545 lines
21 KiB
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545 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-52-finesse}{%
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\chapter{Finesse}\label{chapter-52-finesse}}
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\epigraph{``No, see, you'll profit as well. All you need is to convince five
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others of contributing coin and when they do you'll get a part of their
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own contribution. It'll all work out, I promise.''}{Dread Emperor Irritant, the Oddly Successful, convincing High Lords
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to invest in the construction of ritual pyramid outside Ater}
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Even after having done arguably worse things, I'd never warmed to
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torture. I'd once had an interesting conversation with Black about it,
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where he'd been somewhat equivocal but overall inclined to agree with
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me. Torture, he'd noted, tended to be unreliable. Some people folded the
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moment you pulled out their fingernails, sure, but those with a little
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more staying power would need a great deal of violence before they
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started talking. And at that point, how could you tell whether they were
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saying something because they thought you wanted to hear it or because
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it was actually true? Some heroes side-stepped the whole issue by having
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truth-telling abilities, but that was bullshit divine intervention --
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you couldn't reproduce those results with spells, not with any degree of
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reliability. I tended to get by on my increased senses, since fae eyes
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and fae ears were much harder to trick than their human equivalent, as I
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now suspected the Lone Swordsman once had. William hadn't gotten a pat
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on the back from Above and glaring lights appearing whenever someone
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fibbed at him, he'd had to rely on Name senses to read the opposition.
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He'd been quite good at it, in retrospective.
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I'd had to mutilate my own soul to get better at that trick than he was,
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so for once good ol' Willy had me beat from the grave.
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I stared down at the drow kneeling in front me, frowning. There'd been
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three who'd stiffened when Indrani had spoken in Chantant, and we'd
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separated those from the rest of the prisoners immediately. I'd then
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shaped Winter into a thick spire of ice hollow on the inside and ordered
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the first prisoner brought in. Akua was at my side, as she likely had
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more experience at this kind of thing than any of us. Indrani had been
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curious but I wanted someone keeping an eye on the rest of the drow. A
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flick of the wrist shaped a rough bench of frost and I sat down, eyes
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never leaving the still-silent prisoner. Diabolist had stripped it of
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its helmet, revealing bone-white hair cut so short I could almost see
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the skin beneath. I would have preferred the obsidian armour off as
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well, but there were no obvious clasps to it: I suspected it was like a
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mail shirt, put on with another person's help.
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``We know you understand us,'' I said.
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The drow did not react. Denial? Possibly. Or resignation.
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``Akua, raise its head,'' I ordered.
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Diabolist knelt by the prisoner's side, forcing the chin upwards so the
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drow would have to meet my eyes. It resisted, but only half-heartedly.
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The eyes were not as silvery as I'd thought. The sclera was white as a
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human's would be, though noticeably larger, but it was the iris that
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caught my attention. It was not entirely silver: there were strands of
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the colour to be found, more visible than the rest, but the base was a
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dull brown. Some sort of sorcerous blowback? The black pupil at the
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centre was uncomfortably shaped, more oval than circle, and I'd yet to
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see a single drow blink. In a way, it was more troubling to look at
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their kind than a fae -- the fairies were inhuman, with only the barest
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varnish of similarity, but the drow was close enough to human that the
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discomfort was felt more steeply.
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``What's your name?'' I asked.
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Silence. There was fear in the air now. I drummed my fingers against my
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leg, then sighed.
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``\textbf{Answer me},'' I Spoke.
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The prisoner's face twitched into a pained rictus. It was fighting the
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command, proving to have stronger will than most. It was not enough.
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``No one,'' it hissed, voice dim. ``Nothing.''
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Diabolist rose to her feet and the drow stubbornly went back to looking
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down.
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``Blind it,'' Akua suggested evenly. ``Rip out the eyes and toss it back
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out bleeding in sight of the others.''
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``There's no need for that,'' I said.
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This one looked unwilling to provide useful answers even when its arm
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was being twisted, so we'd try the others before seeing if it was
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necessary to resume the proceedings a little more sharply. Diabolist
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wasn't wrong that a dollop of fear would be useful, but she was also
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proving that even as a shade she had that horrid Wasteland disregard for
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people. I would not resort to knives without exhausting every other
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possibility first. I'd gotten an idea of the drow's voice, from that
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unwilling reply, enough for glamour. Illusions did not come naturally to
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me, as even now they required more focus than I was typically able to
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spare when in a fight, but I had the time to weave it properly tonight.
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A small sphere of shining light formed over my open palm and the drow
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breathed in sharply when a decent approximation of its voice began
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screaming hoarsely into the night. I kept the glamour going for thirty
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heartbeats, then ended it with a harsh snap. Akua's scarlet eyes
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followed me as I dismissed the sphere and spun glamour again, resting a
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hand atop the drow's head: a heartbeat later half its face appeared
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brutally scorched to the naked eye, nose cut off and one eye left a
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bloody empty socket.
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``Sleep,'' I ordered, and forced a sliver of Winter into its shaken
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mind.
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It dropped without a sound.
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``Drag it outside,'' I ordered Diabolist. ``In sight of the others. Then
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get me another.''
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``By your will,'' the shade said, and smoothly bowed.
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I flicked my wrist and shaped one last glamour. An eye, this one, though
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since I'd never actually seen a drow eye out of an eye socket I had to
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improvise to an extent. Akua came back quicker than I'd expected, the
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fresh prisoner moving gracefully into the room. I was \emph{pretty} sure
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I recognized this one. It'd been the one who actually surrendered when
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things went to shit for their warband. Still, it wouldn't do to leave
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the point half-made. I popped the glamoured eye into my mouth and
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chewed, smiling pleasantly at the new arrival. Its lips thinned,
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darkening to a deeper bloodless grey.
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``That will not be necessary,'' the drow said in perfect Chantant.
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I swallowed. So did the prisoner.
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``Well, this is promising,'' I mused. ``Diabolist, make our friend a
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seat.''
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Ice bloomed and a block spun into existence. It was, I noted, with mild
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amusement, closer to the ground than my own seat. Praesi, huh. The
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drow's silvery eyes lingered on the sorcery before it took a seat. The
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silver strands were much deeper, in this one. I could see almost nothing
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of the original green. They were also\ldots{} less vivid than those of
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the previous prisoner. Interesting.
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``What's your name?'' I asked.
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``Ivah,'' it replied. ``Of no sigil.''
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``I'm Catherine Foundling,'' I said. ``Lately Queen of Callow, though
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I've picked up a few other titles over the years.''
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``I greet you humbly, Lately Queen,'' Ivah said.
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I resisted the urge to close my eyes. I was going to let that one go,
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for the sake of avoiding the awkwardness of a correction this early into
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the talk.
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``Just to make sure I'm addressing you properly,'' I said. ``Would you
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happen to be a boy drow or a girl drow?''
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Ivah blinked, silver fluttering behind long lashes. Not because it
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needed to, I suspected. It was a conscious expression of surprise.
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``I am no longer Mighty,'' it replied.
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``That, uh, was not the question,'' I said.
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``If you were human,'' Diabolist said. ``Which gender would you consider
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yourself to be?''
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Ivah looked a little uncomfortable.
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``Cattle has no gender,'' it said, sounding apologetic.
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``As a Callowan, I can tell you that's frankly terrible way to approach
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animal husbandry,'' I noted. ``But let's keep moving. You were\ldots{}
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Mighty, is that right?''
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``When still named Dimas, I was third under Zapohar and a rylleh in my
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own right,'' Ivah said. ``What stands beyond you was toppled and
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disgraced, harvested of all but a sip of Night and sent to die in the
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Burning Lands as final mockery.''
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My eyes narrowed. I lacked context for most of that, but there was one
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part I had guesses about. I tapped the side of my eye.
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``The silver,'' I said. ``Yours is dulled. It's this Night that caused
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it in the first place?''
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``That is so,'' Ivah sadly agreed.
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``Your people are said to pay obeisance to the Tenets of Night,''
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Diabolist said, standing at my back. ``The matter is linked, I take
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it.''
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``All is one,'' Ivah gravely said, touching its lips with two fingers.
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``All is strife. The worthy will rise.''
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``I don't like the sound of that,'' I told Akua in Kharsum. ``It's one
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thing for them to have some sort of cult paying dues to Below, but that
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silver in its eyes is no illusion.''
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``The drow mercenaries I hired were not capable of the shadow flicker,''
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Akua noted in the same. ``Perhaps the power ebbs away from the
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Everdark?''
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``That lot outside is bottom-feeders, Diabolist,'' I murmured. ``And
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still they were capable of a trick most Named wouldn't sneer at. There's
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something wrong here. If their lower ranks are this strong there's no
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way they'd be a ruin of an empire as they supposedly are.''
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``Unless,'' Akua said calmly, ``that very power is the cause of ruin.''
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My brow rose. That was possible, yes. Were they all fighting of this
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Night so ferociously they'd broken their own realm?
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``Ivah,'' I said. ``The other drow outside, were they also Mighty
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once?''
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The prisoner smiled thinly.
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``None of us are drow, Lately Queen,'' it said. ``Had we returned in
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glory, perhaps once more, but this is disgrace heaped upon disgrace.''
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So that was just going to keep happening, huh. Lovely.
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``I thought Mighty was a gender,'' I said.
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``Mighty \emph{are},'' Ivah stiffly said. ``We are not, no longer. Most
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of them never were. They fought under no sigils, nor knew the favour of
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cabals. Meat for harvest.''
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``Mighty are people,'' Akua suggested in Kharsum. ``And so those not
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Mighty, by definition, are not. Natural nobility, it would seem. Power
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earned or lost blade in hand.''
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``It's madness, Akua,'' I grunted. ``If the only way people can ever
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amount to anything in a society is by killing, that's all they'll
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ever\ldots{}''
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I trailed off. Well. Yeah, I supposed that \emph{would} collapse an
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empire. There would be a need to dig deeper into that nightmare of a
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culture later, but first there were immediate matters to be addressed.
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``Do you know a way into the Warrens?'' I asked the prisoner.
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``The path we took was also meant for our return,'' Ivah warily said.
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``The marks on our feathers allow for passage through the Gloom,
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twice.''
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``Your feathers,'' I repeated carefully, then leant forward to flick a
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finger on one of the strips of obsidian making up its armour. ``Those?''
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``It is so,'' the drow agreed.
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``What is the Gloom?'' Akua probed.
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``The gate into the realm of the Mighty,'' Ivah said. ``Only those
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marked may leave, or enter.''
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``Indrani told us that when Ranger tried to get into the Everdark she
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got stuck in the tunnels,'' I told Akua in Kharsum. ``Some kind of
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warded labyrinth, sounds like.''
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``We've enough at hand to salvage keys for ourselves,'' Diabolist said.
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``Though I would suggest we keep one guide to learn how to use it.''
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``I'm not going to just execute prisoners, Akua,'' I peevishly said.
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``Those unable to speak Chantant are useless to us,'' she pointed out.
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``It's not a question of usefulness,'' I said. ``\emph{We} \emph{don't
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execute prisoners}.''
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``Dearest, I understand that mercy is a useful tool,'' she assured me.
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``I do not dismiss it. Yet for it to have worth in the eyes of the
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enemy, there need be a cultural value assigned to it. There is no
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indication it is so with the drow.''
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``This isn't about the drow, Akua,'' I said. ``It's about us not putting
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holes in people who've surrendered. I've got no issue with killing on
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the field, and I've made my peace with assassinations when there's no
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other way to avoid making a mess. This is different. They're no real
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threat to us.''
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``They are blades we must then keep an eye on,'' Diabolist said.
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``Perhaps you and I are proof to such slights, but Archer is not.
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Nothing we have seen leads me to believe they will honour their
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surrender the moment the threat of death is lifted.''
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``If they break that understanding, after being made aware it exists,
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then they can be killed,'' I patiently told her. ``That's how keeping
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prisoners of war works, Akua.''
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``The warband sought to slay or enslave us, and gave no warning before
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striking,'' the shade reminded me. ``They have not earned such
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treatment. This is an unnecessary risk.''
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``It'd be easier to kill everyone, Diabolist,'' I said steadily. ``It
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always is. But when you behave like that, you end up living in the
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fucking Wasteland. Is this the simplest way to do things? No.~But it's
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how we do it, because if we don't act civilized then people don't act
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civilized with us.''
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Scarlet eyes flicked to the prisoner facing me. Ivah's eyes were
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watching us carefully, unable to understand the words but not beyond
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following the tones.
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``Will they?'' she wondered. ``Act civilized, even if we offer them such
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civility.''
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``It was always one of your worst habits,'' I coldly said, ``to burn
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bridges without ever trying to cross them. It may not work. We'll never
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know unless we \emph{try}.''
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Diabolist languidly shrugged.
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``I offer only perspective,'' she said. ``The decision was always
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yours.''
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``It's been made,'' I flatly said.
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I turned away from the shade, and cleared my throat.
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``Ivah,'' I said. ``I want you to guide us through the Warrens.''
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The drow's face fell.
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``The passage leads to the holdings of the Kodrog,'' it said carefully.
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``The Mighty of that sigil are said to be among the strongest of the
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outer rings.''
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``Stronger than the sigil you used to fight under?'' I asked.
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``The Zapohar once ruled a whole district of Great Parun,'' Ivah proudly
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said. ``Our Mighty claimed seats on no less than five cabals. The Kodrog
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would have been broken in an hour's passing, facing our wroth.''
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It grimaced.
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``Their wroth, now,'' the prisoner corrected sadly.
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``Parun was one of the great cities of the drow, before their empire
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broke apart,'' Akua told me in Kharsum. ``Though not the capital, which
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I recall to be named Tvarigu.''
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``I'd guess the more powerful tribes -- sigils, I suppose -- live in the
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old cities,'' I replied. ``Not sure what the cabals are, though. Some
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sort of alliance? Their Mighty seem to be able to belong to both at the
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same time.''
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``Warrior lodges, perhaps,'' the shade mused. ``Or an association of
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influential aristocrats. It is hardly unprecedented.''
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I'd ask our songbird later.
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``We can handle the Kodrog,'' I told Ivah. ``I'd rather avoid a fight if
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I can, but if I can't I assure you they're not going to stop us. We're
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looking to speak to, uh, your most powerful sigils. The people that make
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the real decisions for the Everdark.''
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``You speak of the entire realm of the Mighty,'' Ivah said
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questioningly.
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I nodded.
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``There is no such thing, Lately Queen,'' Ivah told me. ``No cabal has
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ever claimed to influence more than two cities, and the Hour of Twilight
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was massacred by its rivals a century past.''
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``All right, let me put it another way,'' I said. ``Is there anyone at
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all that if they speak, everyone in the Everdark will listen?''
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``\emph{Sve} of Night,'' the drow said in a hushed whisper, touching its
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lips again.
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``The Priestess of Night,'' Akua said, chancing a guess at the
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unfamiliar Crepuscular term.
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``That is cattle-term,'' Ivah reproachfully said. ``The Sve is Mighty.''
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Ah. That shed light, in a manner of speaking. So a Mighty was not male
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or female or anything else, they were \emph{just} Mighty. Priestess was
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a female term, in Chantant, so the implication would be insulting to the
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drow. I'd keep that in mind for future reference. No need to give insult
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to the people I'd come to bargain with.
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``And if the Sve gives an order, the Mighty will obey?'' I pressed.
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``The Sve has already given order,'' Ivah. ``It is the truth of us,
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embraced.''
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``If the Sve says the drow are going to war,'' I patiently tried.
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``Would people listen?''
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Ivah's face creased, folds in the skin appearing that no human could
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mimic.
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``It may be so,'' the prisoner said. ``The Sve does not speak, yet if
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the silence was broken all would hear of it.''
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``Then that's where we're headed,'' I said. ``To have a chat with the
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Sve.''
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The drow shivered.
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``Holy Tvarigu is forbidden,'' it told us. ``Ancient and powerful sigils
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guard the paths to it.''
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``I can be convincing. I'm known as a diplomat of great skill, on the
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surface,'' I lied.
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Akua was too self-controlled to snort, but the way she folded her arms
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together told me everything she thought about that mild reframing of
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that slight exaggeration.
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``It would be better to be slain,'' Ivah softly said. ``There are things
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worse than death.''
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Well, I hadn't expected the locals to be friendly from the start. Gods,
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when had anyone ever been?
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``Tell you what,'' I said. ``Get us into the realm of the Mighty, past
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the Gloom, and when we're there we'll change guides for the next stretch
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of the journey. You'll be free to go.''
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The drow's strange eyes narrowed.
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``You would speak oath to this?'' it asked.
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``I would,'' I said. ``And there are forces beyond your understanding
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that make me keep to those, when I care to give them.''
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Ivah hesitated.
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``I would be slain, even free,'' it admitted. ``I return bereft of
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Night, failing the terms of my exile.''
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Diabolist leaned forward.
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``Tell me, Ivah,'' she said. ``You spoke of the Night being harvested.
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From the living, as was done to you, but can this also be done to the
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dead?''
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``That is so,'' the drow said.
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``We have a corpse,'' she told me in Kharsum.
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The one she'd held, who'd been killed by his own warriors. An easy
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enough concession.
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``Do you need to have killed the person yourself to do the harvest?'' I
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asked.
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Ivah shook its head.
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``Due can be bestowed,'' the drow said. ``It is rare, yet not unknown.''
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``There was a warrior with feathers on their helmet,'' I said. ``If you
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harvested them, would that fix your problem?''
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``Tiarom was first in power among the warband,'' Ivah said, sounding
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rather eager. ``There would be enough to no longer walk as meat, though
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it would leave me well short of Mighty.''
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``That sounds like a yes,'' I said.
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I offered my hand.
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``Ivah of no sigil,'' I said. ``Should you take us past the Gloom and
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into the Everdark, I swear to return your freedom to you. We will part
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ways there without enmity or demand.''
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The drow looked at my hand curiously, then back at my eyes.
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``You're supposed to clasp it,'' I informed it.
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``Strange ways,'' the drow murmured, but without further fumbling we
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shook on it.
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I rose to my feet, stretching out.
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``All right, let's get this done,'' I said. ``Akua, see to the rest of
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the warband.''
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``Healing is no power of Winter,'' she reminded me.
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``You're telling me tending wounds wasn't something your tutors went
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over?'' I replied, eyebrow raised.
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``I will do what I can, if that is your wish,'' she conceded. ``Though I
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promise no miracles.''
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``Never considered those to be in your wheelhouse,'' I drily replied.
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``Come, Ivah. I'm getting curious as to this harvest of yours.''
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The silver-eyed warrior followed without a word. Indrani was carving
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away at a peace of wood, when I came out, sitting on a stone and
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watching the others.
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``Fruitful talks?'' she called out.
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``You might say that,'' I replied. ``Wanna see something I assume will
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be highly gruesome?''
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``Do I ever,'' she enthusiastically replied.
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``Come with me, then,'' I said. ``Where'd you leave the corpse?''
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She blinked.
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``Was I supposed to pick that up?'' she asked.
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``Where it died, then,'' I snorted.
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It was a short stroll down the slope to where Fancy Hat -- Tiarom,
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|
apparently -- had found himself on the bad end of drow politics. The
|
|
body was drenched with half-melted ice from Akua's construct, but
|
|
otherwise untouched.
|
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|
``Are we corpse-robbing?'' Inrdani mused. ``I thought we had, like,
|
|
moral objections to that.''
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``I'm putting this under religious exemption,'' I told her. ``Ivah, it's
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all yours.''
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``Many thanks, Lately Queen,'' the drow murmured, bowing.
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|
It dragged the body further away from the wetness even as I felt Archer
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stiffen.
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|
``Did they just-``
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``Don't you say a fucking word,'' I hissed.
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|
``Oh, that's making it into my next chat with Hakram for \emph{sure},''
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|
Indrani crowed.
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I valiantly ignored her, instead putting the full weight of my attention
|
|
on Ivah and its `harvest'. Kneeling at the dead body's side, the drow
|
|
closed the corpse's eyes before leaning over. I could barely make out
|
|
whispers in Crepuscular, low and rhythmic. Then the dead drow\ldots{}
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shivered. Liquid tendrils of darkness ripped out of the body, leaving
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bloody holes behind, and they slithered up Ivah's arm beneath the
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|
armour. The living drow exhaled. \emph{You are what you take}, a woman's
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|
voice whispered in my ear, in no tongue I knew.
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|
Ivah's eyes shone deep silver before dimming again, and I learned that
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|
this magical adventure was going to be a little more complicated than
|
|
I'd like.
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