329 lines
19 KiB
TeX
329 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-45-ambush}{%
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\chapter{Ambush}\label{chapter-45-ambush}}
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\epigraph{``As the Bellerophans had not redrawn their war maps in over a
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century, their expedition against Penthes instead began with the sack of
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three outlying Delosi towns, one of which was walled and whose watchmen
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rebuffed the assault of the army. The Republic ultimately withdrew a
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month later after capturing a Stygian trade caravan carrying a handful
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Penthesian goods, announcing the unequivocal success of its punitive
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expedition to the great confusion of the Exarch of Penthes, who was
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still mustering her army over three hundred miles to the north.''}{Extract from `A Pack of Squabbles, or, A History of Internal League
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Warfare' by Prince Alexandre of Lyonis}
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If it was a distraction, then it was a good one -- not that I'd expected
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any less from Malicia. Boots scraping against the faded stone, I
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crouched at the edge of the pyramid's slope and studied the silhouettes
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below. Twenty-one, all in all. Ten faceless and genderless soldiers in
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steel with masks of black wrought iron, the Tower's own personal guard.
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The Sentinels, I'd been taught was their name. I was unsure of how hard
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a fight they'd be able to give me, but they were not a young Praesi
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institution. If even half the the hundred Tyrants who'd once commanded
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them had bothered to teach them a nasty trick or two, they would not be
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easy meat. The silent guard formed a ring of steel, broad tower shields
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up as they protected the remaining delegates. Those, I thought, would be
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the source of the real trouble if there was trouble to be had. Of the
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eleven remaining strangers only two wore armour and it was clearly
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ceremonial. Not unlike the colourful scales I'd known Diabolist to wear
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before she claimed that very Name. Those two were Soninke, men and too
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flawless to look upon to be anything but Wasteland highborn.
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I dismissed them anyway. The warlocks would be the real threat here, not
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swordsmen no matter their skill. And there \emph{were} mages among the
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delegates, I could tell as much at a glance. None of the other Praesi
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wore a weapon heavier than a long dagger, and though their robes were an
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ornate riot of vivid silks the colours were not enough to hide the
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discreet shimmer of runes woven into the fabric. Defensive enchantments,
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though without Masego around I had no real way to know of their purpose.
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What I \emph{did} know was that while silk was one of the fabrics most
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apt to imbibe magic without spoiling, there was only so much sorcery any
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fabric could take. Against another sorcerer, defensive enchantments were
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a significant advantage. Against me, it'd be trying to hold back the sea
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with a wooden bucket. \emph{I'll still have to hit them hard}, I
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thought. \emph{Smaller wisps of Winter will just be ignored, if I'm to
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strike at them it'll have to be by surprise and with overwhelming
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force.} Admittedly my favourite kind of fights, on the rare occasions I
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managed to have them.
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One person stood out from the rest, and the sight of her had me
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tightening my grip on the pommel of my sword. The woman was Soninke and
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young. No more than twenty, by the looks of her, and though she was of
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plain appearance every other delegate around her behaved like sunflowers
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turning towards the sun. Her dress was tastefully understated, as was
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the silver jewellery adorning her neck and wrists, but there was no
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mistaking who that was. I wasn't Malicia in the flesh, or more
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accurately it was but not \emph{her} flesh. A simulacrum, then. I felt a
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sharp edge of relief at the confirmation of what I'd always believed to
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be the most likely reality. And yet part of me was disappointed as well.
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There would have been chaos, in slaying the true Malicia, but
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opportunity as well. If I'd been able to force a war of succession on
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the Empire without getting embroiled myself\ldots{} No point in whining
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about it. It was what it was, and in this case the presence of a mere
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flesh puppet might be a blessing. Said puppet was awake and alert, I
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saw, and with good reason.
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It had just almost died.
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I'd arrived too late to see it happen, but just from the lay of the
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Praesi I could get an idea of what had taken place. Just as they'd left
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the Threefold Reflection through the nearest gate and taken the avenue
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into the tall colonnade they now occupied, someone had taken a shot at
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the Empress. The shimmering panes of light around the flesh puppet told
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me exactly why it'd failed, and pointed at the most likely suspect for
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the attempt: Thief. It couldn't be Archer. She had arrows that'd go
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right through most sorceries, and even if she'd failed to make a kill at
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a distance she would have closed in and carved away at the Sentinels.
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Adjutant had not aspect that would work for a quiet ambush, and I'd just
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left behind the remaining two. No, it had to be Thief. The Skein had
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hinted, back in his lair, that she might try to kill Malicia with the
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same blade of moonlight she'd stolen from the Spellblade. That was my
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guess: she'd approached under cover of her aspect, placed her shot and
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immediately retreated when it failed to breach the Empress' protections.
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I couldn't be sure whether that failure was because the Praesi wards
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were particularly strong or because the tool employed had not been a
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good fit, and that was worrying.
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They hadn't seen me, at least for now. I'd not woven glamour over myself
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yet, afraid some of the mages would be sensitive enough to such powers
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it would effectively announced my presence even if they couldn't see
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through it. The moment the delegation caught scent of me, my bet was
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that they'd turtle up behind heavy wards and make enough of a racket
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that the Dead King's people would have to come and take a look. If that
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was allowed to happen, the game was done. Pushing any further would
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break the unspoken boundaries Neshamah had placed on this little lark of
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ours. Was Thief still around? My guts said yes, but I couldn't count on
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it. She might still be acting according to a plan I didn't know. Which
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was the point of all this, I supposed. We'd filled the Skein's sight
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with so many of those there'd been no telling where the rest of the Woe
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were or what they were up to. At the unfortunate cost of my being kept
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in the dark concerning those matters as well. I set aside the thoughts
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for now, eyes one the Praesi delegates. They were on the defensive for
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now, the Sentinels using the cover of the colonnade to form a decent
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holding position while the mages layered enchantments, but they'd get
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moving soon.
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If I were in Malicia's shoes, right now, I'd be worrying more about
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Archer than Thief. The longer she remained in the open, the higher the
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risks she got an unexpected arrow through the throat. If I wanted to
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have a decent swing at the Empress, I needed to be close by the time
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they set out. Which left me with the task of moving unseen next to a
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cluster of highly-trained, professionally paranoid and recently ambushed
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Wastelanders. While wearing armour. In broad daylight. With no real
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cover to speak of the moment I left the upper reaches of the pyramid.
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This was not a recipe for success no matter how you looked at it, but at
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least I was wearing mail instead of plate. Pretty weak, as far as silver
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linings went, but I'd take what I could get.
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Pulling the Mantle of Woe tight around me, since it was colourful but at
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least not actively shining under the sun, I began to make my way down.
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Obliquely, or as close to that as was possible. There were open grounds
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between the colonnade and the end of the Threefold Reflection proper,
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and crossing those unseen was a fool's errand. No, the longer I thought
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about it the more obvious it got I'd have to roll the dice on my ability
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to predict where the Praesi would be headed and lay my ambush there.
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There were only so many places they could go, I mused as I moved from
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stone to stone. There was another palace up ahead, but I wouldn't put my
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money on them going for it. There'd be another Revenant inside,
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certainly, but it didn't look like the most\ldots{} hospitable of
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places. The fluid obsidian structures were unpleasant to look at in some
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primal way, though it was the outlying decorations that would give the
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Praesi pause. Small channels had been dug into the stone in arcane
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symbols, lit up by what appeared to be liquid flame. The palace flicked
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with shifting shadows even under sunlight. If they went through there,
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I'd kill them all. They'd be forced to take narrow fire-walled paths
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with plenty of cover for me to ambush from. Unless the Revenant was
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already in place and ready to intervene, the outlying parts of that
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palace would be a perfect killing floor for me. Malicia herself wasn't a
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military tactician of any renown, but she was hardly a fool. It'd be one
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of the other two paths she took.
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The first would be a gambit on her part. The colonnade and almost
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temple-like promenade surrounding the pyramid did have a path going
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around towards the open plaza where the Hall of the Dead and a horde of
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minions would be awaiting. If the Empress made it there safely, she was
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out of the woods. I couldn't snatch her out of the Dead King's grasp
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without screwing all of this up. On the other hand, I was rather hoping
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that was the option she'd take. I was already near to the last third of
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the pyramid, and all it'd take was dipping out of the sight around the
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corner for me to slip ahead of her party in the colonnade. I'd already
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begun angling my descent to be a step ahead if that was the choice she
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made. Malicia had to know, however, that it was a mostly open space and
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most the Woe were still on the prowl. Forget Thief, but if Archer came
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across her there'd be blood on the floor. Quickest path to safety, but
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arguably the most dangerous.
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The second path was a retreat. Not back into the Threefold Reflection --
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though that was possible, if exceedingly foolish -- but towards the
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lower rungs of Keter. We were all in the highest ring at the moment,
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surrounded by the same rampart Athal had taken me to earlier through the
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secret passage. The Empress could head for those walls, and from there
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either count on the Dead King's soldiers being there and providing
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protection or journey further down and away from the area she knew the
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Woe was roaming. I'd had the advantage of height over her earlier, so I
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already knew there were no undead on the ramparts at the moment. Indeed,
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their absence was quite glaring. Neshamah was quite pointedly looking
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away, in a manner of speaking. Malicia wouldn't necessarily know that,
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though. The Crown of the Dead screwed badly with scrying rituals, so it
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wasn't like she could have a look through a bowl. If she went with that
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choice, she was keeping the game afoot. As long as she wasn't surrounded
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by undead soldiers, she remained a target no matter how far down she
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fled. I wasn't all that familiar with the rest of the city, though, so
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we'd both be going into that blind.
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I'd reached one of the pyramid's four spines when the Praesi moved out.
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Peeking around the corner, I grinned nastily as I watched the delegation
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head towards the central plaza at a brisk pace. She'd bet it all on a
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quick resolution, then. I could work with that. I picked up the pace as
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well, dropping down on the ground long before they were in sight of the
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turn. Fingers drumming against my sheath, I eyed the spot where the
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ambush would have to take place: right after the turn, with a clear line
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of sight to the path leading to the plaza. The columns were but a few
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feet apart and joined by a low wall on the outer half of the colonnade,
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though the half facing the pyramid was without. The turn was angled too
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circular for me to be able to hide in the bend, sadly, but there was
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another detail to this construction: a ceiling. Barded with
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criss-crossing beams of copper, the angular stone roof was held up by
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the columns. The ceiling itself was filled, but there was room between
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the long stretch of stone supported by those same columns and the roof
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itself. Not much, but then for once my size might come in as actually
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useful. A few years ago, the notion of hanging from a ceiling like a
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fucking bat to swoop down on my enemies would have struck me as absurd,
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especially if I was wearing armour. Now, though? It wasn't like my arms
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could get tired anymore.
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It'd have to be around the turn, otherwise the moment the enemy
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approached they'd just see me hanging there. That'd turn awkward real
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quick, leading to questions like `why did you think that would work?' or
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even worse, small talk. I wasn't emotionally prepared to make polite
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conversation with the Empress while murder-hanging from a ceiling. I
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hoisted myself up the low wall and frowned up at the column. There was
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distinct lack of good handholds, but using Winter would be tipping my
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hand and I needed to hurry before the enemy arrived. With all the grace
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of a one-legged squirrel, I hugged the column and shimmied my way up. It
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was easier up there: I caught one of the copper beams and left the
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column, effortlessly dragging my hole body up and spreading my legs to
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gain more traction from other beams. My free hand went into collection
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my cloak, which was now hanging like a shitty tapestry, and just kind of
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bunching it up over my stomach before I pulled myself close to the
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ceiling. There, that should do. I was kind of hoping Thief wasn't
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around, because if she saw me I'd never live this down. I heard the
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footsteps, then their words.
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``The Dead King's enchantments make it impossible to use proper sensory
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spells,'' a woman's voice sighed in Mtethwa. ``My apologies, Your Dread
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Majesty. My abilities are lacking.''
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``I hardly expected you to be the Hidden Horror's superior in matters of
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spellcraft, Lady Olinga,'' the flesh puppet replied. ``Already your
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wards proved your worth by sparing me the Thief's ambush.''
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``She may well still be lurking about,'' a man warned. ``And the
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Adjutant will have found a way out of the illusions by now. We must
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hurry.''
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``Any faster will disrupt the wards,'' Lady Olinga peevishly replied.
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``It already took me decades to train them to be able to maintain it
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while moving.''
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``The Warlock can-``
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``I am not the Warlock,'' the Soninke cut through. ``Nor even the
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Hierophant. Do ask miracles of me, Galadan, when you can barely use High
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Arcana yourself.''
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``We will proceed at the current pace,'' Not-Malicia said, and I could
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almost hear the soothing smile. ``Peace, my friends. This interlude soon
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comes at an end.''
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Well, she wasn't wrong about that. More worryingly, I was hearing the
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Empress and the highborn moving but not a single Sentinel footstep.
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Spelled gear, had to be. And there was no telling what calibre either.
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Enchanted artefacts weren't as rare in Praes as they were in Callow, but
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even in the Wasteland it was the petty stuff that wasn't kept within
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powerful families. Magic made into enchantment waned over time, so for
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anything to last for more than a few years it had to be an extremely
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powerful mage -- or ritual -- that had first made the artefact. The
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lesser stuff had to be empowered anew pretty regularly, and most mages
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saw that kind of repeat labour as beneath them. Which meant finding
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another practitioner to take care of it, certainly easier in Praes than
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my homeland, but artefacts only worked perfectly for the mages who'd
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first made them. After that, every set of hands they passed through made
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them a little shoddier until they broke down. Of course, then you got
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the stuff out of myth. Which tended to be either like the Lone
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Swordsman's, a feather from an angel that'd made intense eye contact
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with Creational laws until they backed away uncomfortably, or your
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average legendary stuff. Which had both been crafted by the kind of
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sorcerer or Named that came around once a century and been made out of
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materials with inherent magical properties that kept the enchantments
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going indefinitely. All stuff that was rare, difficult to obtain and
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horribly, horribly expensive. Archer's longbow was probably worth a pair
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of large palaces in Procer, if she ever tried to pawn it in Mercantis,
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and it wasn't even quite up to snuff compared to some of the stuff out
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there.
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Now, if they were from anywhere else, I'd dismiss the thought of the
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Sentinels having even one piece of such gear out of hand. Personal
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guards or not, they wouldn't rank that kind of ridiculous expense. They
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were, unfortunately, from the Dread Empire of Praes. When a nation got a
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line of three emperors that picked \emph{Profligate} as a reigning name,
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terrible monetary decisions were only to be expected. And that was
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without thinking of the gaggle of practitioner Tyrants that'd held the
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Tower with just as many Warlocks serving beneath them, few of which had
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ever held qualms about a little mass murder and assorted bankruptcy if
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it got in the way of their latest idea. Even then, there couldn't be too
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many of it. Enough to equip ten guards, though. Would Malicia risk that
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kind of precious equipment by bringing it to Keter? My guts said yes.
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She wasn't a mage herself, and like the Calamities she'd never shown a
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great deal of respect for artefacts that were relevant only on the
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tactical level. I could easily see her kitting out her handpicked
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Sentinels in the good stuff both as a show of force for the Dead King
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and for that little additional sliver of safety abroad.
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Which meant I couldn't just ignore the soldiers, as I'd intended to
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previously. They might have stuff that could hurt fae -- no, knowing
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Malicia they \emph{definitely} had stuff that hurt fae. Still, the
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sorcerers remained the greater threat. Fighters, even dangerous ones, I
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could kill my way through. If I got stuck behind a ward, there was no
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getting out. I held my breath, lips thinning when I realized my lungs
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never began to burn. Yet another comforting illusion that would not
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withstand scrutiny. Eyes wide open I waited for the Praesi to approach.
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Artefact-bearers or not, the Sentinels still wore those fucking stupid
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masks. They couldn't easily look up, and their peripheral vision was
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shit. I'd let them pass me before dropping down and take out as many
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mages as I could in the first strike. Without a sound a pair of
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steel-clad soldiers passed under me, and then -- \emph{shit}.
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I dropped down before the streak of lightning could tear through my
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belly. Had that come out of an opal? Did I have to start worrying about
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the jewellery on people's clothes now? The Sentinels were on me before
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the others could so much as exclaim in surprise, swords swinging.
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Sorcery flared behind them, the mages taking action, and I knew without
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a doubt that if I got stuck in a brawl with the soldiers this was headed
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downhill. \emph{Never give mages time to cast}. I breathed out, and
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ripped away another illusion. I stepped through the sword blows, the
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mist that was now my torso billowing as their blades went through. One
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step, two, three and then I was among the mages. Solid, I ordered my
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body. My blade ripped through a Taghreb's throat and the panes of light
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around Malicia dimmed, her eyes widening in fear and surprise. I tugged
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out a string of my domain, shaped it and let it loose with a flick of
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the wrist. The javelin of night-stuff flew perfectly, puncturing the
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sorcerous protection and\ldots{}
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Breaking an illusion.
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Fuck. A ward closed around me a heartbeat later and I found myself
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surrounded by very displeased Praesi. With a sigh I rose from my
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half-crouch, adjusted my cloak and offered the delegation a winning
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smile. I did not get a single one in response, which might have
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something to do with the man bleeding out on the ground a mere foot
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behind me.
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``Well,'' I muttered. ``This is a little awkward.''
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I reached for Winter but found my will couldn't quite make it. That, I
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mused, was not a promising start to these negotiations.
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