456 lines
21 KiB
TeX
456 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-51-first-impressions}{%
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\chapter{First Impressions}\label{chapter-51-first-impressions}}
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\epigraph{``All serve, by whip or by writ.''}{Inscription carved above the entrance to Stygia's Magisterium}
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The game made no sense, and I definitely wasn't saying that just because
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I was losing. I fanned my face with my cards, trading hard stares with
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Indrani and Akua. Sadly, though the former was already drunk she was
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also drunk enough she misremembered her cards half the time. That made
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trying to read her an exercise in pointlessness. I'd already lost two
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laundry chores to her because she'd been under the impression that a set
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of four cards in the same suit was actually a bad hand. My eyes narrowed
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as I studied her stupidly grinning face. Unless that was what she wanted
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me to think. Was she faking being drunker than she was?
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``Your values will not grow from staring at Archer,'' Diabolist mildly
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said.
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I scoffed at her. The wily ass had just tricked me out of two firewood
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chores after letting Indrani raise the bid through the roof when she had
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the most horrible hand we'd seen all night. I was beginning to suspect I
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was being had by the both of them complicitly.
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``This is a stupid game,'' I said. ``No wonder it's from the
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Wasteland.''
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``Oooh, she's got no trumps then,'' Indrani drawled. ``She only gets
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that ornery when she knows she's going to lose the round.''
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I raised my chin haughtily, above the petty squabbles of the lesser folk
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around me. I would win or lose as a dignified Queen of Callow. Probably
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lose, I admitted to myself, since I had two Knaves but no same-suit card
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to match them, making them worth a pittance of ten points even paired.
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The Three of Cups stared back back at my face mockingly, promising I
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would be washing the dishes of these traitorous wenches until the end of
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days.
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``No draw,'' I said, eager to get my beating over with instead of
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worsening the costs. ``Settle.''
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``Shit,'' Indrani said, and slapped her five cards down onto the stone.
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Two from the suit of Swords, but only a four and six, and no matches
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which meant I'd so far managed to pull a surprise upset. Diabolist
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gracefully added her own to the pile. The Knaves of Cups and Coins,
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with\ldots{} shit, equivalent values for the rest. This was going to get
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ugly. I hastily slapped down my own hand then withdrew by half an inch.
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``Succession,'' I said, and tried to slap my fingers back on the pile of
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cards before anyone else could.
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Akua's fingers almost slid under mine in time, but at the last moment
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she stopped and a wondrous wonderland of no longer having to traipse
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around this fucking godforsaken countryside for dead wood presented
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itself to my eyes. Then Indrani's knife went through my hand,
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technically touching the cards first and winning succession. There was a
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heartbeat of silence.
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``Archer,'' I said patiently. ``Is there a knife through my hand?''
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She mused over that, then met my eyes.
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``No,'' she told me. ``'tis but an illusion.''
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Naturally, I decked her in the face. Not full strength, but hard enough
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she went flying with a deeply satisfying yelp. Sighing, I drew the knife
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out of my hand and allowed Winter to knit the flesh back together.
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Holding it by the tip I pointed it accusingly at Diabolist.
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``You could have said something,'' I complained.
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``I debated saying `watch out, she has a knife','' Akua acknowledged.
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``But really, that could apply to any of us.''
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I kind of missed the days when the shade of my hated enemy had stuck to
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creepy intimate endearments instead of outright sassing me. Horrifying
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as the thought was, the Woe might have been a bad influence on
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Diabolist.
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``That's going to bruise, you know,'' Archer called out.
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``Be grateful I didn't aim for the spire, you wanton savage,'' I yelled
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back.
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We'd crossed the Chalice, that quiet lake to the northeast of Keter, and
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yesterday arrived near what could be considered the outskirts of the
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Everdark. The tall snow-capped peaks shared their name with the realm of
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the drow, though in truth their kind occupied only parts of it and all
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of those underground. This was one of the few parts of Calernia where
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digging too deep wouldn't unleash a sea of angry dwarves, though drow
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could hardly be considered a better outcome. There were not gates into
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the Everdark anymore, Indrani had told me. Millennia ago there had been,
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massive always-open panes of bronze that led into a hollowed out
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mountain at the heart of drow holdings, but those were long abandoned
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and Ranger had allegedly found the inside of the mountain collapsed when
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she'd tried her luck there. We'd have to try our hand with the Warrens
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instead. A pretty name, that, for what was a much less glorious reality:
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the Warrens were no great structure, only a sprawling mess of dank
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tunnels leading underground. Many were collapsed or leading to dead
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ends, and there were no surface markers indicating their presence. The
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only people who knew their locations for sure were the drow who still
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used them, sending roving bands of raiders and slavers to the surface.
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Those enterprising souls were not known for having a lot of success in
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those depredations. Ages ago, before the Golden Bloom had been seized by
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the elves, the now-broken kingdom of the Deoraithe had occasionally been
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troubled by them. Now, though? The surface paths led them into three
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dead ends: the Kingdom of the Dead, the Golden Bloom and the Chain of
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Hunger. None of these were known to be welcoming locales to outsiders.
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Once every few decades it was said a cunning and careful warband managed
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to slip through dwarven tunnels or other secret paths to reach northern
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Procer -- or much more rarely, northern Callow -- but even fewer of
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those who made it there succeeding at returning home. What little was
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known of the Everdark these days was learned through exiles, which were
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rare and tended to settle in Mercantis exclusively. Diabolist had hired
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a few of them as mercenaries, when she'd gone on her mass-murdering
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spree, and told me since she'd been rather unimpressed by the quality of
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their soldiery. Regardless, this was now the second day we were on the
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hunt for any path into the Warrens and we had nothing to show for it.
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Indrani had been told of a way down by Lady Ranger, and we'd begun there
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yesterday, but unsurprisingly it'd been brought down.
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It was also marked with blood-red runes, that from what Akua could piece
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together were a warning about `the Destroyer' having hunted there.
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Ranger had evidently proved as charming as one would expect. Dusting
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herself off, Indrani rose to her feet and shook away the bits of stone
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stuck everywhere in her clothes. She strolled back to the fire easily,
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maintaining the pretence nothing had happened with an admirable amount
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of conceit. She plopped herself back down and stretched like a lazing
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cat.
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``Next round, then,'' she said. ``I believe I won the succession, so Cat
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didn't get shit. Hand me my knife, would you?''
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I eyed her sceptically.
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``Do you promise not to stab me again?'' I said.
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``And I as well,'' Akua smoothly tacked on.
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We both ignored her.
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``I mean,'' Indrani hedged. ``Define stab.''
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``Archer,'' I firmly said.
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``It's not like it doesn't grow back,'' she quibbled. ``Also, I know you
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got all pissy last time, but you know I'm right about the mystery stew.
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Technically, since anything we cut would grow back, if we used it-``
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``We're not going to cut off my fingers and put them into the stew so
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you don't have to hunt rabbits anymore, Archer,'' I hissed. ``It's not
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happening.''
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``Ironic,'' Akua mused, ``that cannibalism only became matter of debate
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\emph{after} the Adjutant departed.''
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``A good queen would be willing to bleed for her people,'' Indrani
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solemnly said. ``I'm disappointed in you, Catherine.''
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``I know you're doing this just to rile me up,'' I said, eyes narrowing.
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``You know what? Fine. I bet you wouldn't even do it. If I cut off my
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thumb \emph{right now}, `Drani, you going to eat it?''
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There was a beat of silence.
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``Two firewood chores she doesn't,'' Diabolist announced.
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Those were mine. That utter wretch.
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``I'm a little full right now,'' Archer said.
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I let out a mocking humph.
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``So let's go with a little finger instead,'' she finished.
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I spun her knife around, catching it by the hilt.
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``You wouldn't,'' I said.
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``Hey, use your own,'' she protested. ``I don't want to get fae stuff
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all over it.''
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``You \emph{just} stabbed me, you ass,'' I yelled.
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``I mean, you can't prove that,'' Indrani mused. ``Akua's more or less
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dead, so in Callow she can't be a witness in a trial. It's your word
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against mine.''
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``I'm going to break your knife,'' I told her bluntly.
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``Don't, it has great sentimental value,'' she objected. ``I think I
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killed a guy for it.''
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``To clarify,'' Diabolist said. ``Did you kill him because you wanted
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the knife, or did you kill him and \emph{then} want the knife?''
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Indrani stroked her chin thoughtfully.
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``Yes,'' she replied.
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I laid a delicate finger on the tip of the blade, still holding the
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hilt, and made eye contact with my rebellious minion.
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``I will send you back to Laure in chunks,'' Indrani seriously promised.
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``At least they won't be used in stew,'' I replied just as seriously.
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I caught her wrist when she tried to wrestle me down, but she half-leapt
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at me and we went tumbling into the rocks. I dropped the knife to free
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my hand, but she slammed her arse into my belly before I could push down
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her shoulder. I flipped us around, and tumbling towards a slope we went.
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In between having a faceful of Indrani's clothes in my face, I glimpsed
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Akua discreetly pawing through the deck of cards. I repressed a sigh.
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She was stacking it, wasn't she? A hard bump against the ground jostled
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me out of my despair, and I wiggled so Indrani wouldn't manage to tie my
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wrists together with her scarf. She was a fair hand at brawling, but
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then so was I did have the advantage of being able to lift her with a
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single hand if I needed to. I tugged at her leg and elbowed her in the
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stomach, climbing on top and forcing her into a bed of pebbles. Rustle,
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rustle. No footsteps, but grass parting under feet.
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``Oh, I get it,'' Indrani smirked. ``Give me a moment.''
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She tugged down the neckline of her shirt and thrust out her admittedly
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shapely tits.
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``I'm ready,'' Indrani announced theatrically. ``Ravish me, Black Queen.
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I am powerless before your might.''
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``Archer, now is-`` I began.
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``I get it,'' she winked. ``Hey, Shady Business! Go for a walk or
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something. My legendary charms have finally overwhelmed her.''
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``That's not what I meant,'' I said, almost as irritated by the pun as
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the interruption.
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Her brow rose, a salacious grin splitting her face.
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``Good news, Fae Maiden,'' she announced. ``You're back in the game.
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Lose the top first, I've been pretty curious.''
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``We're about to have company,'' I spoke in Kharsum, offering Indrani a
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flirtatious smile to keep up the pretence for watching eyes.
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``\emph{Yeah} we are,'' Indrani said, wiggling her eyebrows, but the
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moment I loosened my grip she began reaching for one of the sundry
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knives always on her.
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They were creeping through the stones now. The slope to the left,
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leading to a narrow ledge skirting the flank of a rock spire. There'd
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been a stretchof sparse grass beneath it, I remembered. \emph{Not much
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green, though. They have to be more than a few if they made that much
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noise going sneaking through.} I inhaled, yet there was no fear in the
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wind. I could almost discern heartbeats, but they were too muted to tell
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apart. Sorcery, or some natural trait? I got up, turning my back to
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where they were approaching from, and offered a hand to Archer.
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``We doing this or what?'' she grinned.
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``Go easy on me,'' I said. ``My back's still aching.''
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The sound of a cord being pulled taut was the opening salvo of the
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dance. I tore away from Archer, blade already half-formed in my hand,
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and sped forward without missing a beat. I did not need to speak orders
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to the others. Both Akua and Indrani had been in enough scrapes, either
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at my side or not, to need no instructions when blades came out. My
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first drow sighting was little more than a glimpse of silvery eyes set
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in an angular grey face flanked by strips of obsidian: a heartbeat later
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the enemy had vanished, pressing itself against the dead angle of the
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slope. An arrow went flying from above, arced perfectly towards Akua's
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silhouette by the fire, but when it went through her chest all that
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happened was the shattering of ice. She was long gone.
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``Archer, handle above,'' I called out. ``I want prisoners.''
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``Spoilsport,'' she yelled back, landing in a roll that scattered her
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beddings as she grabbed her longbow.
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I'd keep the ones down here busy, trying to limit the damage. I could
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hear faint heartbeats down the slope, just out of my sight, and they had
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quickened. They were waiting for me, to spring attacks in that moment
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where my eyes would be seeking them out and they would have me right in
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their sights. If I'd still been the Squire, that might have scored them
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a wound. Now, though? With a flick of the wrist I formed four monoliths
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of ice in the air above where they should be lying in wait and allowed
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them to drop. There were murmured sentences in a language I did not
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know, but it seemed they had no parry. The working flushed them out,
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seven of them scrambling away from the falling ice. Warriors, one and
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all, or at least drow in good shape wearing armour. The sight if it was
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strange to me, after fighting the soldiery of the west. No steel there,
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no plate or mail: small strips of obsidian fell down to their knees in a
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thick layer, kept together by barely visible strips of leather. My eyes
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were sharp enough to find the discreet runes carved onto the pieces,
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though I knew not their meaning or purpose. There were few differences
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among them. None looked terribly older than the others -- were they
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human, I would have believed none older than their late twenties -- and
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I could hardly even tell them apart. The helms, though, had some slight
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variations. All of them were thin incomplete circles of obsidian closely
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keeping to the frame of their faces, keeping hair out and going all the
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way down to the beginning of angular chins. From that dark glass, caps
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of leather descended towards the back of their necks, set with small
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round stones, save for one drow. The lower part of that one's cap had a
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line of long dark feathers tickling down to its back.
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Well, the one with the fancy hat tended to be the one in charge. It
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would do.
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While I'd been sifting through the sight of them, they'd recovered from
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the surprise. Before the ice even hit the ground one of them tossed an
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iron-tipped javelin at me, though from the corner of my eye I caught
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another danger. The archer had come out and fired another arrow. I could
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hear Archer pulling at her own bow, though, so I instead I focused my
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attention on the javelin. It was well-thrown, aimed right at the centre
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of my chest. It was also laughably slow to my senses after the kind of
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fights I'd picked of late. I snatched it out of the air by the shaft and
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pivoted, throwing it back at the same drow twice as fast. To my
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surprise, it did not duck. Instead its entire body flickered, shadows
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swallowing it whole, and it fell into a pool of darkness that stretched
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and slithered across the stony ground only to reform a dozen feet to the
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side into the same person. Well, that was a new trick.
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``Surrender,'' I called out.
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I realized just after that I'd forgotten about the arrow, musing it
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wouldn't exactly set the right tone if the moment after demanding
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surrender I got shot. As it happened, Archer pulled through.
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``Trick shot,'' she crowed.
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Her own arrow tore through the fletching of the one the drow had fired,
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sending it spinning away from me, and it continued at a sharp angle
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upwards. The sound of obsidian shattering and a pained grunt followed.
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The one with the fancy hat spoke something in drow tongue, and they all
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scattered into the shadows. Literally. Lines of darkness spread out, too
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many for me to follow them all. They had not, unfortunately for them,
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accounted for Diabolist. The scent of blooming ice filled the air as she
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formed a construct right to the side of a fleeing drow, fingers of frost
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ripping the warrior out of the shadowy tendril by the throat. To my
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approval, she'd gone for Fancy Hat.
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``We have your leader,'' I called out. ``Drop your weapons or she'll
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snap his neck.''
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Fancy Hat tried to flicker away again, but I wasn't having any of that.
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I flicked my wrist and a band of shadow tightened around its throat,
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keeping him in Akua's tender embrace as the flicker\ldots{} failed, for
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lack of a better word. A javelin punched through the warrior's chest a
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heartbeat later, tearing at Diabolist's construct behind it. Right,
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drow. Infamously not the most loyal of companions. If that'd been the
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only one that could speak Lower Miezan, I was going to be \emph{pissed}.
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``All right, the hard way it is,'' I grunted.
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The kickback from my running start shattered the ground beneath it, and
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a heartbeat later I was in the midst of them. One pooled into shadows,
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but an arrow nailed it and it flickered back into drow form with a leg
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pierced through, hissing in pain. I handled the rest as gently as I
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could. Spikes of shadow nailed one to the ground, another was sent to
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think about what he'd done in a bubble of ice and I shaped my sword into
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a spear for the third, throwing it straight through its foot when it
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tried to flicker away. There'd been eight in whole, and with one dead
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and two clipped by Archer that left\ldots{} two. One was legging it back
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towards the grass. I let it run -- might learn the way into the Warrens
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from it, assuming that was how they'd all come to the surface. The last
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stared at me with wide eyes and dropped its curved obsidian blade,
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slowly kneeling and putting its hands behind its neck.
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``Diabolist, containment,'' I ordered.
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An exertion of will had wings coming out of my back and I rose up,
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following behind the runner. It saw me, and flickered. Clicking my
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tongue disapprovingly against the roof of my mouth, I went down into a
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dive. No more running, then. Too much a risk of losing it if it stuck to
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that form. I wasn't even halfway caught up when the drow emerged from
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the dark tendril, grey skin gone pale, and began to run away on foot.
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\emph{So it's exhausting to remain like that}, I thought. I wasn't
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surprised. There was no such thing as power without a cost. I swooped
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down like a hawk, boots landing on its shoulders, and it folded without
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a fight. A bit too much, actually. Its head hit a stone at a bad angle,
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and with a sharp breath I knelt by its side to check if it was still
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alive. My fingers went to the jugular, but there was no heartbeat to
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found there. Drow were only so similar to humans, then. I formed a flat
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piece of ice and put it before its mouth, tension leaving my shoulders
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when the surface fogged. Its forehead was bleeding and its eyes closed,
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but it wasn't dead yet. I swung the body over my shoulder and walked
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back to the skirmish field, finding the others had gathered the drow
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together in my absence. Most were bleeding, though we'd avoided outright
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lethal wounds. Even a lesser one could kill if you bled long enough,
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though, so the offer of wounds tended might be leverage we could use. I
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dropped the unconscious drow to the side of the others.
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``All accounted for,'' Diabolist said.
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I nodded. Archer rested her elbow on my shoulder, eyeing our prisoners
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with a deeply unimpressed look on her face.
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``Was that trick really all they had?'' she said. ``I'm feeling a little
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shafted, not gonna lie.''
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``You can't use the kind of opponents we've had recently as measuring
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stick,'' I said. ``We've been scrapping with some of the scariest people
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on the continent.''
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``They could have brought a mage, at least,'' she complained.
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``Night's young,'' I replied, shrugging her elbow off me. ``There could
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be others.''
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None of the drow were speaking, or even meeting my eyes. They remained
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kneeling and looking down, what little I could see of their faces
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resigned. \emph{They think we're going to kill or enslave them}, I
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realized.
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``Do any of you understand this language?'' I asked in Lower Miezan.
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No answer.
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``Do you speak Mtethwa?'' I tried in the eponymous tongue.
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``Why would \emph{anyone} want to speak that if they didn't have to?''
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Indrani mused.
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I glanced at Diabolist.
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``You wouldn't happen to\ldots{}''
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``Speak Crepuscular?'' she finished. ``I do not. For much the same
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reason I do not speak cockroach.''
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``I'm disappointed in your tutors, Akua,'' I informed her.
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``Indeed,'' Diabolist drily replied. ``How dare they fail to teach me a
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language spoken only by a race that has not been seen in the Empire for
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centuries, whose influence in the broader continent is so insignificant
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some scholars do not mention them in the latest histories at all.''
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``Yes,'' I agreed without missing a beat. ``It was very inconsiderate of
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all of you.''
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``Hey, disappointments,'' Indrani called out in passable Chantant. ``Do
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any of you understand me enough to be shamed by my scorn?''
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Three of them stiffened. I grinned, and not pleasantly.
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``Would you look at that,'' I murmured in the same language. ``It's
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finally paid off. All of you who understand me, get up. We're going to
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have a nice, civilized chat.''
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Indrani choked on her tongue at that, which did not reassure them in the
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slightest.
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