473 lines
20 KiB
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473 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-53-gloom}{%
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\chapter{Gloom}\label{chapter-53-gloom}}
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\epigraph{``I am ever amused to hear men speak of senseless violence. What
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is violence, if not the failure of reason? One might as well bemoan the
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wetness of water.''}{King Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand}
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``So what are we doing with the spares?'' Indrani asked.
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It was bluntly put, as was her wont, but she wasn't wrong to ask the
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question. Ivah, after being further questioned, had been pretty clear:
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the only way for someone to pass through the Gloom was with the obsidian
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`feathers' the drow were wearing. We'd had a corpse already, so one of
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us was covered. Two more prisoners had to be stripped of their armour to
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make sure we'd pass without trouble, though, and that left the issue of
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what we'd now be doing with them.
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``We can't take them into the Gloom,'' I said. ``Ivah was vague -- I
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think it doesn't actually know a lot on the subject -- but the
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implication was that we'd just `lose' them the way Ranger got lost.''
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It was still night, though now dawn was a great deal closer. While Akua
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saw to the wounded, I'd told Indrani she should catch a nap. We'd be
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moving out as soon as she was rested, since I saw no point in idling
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around the surface any longer now that we had a guide. I softly inhaled
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the lingering scent coming from the cup of tea in my hand. Actually
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drinking it was nothing to write home about, but the smell was strangely
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pleasant. I'd though nothing of it, at first, but now that it'd become a
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habit I was realizing I'd seen something like this before. The fae in
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Skade had taken delight in small, ephemeral things too. A lot more than
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in the physical pleasures I'd once preferred.
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``So that'd be releasing them, pretty much,'' Indrani mused. ``I take it
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we have some issues with that.''
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``They came to the surface to slave and kill,'' I said. ``It'd be
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irresponsible to simply let them loose after capturing them.''
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My friend shrugged, hazelnut eyes tinted with indifference. She'd yet to
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slip on her leather coat, or even her mail, wearing instead thick grey
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cloth cut close to her form. The only touch of panache to the drab
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attire was the dark linen scarf hanging from her neck, some kind of
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weave allegedly particular to Mercantis. It was certainly finer than
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anything I'd seen come out of Callowan weaver shops, and I knew it could
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be used to breathe through noxious fumes if she needed it to. It was one
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of the few possessions I'd ever seen Indrani care for, save for her bow.
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I'd gathered from idle talk that both were gifts from Ranger.
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``So kill them,'' she said. ``We never flinched at that before.
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Crucified a bunch of Praesi after Second Liesse, didn't you? Those you
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didn't make into your most expendable soldiers.''
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``They were all complicit in mass slaughter,'' I told her. ``And it was
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the mages I had crucified, those who had a direct hand in the killing of
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innocents. This is different.''
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Killing Malicia's minion who'd tried to surrender came much closer to
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the line, in my eyes, but it'd been a trick played on an enemy. It felt
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like a step closer to becoming someone I cared little for to have played
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it in the first place, but I could swallow my discomfort.
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``They're slavers, Cat,'' Indrani mildly said. ``Kill them all, let the
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Gods sort it out.''
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``Their entire civilization practices slavery, as I understand it,'' I
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reminded her. ``Should I murder my way through the whole lot?''
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``Their entire civilization didn't pull blades on us,'' she said. ``They
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did.''
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``Then we're killing them for pulling blades, not being slavers,'' I
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pointed out.
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``Sure,'' Indrani said. ``Let's kill them for that, then. I'll do it
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myself, if you're feeling contrary.''
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``My point was that we \emph{don't} do that,'' I said.
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``Oh, for fuck's sake,'' she muttered. ``Cat, what else can we do? You
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don't want to release them and we can't keep them. There's not a lot
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left, is there?''
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No, I grimly thought. There wasn't.
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``Let them settle it the drow way, then,'' Indrani suddenly said.
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``You're being all lawful, so let them follow their own damned laws.''
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``They don't \emph{have} laws, Archer,'' I replied in a low voice.
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``They seem to murder each other at the drop of a hat.''
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She met my eyes, the deep tan of her skin seeming even deeper under
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cover of dark.
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``You need to make a decision,'' Indrani said, ``about why we're going
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into the Everdark. Because if you're going down there to murder bigwigs
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until their people are terrified into playing nice, I'm on board. They
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have it coming, let them choke on it. But if you're just going down
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there for an army, Catherine, there's going to be darker lines to cross
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than this.''
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I grimaced, then looked away. Once more, she was not wrong. I'd known
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going in that this would be ugly business. My conversation with Ivah had
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only lent weight to the notion. It was an odd thing to hear a person
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seeming otherwise perfectly reasonable to dismiss the rest of the
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continent as cattle and preach the virtues of cold-blooded murder
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without a hint of irony. Even the Praesi kept a veil over that, twisting
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the act into some kind of wicked art. The drow had spoke of killing
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without reason as if there was no need for pretext or justification, and
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I suspected it had not been one of the stronger Mighty. Those at the top
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of the pyramid would have swum through a sea of blood to get there, and
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it was them I'd need to make pacts with. Them and the Priestess of
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Night, who was the very architect of this bloody misery.
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``I can't fix an entire empire,'' I admitted tiredly. ``I can barely
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even handle Callow, and that's with a second born for the work.''
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``Then we don't pretend,'' Indrani said calmly. ``We don't go in
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half-baked, posturing like we're liberators. Because that's how we lose,
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Catherine -- by straying from what we're actually after. Don't swing for
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the toes if you want to cut a throat.''
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I clenched my fingers, then unclenched them.
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``Even letting them settle it by their laws,'' I said quietly. ``It's
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just posturing, isn't it? Foisting the dirty work onto them. The blood
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would still be on my hands, only with cowardice added to it.''
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``Responsibility's a bed of thorns,'' Indrani said. ``You keep lying
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down and then getting surprised at the bleeding. It's not on you to save
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every stranger you meet. Especially if they don't \emph{want} to be
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saved.''
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``Is it really too much to ask,'' I murmured, ``that we get to behave
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like decent souls, for once?''
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``There's a lot of those, at the feet of Above,'' my friend said. ``They
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don't tend to stick around long down here.''
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Maybe I was a coward, because when I gave the order it was for drow to
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settle it among themselves. The fought, until two were dead. The most
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heavily wounded, though they might have survived if they'd not been
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slain. Their Night was harvested by their killers as I watched in
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silence.
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But we put on the dead men's armour, and went into deeps.
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---
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I'd not been sure what to expect when we entered the Warrens. The
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Everdark was supposed to be a wreck, nowadays, its people fighting over
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faded glories they no longer knew how to restore. On the other hand, a
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lot of those tunnels should date back to when the drow had been more
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than a pack of backstabbers living in ruins of their own making. There
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wasn't a lot known about the days when the drow had been a power to
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reckon with: what records dated to when the era was theorized to have
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taken place were sparse and didn't tend to extend much further than
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whatever nascent city they'd been written in. In the echo Masego and I
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had eavesdropped on, the Wandering Bard had mentioned something called
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the Twilight Sages. That they'd `considered death the only sin'. That
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didn't exactly sound like pacifism, but it was a long way from the drow
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encountered now. The territory of the Everdark on the surface was
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smaller than Callow's, and nearly all of it mountainous, but then that
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didn't mean much: they were a subterranean people, like the dwarves and
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once upon a time the goblins. Their holdings would have been measured in
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depth more than in length or breadth.
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The Warrens ended up being tunnels. Just that. Not particularly
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well-maintained ones, damp and cold and occasionally half-collapsed, but
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they weren't strewn with bones or filled with packs of monsters. I kept
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pace with Ivah, at the head of our little band, and the drow led us
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forward unerringly from tunnel to tunnel. It'd already been a few hours
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and I could honestly see no difference between the paths we'd taken at
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the occasional crossroads and those we had not. We were going deeper,
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that much I'd felt. But there were no markers, no signs our guide could
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be drawing on.
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``How long before we enter the Gloom?'' I asked.
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Ivah flicked a silver glance at me.
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``We already have,'' it replied.
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My brow rose. I'd not felt so much as a speck of power. I was
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particularly sensitive to wards, nowadays, so the passing of a threshold
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should have been noticeable.
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``I can see no difference between when we first entered and now,'' I
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admitted.
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``Nor will you, Queen,'' it said. ``We bear feathers. There is no Gloom
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for us.''
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``So if we didn't have the feathers,'' I said. ``We\ldots{} wouldn't
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have seen the tunnels?''
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``We would see others,'' Ivah said. ``Leading nowhere.''
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That didn't sound like a ward. More like a domain, honestly, though it
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was a terrifying thought there could be an entity out there powerful
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enough to keep a domain going for centuries.
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``It seems too easy to cross,'' I said.
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``The \emph{nerezim} have pierced through before,'' Ivah said. ``Never
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for long. They rip ore from the stone and leave, do not linger.''
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``You mean the dwarves,'' I said.
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``That is so,'' Ivah agreed. ``They have slain Mighty with great
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machines of steel. They are not cattle.''
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``Because they killed drow,'' I frowned.
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My guide shook its head, rueful smile baring sharp white canines.
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``Because to them, it is us who are cattle,'' Ivah said. ``One does not
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fight \emph{nerezim}. One survives them, hiding until their purpose is
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fulfilled and they leave once more.''
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Well, it was almost heartening to know the Kingdom Under had everyone as
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terrified underground as they did on the surface. I'd begun to suspect
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that the Gloom had been placed to make sure the madness of the Everdark
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remained contained, but now another candidate had emerged: it might just
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be a sorcerous moat to keep the dwarves at bay. The Kingdom Under was
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not known to tolerate rivals underground, as the ancient exodus of the
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goblins tribes to the surface had made abundantly clear. I let the
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conversation lapse after that, though boredom saw me speak again when
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the journey through the tunnels continued to stretch on.
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``You said you used to be a rylleh,'' I said. ``What is that, exactly?''
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``Dimas was rylleh,'' Ivah replied. ``What you look upon never was.''
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``And what did it mean, when Dimas was rylleh?'' I asked.
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``To earn this honour, one must know twelve Secrets and slay another
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rylleh,'' Ivah said. ``Even then, it is worthier to hold than to claim.
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Many do not last long.''
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I hummed.
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``And Dimas?'' I probed. ``How long did they last?''
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``A hundred years and three,'' Ivah proudly said. ``Many tried to claim
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its Secrets, for Dimas knew the three glorious arts of killing.''
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My eyes narrowed. First at the revelation that my guide was over a
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century old. Scholars argued about how long drow could physically live,
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but most ascribed them a lifespan no longer than a human's. Apparently
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that was incorrect. More importantly, there'd been an implication to
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what Ivah said.
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``Dimas knew these arts,'' I slowly said. ``Ivah does not?''
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The drow eyed me with surprise.
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``Night was taken from Dimas, save the last sip,'' it said. ``Tiarom
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knew no Secrets, and so none were learned from the harvest.''
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``You make it sound like there is more to the Night than the shadow
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tricks,'' I said.
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``That is so,'' Ivah said, then touched its lips. ``Shapeless and
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shaped, encompassing all. The worthy take. The worthy rise.''
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\emph{It's knowledge too}, I realized.
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``Those three glorious arts of killing, what are they?'' I asked.
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``Spear and blade and bow,'' Ivah said. ``Dimas harvested many, to learn
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them whole. It was great accomplishment.''
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I breathed in sharply. So by killing someone who knew one of those
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Secrets they could just become a master swordsman instantly? That was
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\emph{insane}. You couldn't just create knowledge out of nothing, that
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wasn't the way Creation worked. \emph{Unless it's the same knowledge}, I
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thought. \emph{Passed from killer to killer, since times immemorial.}
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Were they just passing around the same few learnings, one corpse at a
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time?
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``Ivah,'' I quietly said. ``Can someone add to the Night?''
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``That is poor choice,'' the drow amusedly said. ``What worth is there
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in empowering Mighty by one's death?''
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``If a drow learned to make steel,'' I said. ``And someone killed and
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harvested them. Would \emph{they} know how to make steel?''
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``Weapon-making is a powerful Secret,'' Ivah acknowledged. ``The
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Ysengral hoard it mercilessly, and Ysengral itself hunts for the finest
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whispers.''
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So anytime someone learned anything useful they were murdered for it.
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Gods. No wonder they lived in ruins. If someone tried to restore them
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they'd probably get stabbed for the knowledge of how they wanted to do
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it.
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``Is Ysengral a sigil or a Mighty?'' I asked, slightly confused.
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``A sigil is a Mighty,'' Ivah told me, tone implying I was a little
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slow.
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``So Dimas' old sigil, Zapohar\ldots{}'' I prodded.
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``Zapohar is Mighty, of great influence in the cabal of the Silent
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Song,'' the drow said. ``Though forced out of Great Perun, the Zapohar
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are first of the inner ring. Many fear them.''
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``And was that how Dimas ended?'' I asked. ``Fighting for the Zapohar?''
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``Dimas grew fat and lazy,'' Ivah bitterly said. ``Forgot that many
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coveted its Secrets. That which broke it was worthier to hold them, and
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now stands second under Zapohar.''
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So backstabbed by an ambitious colleague, not beaten by an outsider. And
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still it seemed to feel some sort of pride for the Zapohar, instead of
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hatred towards the sigil that had seen it laid low. That smacked of
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Wasteland morals to me, the way Praesi highborn claimed that hatred and
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enmity were unrelated matters. It seemed a touchy subject, regardless,
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so I didn't press any further. There'd been something else I was curious
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about, anyway.
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``Tell me about the Kodrog,'' I said. ``We're heading into their
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territory, right?''
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``They lurk near the Gloom, unfit for the strife of the inner ring,''
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Ivah said with open disdain. ``Kodrog's Night was thinned by the Mighty
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Soln, three hundred years past. It fled to the outer rings and has not
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returned.''
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``Soln didn't kill it?'' I asked.
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``Kodrog is said to know whispers from the Secret of Many Lives,'' the
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drow informed me. ``A single death was not enough, though it lost much
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Night in defeat.''
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``I thought you said the Kodrog were strong,'' I pointed out.
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``To meat,'' Ivah said. ``To drow. To the least of the Mighty. Not to
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great sigils. It will crush you like an insect, Queen, but that is
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different matter.''
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``I wouldn't count on it,'' I mildly said. ``Is it the Kodrog that gave
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you all your feathers?''
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The drow shook its head.
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``I journeyed to Great Mokosh under brand of disgrace, to be granted
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this last chance,'' Ivah said. ``There the Sukkla discharge holy duty,
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having been granted sigil from the Sve of Night itself. Any can claim
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feathers, if they know the tongues of the Burning Lands and despair
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enough to try striding them.''
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``So it's a holy duty, to try the Burning Lands,'' I said. ``Why?''
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Ivah touched its lips once more.
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``It serves the purpose of the Night,'' it said.
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Oh, that did not sound all that pleasant.
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``Killing cattle,'' I said. ``Taking it. What does it do for you?''
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``The Night grows,'' Ivah smiled. ``To do such sacred act would redeem
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any disgrace.''
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``I want to be perfectly clear, here,'' I said. ``If you kill humans, or
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any other race. It grows the Night?''
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``That is so,'' the drow reverently said. ``All is one. All is strife.
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The worthy rise.''
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I sucked at my lip.
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``Killing undead,'' I said. ``Would it also grow the Night?''
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The drow paled.
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``Speak not of the Hidden Horror,'' Ivah whispered. ``For its crown is
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dawn, and that pale light is the end of all things. Only the mad would
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enter the eye of the Host of Death.''
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``It does, doesn't it,'' I said. ``The necromancy that keeps its army
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walking, you can claim it for the Night.''
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``I say no more,'' Ivah insisted. ``It sees all. It hears all.''
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Well, Neshamah had clearly paid these people a visit at some point after
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his ritual. The drow were a murderous bunch, they shouldn't be so scared
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unless the Dead King had spanked them roughly after being provoked. I
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honestly wasn't sure to root for there. Still, I was pleased to have
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learned that. If the undead had been of no worth to the drow's societal
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murder pyramid it would have been much, much harder to gain any ground
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there. Ivah had been pretty high up the ladder at some point, by the
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sound of it, but he'd still been someone's minion. The people on the
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notch above might be less terrified at the idea of a fight with Keter,
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if they were offered the right incentives. I had a few notions about
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what those mighty be, though the offer I knew would be most tempting was
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one I very much wanted to avoid.
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``Let's talk about the Kodrog, then,'' I said. ``I'm looking for
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practical information. Number of Mighty, which is known for what. How
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many fighters to they have, what are their defences like?''
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I'd come with the intent to negotiate, but I might have actually found a
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place where my propensity to stab before making an offer would be
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considered reasonable. If I could get through without killing, I would.
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But if blades came out, well, it wouldn't be the first time I walked
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over a few corpses to get where I needed to be. Ivah had unfortunately
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little to share, since it'd been ushered through Kodrog territory into
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the Gloom after copious mockery and a few beatings, but little was
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better than nothing. By the sounds of it, there were a few thousand drow
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scattered across several large caverns but only a small part of those
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were considered fit to fight. Even fewer of those would be Mighty, which
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I'd mentally put in the same league as half a company of Watch.
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Dangerous, if you took them lightly, but rather killable. If Archer hung
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at the back taking care of those with fancy Secrets, Diabolist and I
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could handle the brawlers. Unlike on the surface, I didn't intend to
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take prisoners here. Wouldn't run down anyone fleeing either, but if
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they became an obstacle capture wouldn't be the objective.
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It took us three days to leave the Gloom. Over the last stretch of the
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journey the tunnels changed from rough bare stone to something more
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ornate. Base-relief was carved on every surface, even the floor and
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ceiling, though the sculptures under our feet were covered by moss and
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dirt. It was my first look at anything the drow had made, and to my
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utter lack of surprise pretty much everything depicted was their kind
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sallying out to the surface and winning glorious battles before
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returning to the Everdark covered in glory, riches and slaves. There
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were also depictions of single combat between drow champions, though
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oddly enough they did not seem to be to the death. The loser was made
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servant of the winner, carrying their spear and quiver. Honour duels?
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Those were supposed to be common in Levant. The Northern Steppes as
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well, though orcs didn't stop until one of the fighters was dead and
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dinner. The last step was a threshold carved into the tunnel, though one
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without gates, and there we found fresh signs of life. Symbols had been
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painted in blood over them, which Ivah informed me promised sundry
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torments to all venturing in the holdings of Mighty Kodrog.
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``We now reach the realm of the Mighty, Queen,'' our guide told us.
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I nodded.
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``Bargain was struck,'' I said evenly. ``We part ways now, if you wish,
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with no enmity or further demands.''
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The drow hesitated.
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``I walk with you a little longer,'' it said. ``Until we reach the ring
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of stones.''
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The Kodrog apparently held the remains of an old border fortress, which
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barred the entrance to their territory proper. It was probably as deep
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as Ivah could go without being openly associated with us.
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``Follow behind, then,'' I said. ``Archer, Diabolist -- look sharp.''
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``Oh Gods, \emph{finally},'' Indrani whined.
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I took the lead through the threshold, tough my advanced faltered after
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a single step. The others trailed in after me as I stood there in
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silence, ignoring the words they spoke. Well, we'd found the Kodrog. The
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cavern I'd entered was twice as large as the throne room in Laure, its
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uneven ceiling a natural dome. It could have fit at least a thousand
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comfortably, which I knew for a fact because it currently did.
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The floor was covered with dead drow, thick as a carpet.
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``Shit,'' I finally cursed. ``I'd better not get blamed for this.''
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