where I was
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coming from. One of the reasons I'd never talked about this with
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anybody. It had been extremely presumptuous of me.
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``I'm sorry,'' I said quietly. ``I didn't mean-``
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``I know,'' he sighed, fangs flashing. ``I will not pretend my people
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are anything but red-handed, Catherine. We have fed upon mankind since
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the First Dawn. We kept slaves and sacked cities, splattered blood
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across the writ of Creation. But this, we understand. The Miezans taught
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the Wasteland to hate chains, and in turn the Wasteland taught us to
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hate the altars. When Lord Black decreed the Legions would no longer
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bleed their own for victory, he earned deeper loyalty than he
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understood.''
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I looked away, because I knew that Black hadn't done that because he
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thought it was right or just. He'd thought it necessary, that those
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rituals were a crutch that did more harm than good. He probably knew
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that already. Most of the orc generals likely did as well, but to
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greenskins action always mattered more than intent.
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``I've killed people,'' I said. ``A lot of them. Because they were my
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enemies, because they were in my way. Sometimes even to make a point.
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Guilt, what was actually \emph{deserved}, I stopped bringing into it
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somewhere along the way.''
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Hakram drank and did not speak.
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``I started the Liesse Rebellion,'' I admitted suddenly. ``I let the
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Lone Swordsman go after starting him down that path. Because I needed a
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war to rise.''
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The orc set down his cup.
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``I suspected,'' he gravelled. ``It was too personal for you. More than
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it ever was when you were pruning away the undesirables in Callow.''
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``In sparing him, I killed thousands,'' I said. ``I used them as a tool.
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And that's despicable, Hakram. I hate it, that for a moment I stood in
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the same place the High Lords do when they decided to hike the taxes or
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murder a few of my people for convenience. I think that's the line I
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can't live with crossing. Being the kind of person that doesn't see
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people as people, just \emph{objects}.''
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``The kind of person that would use killing others as fuel for a
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ritual,'' he said.
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``I know it's different for Praesi,'' I said. ``You read Black's
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journal, same as me. There were years where sacrifices for the fields
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were all that kept famine away, and I won't cast stones at people doing
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ugly shit to survive. But there's no need for that anymore. Not if the
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grain can come from Callow instead. But it's still done, and there has
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to be a point where culture isn't an excuse anymore, right? Gods, if it
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was someone's culture to eat fucking babies does that mean I just have
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to smile and pretend it's not vile? Because there's a lot of that going
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around, Hakram. The Matrons are our allies, so we have to pretend the
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things they do every year to boys just like Robber \emph{because}
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they're boys aren't revolting. Ratface's own father tried to have him
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knifed in his bed because he was inconvenient, and I'm supposed to just
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laugh it off and say `that's the Taghreb for you, there they go
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murdering again'? Fuck, I've done dark things but at least I don't
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pretend it's all right for me to have done them. I don't
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\emph{encourage} it.''
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Gods, but it felt good to actually say that out loud. Because I knew who
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I'd sided with, and now more than ever I knew who I answered to. But
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there were compromises that rankled. Things I had to pretend I didn't
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see because I couldn't pick every battle that should be picked and still
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think I'd win. That was the thing, with stories. They never told you
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that the ogres had kids that would starve without a father or that the
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valiant knight that helped you was part of a larger institution that
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might trigger civil war if left unchecked. If you wanted a clean ending,
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one that didn't leave a bad taste in the mouth, you had to end the story
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just after the victory. Otherwise you got to see that you could win
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loudly once, send Evil skittering back into the dark, but that
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everywhere across Creation there were lesser evils taking place every
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hour of every day and there wasn't much anyone could do about it.
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``Ah,'' Hakram said softly. ``You hadn't realized.''
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I looked at him.
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``That Kilian is Praesi,'' he said. ``With all that entails.''
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``She doesn't \emph{need} to do this,'' I said, almost pleadingly.
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``She's not as powerful as she could be, it's true. But she's still
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better than the average Legion mage. If it came down between her dying
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and the ritual being made, Gods forgive me but I'd do it. Because I'm in
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love with her, and I'm selfish and I'd rather be a monster than lose
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her. But it's not going to kill her, to be who she is. This is just
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wanting more for herself at the expense of others.''
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``She can do it legally,'' Hakram said. ``Using death row criminals at
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auction.''
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``I know that,'' I said through gritted teeth. ``And I know that the
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people who'd bleed wouldn't be choir children. That they'll die anyway,
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probably on another altar in a way that benefits someone else. That even
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in Praes you don't get the noose lightly. But if they hang, Hakram,
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that's law. That's the exercise of justice, or the closest the Wasteland
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can have to it. There's a difference between hanging someone for a crime
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and slitting their throat open so your magic comes more smoothly. And it
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stings that I shared my bed with someone for more than a year who
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doesn't get something that basic.''
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I drained the rest of my cup.
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``Gods, is \emph{human sacrifice} too low a bar to set?'' I said, and I
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felt exhausted. ``Because in my enemies I'll live with it. Until I can
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make them stop, and I will. But Kilian's on my side. Used to be a lot
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more than that. And I refuse that this should be who we are.''
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I looked at the orc.
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``What's the point of any of this, if we're just the High Lords with a
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nicer reputation?'' I asked. ``I'm not better than her even if she does
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this, Hakram. I'm probably worse, if a count can be kept for things like
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this. And we both know I'll do worse things before this is over. But I
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won't put on a smile and pretend this is all right. I'm not willing to
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be that person, not even for Kilian.''
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The tall orc finished his cup.
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``This is,'' he said, ``half the conversation you needed to have.
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Perhaps you should seek the other half.''
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He left the tent, left me alone with the words I'd spoken still filling
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the silence. They were no comfort. Never had been.
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