393 lines
20 KiB
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393 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-63-bridge}{%
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\section{Chapter 63: Bridge}\label{chapter-63-bridge}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A dilemma is no such thing if it is flammable.''}
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-- Dread Empress Sulphurous, the `Technically Correct'
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\end{quote}
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Liesse looked like it'd spent a few years rolling around in nightmare
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juice, but at least the result's old floor plan still more or less held
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up. I'd taken this city once before, and though this time I'd come
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knocking without an army at my back I still knew my way around. The new
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occupants, though, were something of a problem. For one they were all
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dead, which was not a desired quality in the inhabitants of what had
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been one of the most thriving cities in Callow, and the entire place had
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gone to Hell. Literally. Akua's idea of a garrison apparently involved a
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generous helping of devils let loose in the streets. Which, hey, not a
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problem if I stuck to the rooftops. But the devils with wings were, and
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the penumbra that hung over Liesse like a veil wasn't quite enough on
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its own to hide me. The inevitable long periods spent huddled under
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whatever was available to hide allowed me to stew in anger that was
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growing sharper by the moment. It wasn't enough that Diabolist had
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slaughtered everyone within these walls, the population of the second
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largest city in Callow and all the refugees from the south that'd been
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fleeing the fae. No, she had to wreck the actual city as well.
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There would be no salvaging Liesse after this. Setting aside the
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madwoman's little helpers currently having the run of the streets, the
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entire place had been turned into some fucking Praesi ritual tool. There
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were runes everywhere, wards I could feel buzzing when I came too close
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and even the lay of the streets had been fucked with. Akua or one of her
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minions had ordered the already messy sprawl of Liessen streets to be
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turned into a maze of collapsed dead-ends and barricades. This was no
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longer a liveable city. It might become one again eventually, but that'd
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take years of highly dangerous and professional work as well as what I
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could only qualify as a prodigious amount of money. Which, even if I did
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have -- which I didn't, because rebuilding a twice war-torn nation and
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my own ravaged demesne wasn't exactly cheap work -- I wouldn't be able
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to spare. Because, once again fuck you Akua, this little murderous
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tantrum was the call for every godsdamned nation on Calernia that could
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spare an army to march for the Red Flower Vales. At best I'd be able to
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put wards around this wreck of a city and forbid entrance by Imperial
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decree.
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Every speck of coin I'd be able to spare would be going to fortifying
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Callow and ensuring its people didn't starve through this winter, or the
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seasons after that. I somehow doubted the Tenth Crusade would be over in
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a year. It was going to be a long and brutal slugging match between the
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most powerful nations on the continent, and my people were troublingly
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unprepared for it.
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My advance was slow, but it was still an advance. The deeper I got into
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the city, sticking to shadows and hiding places, the thicker the patrols
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became. I'd half-expected Diabolist to send an army of ten thousand
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wights just outside the tunnel that Black and I entered the city
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through, but there'd been no one in sight when we did. Just a set of
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hidden runic arrays that my teacher promptly tore apart with his shadow
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before we made a run for it. That had me wary. Diabolist was of the old
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breed but she wasn't stupid. I kept having to repeat that, these days,
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but that made it no less true. Just because we'd torn apart her vanguard
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outside Liesse didn't mean she was done: if anything, that probably
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meant the heart of her plan was in here. What that plan actually was, I
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still couldn't tell. Sure, she'd opened a Greater Breach in the worst
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place possible at the worst time possible for our army. She'd followed
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up that disaster by tossing three demons at us, which meant both Warlock
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and Hierophant had their hands tied with damage control. But how long
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did she expect that to last, really? At some point one of those two
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threats would give, and then the Named that was freed up would turn to
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cleaning up the remaining wights.
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Black and I had come into the city ahead of the rest, but I fully
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expected that before too long we'd be followed by the Legions. I
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wouldn't even be surprised if the Watch had already begun landing at the
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bottom of the pit. Was that her plan, then? Forcing an engagement in a
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narrow tunnel that couldn't really be bypassed? Once more that might
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work for a while, but we had two sorcerers on par with if not outright
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superior to her outside and I really doubted her little
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get-out-of-Creation trick was impervious to the Warlock's entire bag of
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tricks. Right now, I couldn't see a way for her to get out of this
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alive. She'd last a while, there was no denying that. She'd even cost us
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a horrible butcher's bill before it was all said and done. But tonight
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or in a week, even without Black and I lifting a hand, this path led to
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her head on a pike. Or the Hall of Screams, if the Empress was feeling
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vindictive. Which meant I was missing something, because Diabolist only
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ever planned for defeat when it got her something she wanted and she was
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too fucking arrogant to care for something that sprang from her death.
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Akua Sahelian's cause was herself: everything else was, ultimately,
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expendable. It wasn't the kind of thinking that led to a woman martyring
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herself for some kind of philosophical point.
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Not that it would succeed, anyway. Black had already made it clear that
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the aftermath of Second Liesse was going to be one long thorough purge
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of everything and everyone even remotely associated to the Truebloods.
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\emph{And she has to know that}, I thought. \emph{That she gave him the
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excuse he'd been waiting on for decades.} There was a way, in
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Diabolist's eyes, where today ended up with her on top and beyond
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reprisal. I was going to have to find what that way was and shove blades
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into it until it stopped twitching.
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The first step towards that was getting eyes on the Ducal Palace, which
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was where Diabolist was bound to be holed up. Probably on an overly
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ornate throne, drinking expensive wine. I just knew her armour would be
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nicer than mine, too. Shame about all that blood that I was going get
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all over it. I ended up on a rooftop overlooking the outside of the
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palace, and grimaced when I took a closer look. I'd grilled Robber after
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he'd infiltrated the place a few months back then Thief after she did
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the same a great deal more recently, and they'd not been wrong to call
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it a fortress. They'd both mentioned that the area in front of the outer
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walls was open field, with space once occupied by shops and mansions
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torn down and cleared out to make it even harder to approach unnoticed.
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That part had changed, I saw. It was now entirely filled with tight
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ranks of perfectly still wights in full arms and armour. How many did
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that make? Thousands, at least. This was easily larger than the biggest
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marketplace in Laure, and it could fit that many people during
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festivals. Behind the walls I saw runes and stalking devils, and even
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clusters of mages she'd kept back.
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Frontal assault wasn't looking all that feasible, but there weren't any
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obvious backdoors to exploit. It'd been a little too much to hope for
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that there would be: it wasn't like Diabolist lacked the manpower to
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cover ever nook and cranny. A distraction, maybe? Something loud enough
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she'd send men to quell the mess, making an opening for us to sneak
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through. \emph{But she'll be expecting that}, I thought. \emph{She knows
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we're in the city.} It might be that patience was our only real option.
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Waiting until the Legions made landfall and she had to shift her forces
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to hold them back, then going for the head of the snake. And even then,
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it wouldn't be a sure thing. I did hate it when my opponents were
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competent, it complicated everything. I waited under cover for what must
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have been at least half an hour, watching patrols and unmoving
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sentinels, but no opening ever emerged. At this rate Black would join me
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and I'd have no plan to suggest.
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The explosion took me by surprise.
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Not because there was an explosion at all -- that'd pretty much been
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made a certainty the moment I'd sent Robber's cohort into the city
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through the path Thief had found me -- but because it sounded wrong. It
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wasn't the kind of detonation that came from goblin munitions. It got
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worse when I quietly shifted rooftops to have a look at where the noise
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came from: one of the wings of the Ducal Palace was half-collapsed and
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smoke was trailing into the sky. \emph{Shit}, I thought. If that was
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what I thought it was\ldots{}
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``A good plan,'' Diabolist said. ``Or rather it was, the first time you
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used it.''
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My blade was out before she finished the first word and I twisted around
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only to find Akua Sahelian in all her glory leaning against the edge of
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the rooftop, looking down at her assembly of wights. I'd been incorrect
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in assuming she would put on armour. Instead she had draped over her
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full curves a complicated robe of red and gold with snow white silk
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borders. The back of her neck was covered by a low-hanging veil set with
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patterns of precious stones, and the oblique cut of her skirt revealed
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legs covered by form-fitting soft leather trousers. Even her boots, I
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thought, looked like they cost a year's salary. My first thought was:
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\emph{well, that's twenty denarii}. My second thought was really more of
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a response, namely forming a spear of shadow and tossing it through her
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throat. It made a hole in the silhouette that glowed around the edges
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but almost immediately closed. An illusion. Diabolist raised an eyebrow.
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``How uncouth,'' she chided. ``As I was saying, there was some
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cleverness to the thought. Sending Thief after the keystone of my ritual
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while my eyes were on you and the Carrion Lord.''
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``Some cleverness,'' I replied flatly, keeping eye on the wights below.
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``How kind of you to concede that.''
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They weren't moving, at least not those I could see. That was little
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comfort, given where I was currently standing.
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``Dearest Catherine,'' Diabolist drawled, sounding amused. ``You
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employed this same trick to steal the very sun of Summer. Did you truly
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think that would go unnoticed? Of course I prepared for the
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eventuality.''
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``It was a trap,'' I sighed.
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This entire city was, I'd known that going in, but I'd thought that my
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little contingencies might be snuck past her.
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``Just because the keystone needed to be there once does not mean it
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needed to \emph{remain} there,'' Akua languidly said. ``Even if your
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little burglar survives my precautions, she will find nothing there to
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steal.''
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I frowned at her.
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``So is this a back-patting session, Akua?'' I asked. ``Because I'm kind
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of busy. You know, working out the logistics of killing you.''
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She waved away my words airily. It really was shame I'd only be able to
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brutally murder her the once. I felt kind of cheated by that fact.
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``I am in no hurry,'' she said. ``You are. After all, your army is
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losing the battle outside quite spectacularly.''
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I went still. She could be lying, of course. Very likely she was. When
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I'd left two thirds of her mages on the field were dead, Masego had her
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demons imprisoned and the wights were collapsing on two fronts. Juniper
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was headed out to contain her Hellgate with the Warlock at her back, and
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so while I wouldn't consider that situation under control it should at
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least not be outright fucking us over for the foreseeable future. On the
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other hand, I'd thought since the beginning that this was going
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\emph{too} well considering the amount of time she'd had to prepare her
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defences. There was a chance, however slight, she wasn't lying through
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her teeth.
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``Istrid Knightsbane is dead,'' Diabolist said. ``General Orim and
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General Afolabi are as well. Their legions were gutted around them, then
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rose in my service. The remaining commanders are hanging on by a thread,
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and that thread is thinnin\emph{g} with every heartbeat. Even if they
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manage to retreat, this cannot be called anything but a defeat.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``If it's true, that's a mess that's going to cost us badly,'' I said.
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``But it doesn't really matter, does it? The moment you used your ritual
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you made this about Named. Even if you wipe out my whole army your side
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collapses the moment you die.''
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``Can you?'' Diabolist asked, and she sounded genuinely curious. ``Put
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aside your pride and your hatred, for a moment. Do you truly believe
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that even if you came to stand before me, you would come out the victor
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of that confrontation?''
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``I've killed more terrifying things than you, Akua Sahelian,'' I
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hissed.
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She laughed, and gracefully arced her arm to display our surroundings.
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``No,'' the Soninke smiled. ``No you have not. I am not a fettered god
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you can trick or a petty tool hollowed out by the Heavens. I am heiress
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crowned by inheritance, in the fullness of her might. That I bother with
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these ramparts between us is a mere mark of respect -- I could break you
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with a word, Catherine. You have risen too swiftly. It has made you
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\emph{fragile}.''
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``I think I'm supposed to pity you,'' I said. ``For being so far gone
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that you can't even understand what a repulsive creature you are and how
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it's going to get you killed. The worst part of it, Akua, is that you
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have all these \emph{gifts}. You're so fucking capable, and I have bad
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enough a need for capable people I might actually have ignored what a
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monster you are if you'd not proven again and again you're poison to
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everything you touch. But you just had to cross those lines, the ones
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that mean I have to put you down whatever the cost.''
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Diabolist sighed.
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``Must you still bother with the pretence of righteousness, even at this
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late hour?'' she said. ``It has grown increasingly quite tedious.''
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``Is this the part where you trying telling me we're not so different?''
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I said. ``Fuck you and the flying murder fortress you rode in on,
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Sahelian. I've done some nasty stuff, but you? You don't have
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\emph{limits}. It's worse than a sickness of the mind, because you chose
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to be like this. You glorify it.''
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She seemed amused, and in that expression I saw a lot I'd rather I
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hadn't. I saw the Empress weaving plots that bound me ever tighter to
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her reign, I saw Black imparting a lesson that was always as brutal as
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it was practical. We'd both been raised in the shadows of the same
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monsters. It had left marks on both of us, and the knowledge of that
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shared brand had bitter taste in my mouth.
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``Tell me, old friend,'' Akua said fondly. ``What \emph{are} your
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principles, exactly? I keep hearing of these lines and the way I cross
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them yet you never elaborate. I have murdered for my ambitions, this is
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true. But then, so have you. Is it simply the scale of the killing that
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is your objection?''
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``Friend? Gods, when people say your kind gets drunk in power I didn't
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think it was quite that literal. You've loosed devils on innocents,
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Akua,'' I said coldly. ``You summon demons to make use of them in war.
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You're racist, backstabbing and utterly amoral. \emph{You murdered a
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hundred thousand of my countrymen in cold blood to make a fucking
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point}.''
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``Nearly all these acts have been committed by those you call allies as
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well,'' Diabolist mildly said. ``Your own teacher has methodically
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butchered Callowans for decades to cow them. Perhaps never a hundred
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thousand at once, this I'll grant. But between the Conquest and the
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occupation? My dear, I broke a city. He broke a \emph{nation,} and kept
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it so. I daresay the sum of corpses to his name is a few graveyards
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ahead of mine.''
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She stretched lazily.
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``You've yourself made pacts with entities that are hostile to
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Creation,'' she continued. ``And even now bear their mantle, a diabolist
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in frost instead of brimstone. You've consistently put Callowan lives
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above those of Praesi and greenskins, which indicates a certain\ldots{}
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disregard. In matters of treachery, shall we revisit the inception of
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the Liesse Rebellion?''
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She laughed, the sound of it rich and almost enchanting enough the urge
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to kill her didn't have my hand tightening into a fist.
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``As for the same moral fibre you so often chide me for lacking,'' she
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said, and met my eyes calmly. ``Catherine, when have you ever displayed
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it yourself? I was under the impression that to be righteous one needed
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to do more than merely commit lesser sins instead of great.''
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``The difference,'' I replied coldly, ``is that killing is something I'm
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driven to, while it's your starting point.''
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``What difference is truly there,'' Diabolist asked, ``if we both come
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to kill? Does hemming and hawing over bloodying your blade somehow
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exempt you from the nature of your actions?''
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``The difference is that at some point I \emph{stop}, Akua,'' I said.
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``I have an end. You don't. It's one massacre after another until
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someone puts you down. The payoff for all the ugly things done at my
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hands or my orders is peace. Real, lasting peace. A way out of the loop
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that's fucked over both our peoples since the First Dawn. What's your
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payoff, Diabolist? Progressively greater atrocities, until you finally
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run into someone stronger than you?''
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``That,'' Akua said smilingly, ``sounds like a justification.''
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I flinched, because it was just true enough to cut.
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``Did you ever wonder why all these renowned villains displayed such
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immediate fondness for you?'' Diabolist said. ``Or did you merely
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assumed you were unfathomably charming? You have always been a threat to
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the very order they've spent a lifetime building, even when you set out
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to serve their purpose.''
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``I'm aware I'm being used,'' I replied flatly. ``I can live with that,
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so long as I'm using them as well.''
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The Soninke clicked her tongue against the roof her mouth
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disapprovingly.
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``Sentiment is a blinder, Catherine,'' she said. ``Consider the facts.
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From the moment you've become the Squire, Callow has been graced with
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one bloody reaping after another. Did you ever stop to consider this was
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no accident but the actual intent?''
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She leaned forward.
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``Did you ever consider that Callow cannot rebel if it too busy
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\emph{burning}?'' she said. ``That the ashes of a kingdom are easier to
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subjugate in full than a resurgent nation under your hand?''
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``I know exactly what they're after,'' I flatly replied.
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``You `know' what two of the most exquisitely manipulative villains
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alive have told you,'' Diabolist corrected. ``Is a few scraps of
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affection all it takes to bind you?''
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``Did you think a clever speech would be all that was needed to sway
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me?'' I said. ``I know what you are, Akua. It's what I would be, if I
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believed in nothing. If I thought I was the only thing that mattered on
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Creation.''
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``You will hate me,'' Diabolist said. ``That is as it should be. But I
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know you as well, Catherine Foundling. And there is a truth you have
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flinched from looking in the eye, for it is distasteful to you: the
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Empress and the Carrion Lord, though you may be fond of them, have a
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plan for Callow. Me?''
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She shrugged.
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``Its existence is a matter of indifference to me, so long as tribute is
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paid,'' Akua said. ``And so now I ask -- is there truly a bridge you
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will not burn, if it means better outcome for your people?''
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Her smile was thin and sharp, a slice of ivory between red lips.
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``Let us find out,'' she said. ``We will begin, I think, by severing the
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ties holding you back.''
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She looked towards the Ducal Palace, the very picture of nonchalance.
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``Do hurry, Catherine. I have the Black Knight.''
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My blood ran cold, even as the illusion dispersed and the undead below
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began to move. A reminder, those, that no matter how convincing she
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could be I was still mere feet away from thousands of my people she had
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murdered and enslaved. There were some things that could not be painted
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over by eloquence. The wisps of sorcery that Diabolist had left behind
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spun again, and even as I prepared to forcefully disrupt them a
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silhouette formed and my hand was stayed. Exactly one sentence was
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spoken to me, and then the silhouette was gone before I could so much as
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open my mouth. Loudly, I swallowed. My fingers clenched and then
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unclenched as I watched the wights beginning the climb towards me. In
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the distance mages wove sorcery and devils took flight, the full muster
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of Diabolist's madness finally taking the field. I closed my eyes,
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breathed out and stilled my mind. I opened them to sight of a
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corpse-like hand grasping the edge of the roof.
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``\textbf{Fall},'' I said, and darkness obeyed.
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