372 lines
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372 lines
16 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-48-interrogation}{%
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\section{Chapter 48: Interrogation}\label{chapter-48-interrogation}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``I was once told that character is what you are in the dark. I
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found, my dear Chancellor, that I was the dark.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Sorcerous
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\end{quote}
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``There,'' Hierophant said.
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It had been a pleasant surprise to learn that Masego had not ignored the
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talks with Diabolist purely because the matters discussed bored him. He
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had, in fact, been tracking the other end of the scrying spell since its
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establishment. Though Akua had used relays to muddy the water, I doubted
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she'd seriously expected her work to fool the eyes of a Named mage. The
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implication there lay bare: it didn't matter if we knew where she was,
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because she was ready to pull the trigger at any time. On Still Water,
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and whatever else she had up her sleeve. The neatly ordered lines of
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light in the air formed a broad map of Callow, though it ignored cities
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for geographical features. Studying it, I picked one of the stones
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Juniper used when planning operations and set it down on the earthly map
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I'd sent for.
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``This looks accurate to you?'' I said.
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The Soninke did not turn, and I got the eerie impression he was looking
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with his glass eyes through the back of his head.
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``Half an inch upwards,'' he said.
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I adjusted and grimaced as he dismissed the spell.
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``No way to tell if she's set down, is there?'' I asked.
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``She will have to, to use her array,'' Hierophant said. ``On a working
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of this scale, the slightest imprecision would have massive
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repercussion. I've never heard of a flying fortress capable of remaining
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entirely still in the sky.''
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So this, I thought, was going to be our battlefield. Akua had brought
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Liesse in the heartlands of Callow, precisely at the intersection of
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three cities: Vale, Ankou and Southpool. All cities that had gone
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largely untouched by the Liesse Rebellion and what men were already
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beginning to call the Arcadian War. On one hand, that brought her within
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marching distance of the legions under the command of Marshal Grem
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One-Eye. On the other hand, those legions were posted there because they
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were in spitting distance of the border with the Principate. There was,
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I knew, no realistic way to keep anything that would go down there quiet
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abroad. Diaobolist, as was her habit, had begun to fuck us over form the
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very beginning. Black and Malicia had spies under every rock in this
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land, but not even that would be enough to keep the method of necromancy
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used here under wraps.
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It'd taken another sit down with Masego to understand how much of
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problem it would be if Still Water got out. I knew there was something
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called Keter's Due that was one of the limits of sorcery, the amount of
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power that got wasted with every spell and ritual, and apparently the
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Due one was one of the reasons why large rituals were only ever used if
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you didn't mind wrecking wherever they took place -- like, infamously,
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the Kingdom of the Dead. Warlock's horror project was bad news in part
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because most the heavy lifting was done through alchemy, with only the
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trigger being sorcery. It could be used again and again without any
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great resource investment save the reagents. Calling it world-shaking
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innovation would be stretching a bit, in my opinion, since there were
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still obvious limits on how it could be employed. If people didn't
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imbibe enough of the reagents, the ritual wouldn't do much at all, and
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after the initial use other nations would certainly start keeping an eye
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out for it.
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It was still a brutal weapon, one that had the potential to wreck large
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swaths of territory if employed properly -- which it would be, if the
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Empress and Black were the ones plotting the use. Given that the First
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Prince was already itching for a Crusade, there would be consequences
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when it got out. The best I could hope for was to slow the spread of
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information and destroy the proof. I knew better than to hope that would
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lead to more than a delay. Diabolist had just effectively ensured we'd
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be at war with the Principate within a few years, at a guess the moment
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they finished getting on war footing. Given the titanic size of Procer
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and what it would actually mean to have its full strength thrown at the
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Empire, I doubted Black would give them the time to gear up in peace.
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He'd strike first and strike hard, aiming to cripple them before they
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mustered their armies properly. \emph{If they don't start the war, we
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will.} Dark as the thought was, I would prefer the latter. Better to
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fight on Proceran soil than Callowan.
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I reached for the bottle and topped up my glass. I had no idea how long
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Diabolist would need to finish her array, assuming she hadn't already,
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and that meant the time scale of this campaign was still in the dark. If
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I took a few months to gather reinforcement, was I going to have to deal
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with the sky raining fire? On the other hand, with the army that stood
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on the other side, could I afford \emph{not} to? Unless she'd gotten
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reinforcements since her scrap with the Princess of High Noon, Diabolist
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had only six thousand proper soldiers but twice that in undead and
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devils. Then she'd get the entire population of Liesse, of course, and
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she still had one `greater devil'. For something to qualify as greater
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in the eyes of a Princess of Summer meant it wasn't to be taken lightly,
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by my reckoning. It would mean nothing to hit fast if my armies failed
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to take the city. \emph{There are still so many unknowns}, I thought,
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and glanced as Masego made to leave.
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``Stay,'' I said. ``I need you for the coming conversation.''
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``Though my judgement is laudable, I have not much exercised it in
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matters of war,'' Hierophant said.
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``This one's not about war, not exactly,'' I said. ``I sent for Duchess
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Kegan. I want to know exactly what Diabolist got her hands on that has
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her so worried and what the consequences of killing it would be.''
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The blindfold creased with his brow.
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``Deoraithe are notoriously secretive,'' he said.
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``And it'll be the three of us in the tent alone,'' I grunted. ``I
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already am compromising. I'd rather have Hakram and Juniper in here as
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well.''
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``And you believe she will see it this way?'' the blind man asked,
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genuinely curious.
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``Let's hope she's reasonable,'' I said.
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The mage looked amused at that, for some reason, but he grabbed the seat
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at the edge of the table. It was meant for over a dozen, the same I used
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for staff meetings, and looked rather strange so empty when I'd grown
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used to it being full. I drank from my cup as Hierophant summoned the
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bottle to him and poured himself one as well. I raised an eyebrow.
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``Would it really have been that much of an effort to get up?'' I said.
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``You sound like Father,'' he muttered.
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Whatever I would have made of that -- and already I had \emph{ideas} --
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had to be set aside for he moment, as Kegan graced us with her presence.
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It would be revisited though, the grin I sent Masego's way promised as
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much.
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``Your Grace,'' the Duchess greeted me, then grudgingly inclined her
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head at Masego. ``Lord Hierophant.''
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``Duchess Kegan,'' I replied over the rim of my cup. ``Please, sit.''
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The courtesies on her part were stiff, and I knew exactly why. Twenty
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thousand Deoraithe had marched out of Daoine, a quarter of them Watch,
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and now only fourteen thousand remained. Her casualties had the Battle
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of Four Armies and One had been relatively light, but Dormer had been
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bloody business. Made worse, I knew, by the fact that Juniper had
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refused her use of the Watch when she struggled against the Summer
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regulars in the outer city. Instead they had been sent to fight the
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Immortals, and courted disaster there as well. I'd yet to get a spoke
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report, but the written one I'd gotten my hands on said the Watch had
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been getting brutalized before Thief came to their aid by snatching the
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standard on that flank. Half the Watch had been buried, either here or
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in Arcadia. It was the kind of losses that would take a generation to
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recover from, and we hadn't even come in sight of Liesse yet. Kegan took
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a seat distant from both mine and Masego's, to my dark amusement. It was
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almost childish, the three of us sharing a table meant for four times
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our number as if there was nothing odd in it.
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``Your messenger did not specify the reason for your summons, only that
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the matter was urgent,'' the Duchess said.
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She eyed the bottle, but did not reach for it. I had no intention of
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wasting Vale summer wine on the likes of her, and so did not offer.
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``We know where the Diabolist is,'' I said, and gestured at the table.
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She glanced at it, eyes lingering on the stone I'd placed.
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``A blunder on her part,'' the Deoraithe said. ``You could easily muster
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forces from the adjoining cities without even use of portals. Orders
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through scrying would allow you to gather and arm men in great
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numbers.''
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``I'm considering my options,'' I said.
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I balked at the idea of sending half-trained civilians into the den of
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madness Akua would have have prepared for them, but I was not unaware I
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might not have a choice. What we had left might not be enough to deal
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with more than a hundred thousand undead, much less the horde of devils
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she was sure to have contracts for.
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``That is why I called for you, as it happens,'' I continued. ``The odds
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are already stark as is. We can't afford to go in blind.''
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The tan face of the aristocrat went blank.
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``I have already shared with you what I can,'' she said.
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I raised an eyebrow. She'd told me that whatever Akua had bound `could
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be considered a deity of sort', which was actually less than what Masego
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had been able to tell me -- and all \emph{he} knew was second-hand from
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his father.
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``Behavioural changes were observed in the Watch,'' Hierophant said.
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``Of this you have not spoken, or truly much at all.''
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Kegan's eyes went cold.
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``Has your \emph{esteemed} father not put enough of my people under the
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knife to discern some truths?'' she said.
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Ah, sarcasm. She should know better than to think that would work on
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Masego. He had a decent read on those he knew well, but strangers?
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``No,'' Hierophant replied frankly. ``He is under orders never to grab a
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member of the Watch without legal cause, which has been very difficult
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since the Conquest.''
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``How sad for him,'' Kegan replied blandly.
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``That's very kind of you,'' Masego said, sounding surprised. ``It has
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been very irritating to have such a fascinating mystery within reach but
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forbidden from study.''
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``Warlock's not the one asking you the question, Duchess,'' I said. ``I
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am.''
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The woman's eyes returned to me.
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``The terms of our treaty with the Tower place the affairs of internal
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rule within our sole purview,'' she said.
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``And if the thing was still within your borders, I'd cheerfully pretend
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it didn't exist,'' I said. ``It isn't. It's being used as fuel for
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whatever Diabolist means to throw at us, and I'm not taking a swing at
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that without a broad idea of what's waiting on the other side.''
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``The breach of terms was Praesi,'' Kegan stiffly said. ``It is not for
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Daoine to pay the price for that treachery.''
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``Akua Sahelian has been attainted as rebel by the Empress,'' I sighed.
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``You know who stands for Praes, right now? \emph{I} do. You know, the
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person trying to fix this fucking mess.''
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``A mess you have no small hand in making,'' the duchess coldly said.
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``Did you not personally petition the Court to have the Diabolist named
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governess of Liesse?''
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``I was bound by oath to do as much,'' I reply, but it was a weak answer
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and I knew it.
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It had occurred to me, of late, that it was hard to tell if I was the
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pillar propping up Callow or the stone around it's people's neck. I
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wasn't done losing sleep over that, but neither was I going to let it
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bind my hands when dealing with a woman actively refusing to inform me
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of a danger we both faced.
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``And I am bound by duty not to speak of this matter,'' Kegan said.
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I let out a long breath and calmly put my hand on the table. The other
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woman watched it, and her features loosened almost imperceptibly when
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she saw the wood had not fogged or frozen. She thought it meant I wasn't
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furious. \emph{Wrong. It just means I've gotten back a sliver of
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control.}
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``I've made a lot of oaths and promises, in the last few months,'' I
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calmly said. ``Some pretty grandiose threats, too. I won't bother with
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that here, Kegan. I'll just put two truths in front of you. The first is
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this: to have a decent chance at victory, I need to know what I'm
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facing. The second is this: I do not need your consent to get an
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answer.''
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I could Speak, I could have Hierophant rip it out of her mind or half a
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dozen other ways. With ever month my arsenal grew, and I grew less
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reluctant to use it. I could use any of those tools and even make sure
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she wouldn't remember a bit of it when she left this tent. Masego had
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learned much from his work against fae in the south, when I sent him to
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use Summer against the Diabolist.
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``You have made much of treating fairly,'' Kegan said, but I could see
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fear there.
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``And I will again,'' I said. ``I'll offer mercy whenever I can. Justice
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too, as much as it can be had -but never when the cost is defeat. That
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is my line in the sand. Cross it at your peril.''
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The duchess met my eyes, even afraid, and for that she won my respect.
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It would not stop me from asking Hierophant to carve open her mind, if I
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had to.
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``A lesser evil is still an evil,'' she bitterly said.
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``I prefer necessary to lesser,'' I said, ``but will not quibble over
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the rest.''
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Kegan breathed out, and reached for the wine. She poured herself a glass
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and whet her lips before speaking.
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``It is not a god in the way Praesi would know of it,'' she said. ``It
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is a gestalt.''
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Masego gasped.
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``Souls,'' he said.
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Kegan nodded.
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``Every single one of the People that have died since the elves took the
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Golden Bloom from us,'' she said. ``Millions, by now.''
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``And the Watch is bound to them,'' I said.
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``They borrow the strength of our ancestors, one day to take back our
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home,'' the duchess said.
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``You forged a god,'' Hierophant said, and spoke with a touch of awe.
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``This might be the single greatest working of necromancy Creation has
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ever known. Unlike Keter it would \emph{keep growing}. Every decade you
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can have more Watchmen, or stronger.''
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I had other worries.
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``If Diabolist controls your\ldots{} gestalt,'' I said. ``Can she
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control the Watch through it?''
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``The past rulers of Daoine had similar worries,'' Kegan said. ``A
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degree of separation was created to prevent a Warlock from effecting
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this should they find out. It is one of the reasons the Watch has not
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been able to grow more numerous but not more powerful over the
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centuries. The number of oaths that can be taken is limited. The
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usurpation was still felt, however. It is quite unpleasant.''
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``You should have spoken of this to Father years ago,'' Hierophant began
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excitedly, ``there are numerous theories that-``
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I cut him off with a raised hand.
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``Can it be destroyed?'' I asked.
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``Yes,'' she reluctantly said.
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``And what would the consequences of that would be?'' I pressed.
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``I am unsure,'' she admitted, and I turned to Masego.
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``You'd be destroying the gestalt, not the souls,'' Hierophant noted.
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``As individual entities they would go on existing, released from
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whatever binding kept them together.''
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I grimaced.
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``That sounds bad,'' I said. ``It would damage the surroundings,
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right?''
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``Containing them in a location would be feasible, with the right set of
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wards,'' he said. ``Otherwise, should they be unconstrained, I imagine
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over a third of Callow would be turned into a blasted, violently haunted
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wasteland. I'll need a direct look or more precise numbers to project
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the exact fallout.''
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``I have brought specialists to wrest back control from the Diabolist,''
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the duchess said. ``Preventing her from interfering with the process is
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the most salient issue.''
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Glass eyes turned to her.
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``It find it unlikely,'' Hierophant said, ``that Deoraithe mages could
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undo the work of a Named practitioner of Akua Sahelian's skill.''
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I drummed my fingers against the wood.
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``Duchess, get your people talking with Hierophant,'' I ordered. ``We'll
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see how feasible your way is. I'd much prefer it was. But if it
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isn't\ldots{}''
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I grimaced.
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``Well, Diabolist put a sharper in the middle of her army,'' I said.
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``I'm not above lighting it to finish the war.''
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