780 lines
38 KiB
TeX
780 lines
38 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-55-outskirts}{%
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\chapter{Outskirts}\label{chapter-55-outskirts}}
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\epigraph{``Over the month I spent in Atalante I witnessed no fewer than two
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hundred debates take place under the gaze of the pale statues of the
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Temple of Manifold Truths, for the people of the city delight in such
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exercises of rhetoric as those of Stygia delight in bloodsport. The
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subjects varied from the purpose of mankind to the proper shape of
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apples, though the true wonder of the place was that I do not believe a
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single speaker left the Temple believing they had been wrong.''}{Extract from `Horrors and Wonders', famed travelogue of Anabas the
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Ashuran}
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I'd come across more than my fair share of impressive fortifications,
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over the years. Summerholm, the river-straddling Gate of the East.
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Liesse, whose walls had been old and half-abandoned yet still holding
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sorcery powerful enough to give pause to the full might of the Summer
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Court. Ater, the Dread Empire's own capital, with towering walls and
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massive gates that had held strong under the Tower's shadow for
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millennia. Keter, Crown of the Dead, a haunting spire of rock beholden
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to no laws but the Dead King's that had turned back crusade after
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crusade. This, though? This was laughable. There were fortifications in
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northern Callow, a region that had not known the touch of war for a
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hundred years before Procer created the passage, that were greater than
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this. When Ivah had called the `fortress' at the edge of Kodrog
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territory a ring of stones, I'd thought it half-poetry. Daoine and the
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eastern stretches of Callow boasted old fortifications called the same
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thing, ancient broken-down forts used in wars that predated the
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unification of the kingdom and peace with the Deaoraithe. Many of them
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had been made into the heart of small towns and villages, the hill-forts
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used as a guild hall or minor noble's seat. What I was looking at right
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now was not that: it was a literal ring of stones.
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A few narrow tunnels had led us out of the butcher's yard and into what
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had once been the lands of the Kodrog, our first approach into another
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large cavern almost intimidating. There were no corpses to be found, but
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thrice we came across trails of blood on the stone where dead drow had
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been dragged. The way into the great cavern was through an angle slope,
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narrow as the tunnel that had led us there, and part of me noted that
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this was a natural chokepoint. Easily defendable with a company of
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crossbowmen and some half-way decent infantry. The ancient drow
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apparently agreed, for mere feet beyond the end of the slope the ring of
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stones stood. The sight of it had me raising an eyebrow in skepticism.
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It wasn't indefensible, really. The slabs of granite making a loose
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circle of upright stones could serve as a curtain wall of sorts. Or they
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would have been able to, without the large gap in the slabs just to the
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side. Anyone could just\ldots{} walk right in. That wasn't a
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fortification so much as a decoration. The dwarves had apparently been
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of the same opinion, because they'd wasted no time filling it with
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corpses.
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I'd had dinner with Baroness Anne Kendal, after ascending to the throne,
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and over pheasant she'd praised me for how quickly I'd reacted to Akua
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unleashing devils at First Liesse. Said that most would have been
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stricken with terror, and that my swift decision to `conscript' everyone
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in the city had saved dozens of thousands of lives. I'd not quite had
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the heart to tell her by then I'd bared blades at things scarier than
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mere devils. When I came knocking at the gates of Liesse with the
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Fifteenth, even my legionaries no longer flinched in the face of the
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hosts of Hell. Masego had called it \emph{horror fatigue.} The way some
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people beheld so much terror their standards shifted and sights that
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would have once horrified them grew mundane. It was apparently a common
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phenomenon among Praesi sorcerers. On occasion it led to diseases of the
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mind, he'd noted, when mages witnessed so many terrors that it was the
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mundane matters of the rest of the world that grew eldritch to their
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eyes. I wondered if I was inching towards that, one slaughtering yard at
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a time, because the aftermath of brutality no longer stirred any great
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feeling in me.
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Most the corpses in the fort had not been slain there. There were tracks
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leading to tall piles beneath the stones, and even taller ones inside
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the circle. If there had been marks of fighting there, they were now
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buried in death. I heard Archer come towards me as I stood a handful of
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feet from the piled dead within the embrace of raised stones.
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``The trail leads north,'' Indrani said.
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I nodded.
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``Did it betray anything about their numbers?'' I asked.
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``Hundreds, at least,'' she shrugged. ``Hard to tell the difference
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between those and thousands on stone grounds. There's tracks though,
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from carts or something else on wheels. Heavy things, I'm pretty sure
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even the wheels are metal.''
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My fingers clenched, then unclenched. It had always helped me think, but
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there was too little to go on here to make any real deductions. It might
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be carts to carry whatever they'd come for back to the Kingdom Under.
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They could be supply wagons. They could be machines of war, as Ivah had
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said the dwarves sometimes used to slay the Mighty. Hells, it could be
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all of that. We wouldn't know for sure unless we took a look with our
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own eyes, and that struck me as a bad idea for all sorts of reasons. I
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glanced at Indrani.
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``Do we know what's north?'' I said.
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``Ivah says it's the core territories of the Kodrog,'' she replied.
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``We're still in the outskirts of the outer rings. I'll be at least a
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few days of travel before we reach the first ruins.''
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Piecing together the lay of the Everdark from what my guide was very
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willing to share had been difficult, even though Ivah was trying its
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best. The drow considered too many things to be self-evident to be a
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proper informant. The outer rings, as far as I could tell, were the drow
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territories outside the loose web of underground cities that had once
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made up their empire. Those were the harshest battlegrounds of their
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people, and a gathering place for the strongest Sigils and cabals. The
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inner ring, singular, was vaguer in what it covered. From context, it
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seemed to mean all the territories between the old cities. There the
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tribes that'd been forced out of the cities fought against each other,
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murdering their way to enough power to try to get a foot in a city
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again. The cities were where the strongest of the Mighty gathered, Ivah
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had said, but the inner ring was where a Sigil could be wiped out in a
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night. Those that fled that underground sea of carnage eked out a living
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in the outer rings, but pickings were sparse out here. It was uncommon
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for a Sigil that bolted to the outskirts to make a comeback, even if
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they bided their time for a few decades.
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Holy Tvarigu was at the centre of the madness, the handful of paths
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leading to it guarded by powerful Sigils who were said to rival those of
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the cities. We'd need to gather strength and support, before trying
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those.
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``There's one last thing,'' Indrani said. ``I found black blood.''
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My eyes narrowed. That meant a Mighty. Ivah had been clear that the more
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Night a drow held, the deeper the changes to their body. I had no reason
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to distrust that: after reaping the harvest of the cavern it had visibly
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changed.
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``Show me,'' I said.
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``Sure,'' she said. ``It's not far. Want to grab our favourite scavenger
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in case there's a survivor?''
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``Might be for the best,'' I agreed.
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And still she did not move. I cocked an eyebrow.
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``Archer?''
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Her lips thinned.
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``You all right, Cat?'' she asked. ``You've been looking at dead bodies
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for a while. And not that long ago you were hearing voices.''
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``Just the one,'' I sighed. ``And that was the Priestess of Night, I'm
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sure of it.''
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``I'm sure you believe that,'' Indrani delicately said.
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``I'm not quite that far gone,'' I reassured her. ``Anyways, I'm not
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going morbid on you. I was actually wondering why they're not burning
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the bodies. Wouldn't it make more sense?''
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``Not a lot of firewood down here,'' she replied. ``And you need that or
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oil to get a good pyre started.''
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``I really doubt the dwarves ready to commit mass slaughter without
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tallying proper supplies,'' I said. ``If they're really killing everyone
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to make sure there can be no harvest, it'd be logical to burn the dead.
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Can't claim Night from ashes, I don't think.''
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``If they're as prepared as you say, they'll have a reason for it,''
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Indrani pointed out. ``I try not to spend too much time figuring out why
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dwarves do what dwarves do. You'll only end up with a headache and an
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empty purse by trying.''
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``We're missing something,'' I told her. ``I'm not gonna go digging in
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corpses to find out -- we don't have the time to spare -- but it's worth
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asking questions.''
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``Somehow I doubt our little band of murderers is going to have a good
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explanation for you,'' she said, rolling her eyes. ``Come on, let's grab
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our minion. We're wasting daylight, even if we can't see it.''
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The rest of our company wasn't far. I'd learned why the drow were so
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afraid of coming close to the corpses, after a little chat with Ivah.
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It'd said it wasn't the death that scared most of them. It was all the
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Night that waited there to be taken. By beating them down, we'd
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established ourselves as higher on the pecking order. Drow who eyed
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Night ripe for harvest when stronger drow were around tended to end up
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killed just to make sure there'd be no trouble. Diabolist was keeping an
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eye on the prisoners, but Ivah was visibly itching to have a look at the
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corpses. It didn't consider itself strong enough to just harvest the
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Night no matter what we said, then. Good. As long as it was afraid of
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us, it'd uphold its part of the bargain with no qualms.
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``Ivah,'' I called out. ``With us. Archer has found a Mighty's blood
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trail.''
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``I follow, Queen,'' the silver-eyed creature smoothly replied.
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Its eyes were brighter, now, but that was the least of the changes.
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Where before it had been stooped by days of travel with limited supplies
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and little sleep, now its back was ramrod straight and its stride had
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grown assured. The skin was still pale grey, but now and then from the
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corner of my eyes I could have sworn I saw small arcane patterns of
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Night shine on its bare arms. I suspected there'd been other changes
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less obvious, though it was hard to gauge something like senses and
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reflexes without actually testing them. The rest of the cavern beyond
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the ring of stones was a great deal less bloody. There were trails and
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footsteps on the dust and dirt, but little else. A handful of leather
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tents and fire pits skirted the edge of the walls, not enough to shelter
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more than a few hundred drow. There was at least twice that in dead
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inside the fort, which meant the corpses had likely been gathered from
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other tunnels and caverns. Three passages out could be found. Two
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heading north, side-to-side, and one towards the east. It was that last
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one Indrani led us towards.
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Unlike the last stretch of tunnels out of the Gloom, these were not
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carved or sculpted. Apparently even when the realm of the drow had still
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been worth such a name, this had been considered the edge of nowhere. We
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passed through a small cave half-filled by ponds of water, though they'd
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all been fouled by dirt and blood, and only found what Indrani had
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mentioned after another stretch of winding tunnel. There was a naked
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body, which she hadn't mentioned, but it was easy to see why. It was a
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ruined wisp of a cadaver: the head had been pulped, but the rest was a
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ruin without needing wounding. It looked like it'd been exsanguinated,
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drained of all fluids and insides until all that was left was paper-thin
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grey skin and hollow bones. In other news, drow did have genitalia no
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matter how they called themselves: this one had a cock, though it was as
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much a shrivelled husk as the rest of it. Black blood and brain fluids
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formed a blasphemous halo around the wreck of the head, but that wasn't
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the interesting part. From the body another trail came. There were bits
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of blood in it, but also some sort of transparent fluid gone dry. A
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sticky, stinking trail led from the corpse deeper into the passage
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ahead.
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``Another twenty feet of crawling, then whatever came out got on its
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feet,'' Indrani said. ``From there it's just drip. Haven't touched the
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body yet, figured you'd want the honours.''
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``Kind of you,'' I drily said. ``Ivah, anything to say?''
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``This is not known to me,'' the drow admitted. ``Though none but Mighty
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would have blood so dark.''
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Less than helpful. I knelt by the body, gingerly raising it. Immediately
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my eyebrows climbed up. The entire back was messed up, like something
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had ripped its way out forcefully. Almost no blood, though. At a guess,
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whatever had left the trail was responsible.
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``Looks like our friend here had one last trick up their sleeve,'' I
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said. ``Ivah, you mentioned something called the Secret of Many Lives to
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me once. Would this be what it looks like in action?''
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``I have never witnessed this with my own eyes,'' the drow said. ``Only
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heard rumours. Yet if this is true, we look upon the body of Mighty
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Kodrog. Or one who slew them and claimed the whispers.''
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``Let's find out,'' I grimly said.
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I left the body there. There was no Night in it, and I wasn't sure I
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should let Ivah harvest it even if there was. We set out again, though
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the trip was amusingly short. Maybe sixty feet further, after the trail
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of dried fluids had ended, another corpse was waiting. Its head had been
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pulped as well. There was another trail, and we didn't stop to check the
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body before following this time. Apparently the dwarves hunting Kodrog
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has lost patience, because when we found the next body not even twenty
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feet further around a corner it was thoroughly demolished. No flesh or
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bone had been left untouched, the remains more smear than corpse. And
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still a trail crawled away from it. I heard a rasping breath, further
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ahead. Had the hunters missed the last rebirth?
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``There's something still breathing,'' I announced, and pressed on at a
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pace.
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Indrani snorted.
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``Yeah, not surprised,'' she said. ``Look at the fluids, Cat. It didn't
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crawl away, it was dragged.''
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Honestly the trail looked to me exactly like the others, but she was the
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tracker and I was the city girl. Regardless, we did not make the
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survivor wait long. I almost winced at the sight, after we stumbled
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across it. This particular body was no husk like the others, though it
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might wish otherwise. The naked drow had been nailed to the tunnels'
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wall with iron spikes through the shoulders and calves, limbs flopping
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listlessly. The drow's eyes were closed, but I could hear it breathe
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just fine. It was still rather improbably alive. Ivah breathed in
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sharply, and earned a curious look for it.
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``This is Mighty Kodrog itself,'' my guide said. ``The wound splitting
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the lip in half, it is famed. The blade of the Mighty Soln caused it.''
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There \emph{was} a rather nasty scar and chunk of missing flesh parting
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the drow's lower lip in half. More interesting were the nigh-invisible
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patterns of Night covered Kodrog's face, surrounding the closed eyes
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like they were some sort of spider web. It looked like a tattoo of
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arcane symbols I was unfamiliar with, though a very faint one.
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Apparently the repeated rebirths had weakened the Mighty considerably.
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``It's unconscious,'' I said. ``Let's drag it back to camp, see if we
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can wake it up there.''
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``You're going to have to handle the spikes,'' Indrani said. ``That's
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solid rock they were hammered into. Not sure I could pull them out.''
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I grimaced but got to work. The difficult part was doing it carefully
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enough I wouldn't rip up Kodrog's body, not taking them out, and greyish
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blood began pouring out the moment they were removed. No longer black,
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huh. Someone had had a rough week. I froze the wounds shut, which was
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about as much as I knew of healing, and hoisted the drow over my
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shoulder when it became clear the pain wasn't enough to wake it up. Ivah
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was looking at me carrying a Mighty like a bag of potatoes like it
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didn't know whether it should be amused or appalled. The walk back was
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quicker, though I was careful not to jostle the goods. In part because I
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didn't want to worsen the bleeding, in part because when strangers
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dangled their dangly parts against me I preferred fewer gaping wounds
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being involved. A rustle when through the prisoners when we returned
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bearing our newest addition, a few whispered words in Crepuscular being
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traded. Kodrog was the only word I recognized. I lowered said burden to
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the floor carefully and smiled at Akua, who'd silently approached.
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``I've got a surprise for you,'' I cheerfully said.
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``Joy,'' Diabolist drawled. ``More half-dead drow. My favourite. I
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expect you want me to attend to it?''
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``If anyone's going to know what happened here, it's that one,'' I said.
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``I need it capable of talking.''
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``That much I can promise,'' the shade noted. ``How \emph{long} it will
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remain that way is more chancy a matter.''
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``Do what you can,'' I said.
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``Ugh, does that leave me on guard duty?'' Indrani asked. ``Because
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that's really tedious. You won't even let me make them fight.''
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``I'm sure Ivah can inform them of the consequences of acting out,'' I
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said, casting an eye as said drow.
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It nodded slowly.
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``Find me in what direction the dwarves went,'' I told Archer. ``Try to
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find out numbers, or anything more than we have. If you run into any of
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them\ldots{}''
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``Stay out of sight, head back immediately,'' she said. ``I've got it.
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How long you giving me?''
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I chewed my lip.
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``We'll need a while for the interrogation,'' I said, watching Akua
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begin to remove the ice I'd shut the wounds with. ``We might as well
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make camp here. A few hours, at least, but careful not to get lost.''
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``I never once in my life got lost,'' Indrani assured me.
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``Last month you told me you'd been sober your whole life,'' I noted.
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``You really should start picking better lies.''
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``That sounds like a horrible way to live,'' Indrani said.
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I rolled my eyes.
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``Just don't get killed,'' I said. ``Or start another war. Gods know we
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already have a net surplus of those, and the year's not even over.''
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She waved me away in a less than reassuring gesture, but she adjusted
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her bow against her shoulder and got moving towards the north-leading
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passages. She might give me backtalk the way sparrows flew, but I knew I
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could trust her to pull through when I needed her. I had few worries
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about her reconnaissance.
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``Now would be a good time to inform your fellows we're camping,'' I
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told Ivah. ``They're free to scavenge tents and necessities, though they
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are not to touch the Night.''
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``As you say, Queen,'' the drow nodded.
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I watched it walk over to the others, then returned my attention to
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Akua. I dropped down next to the body in a seat, watching her work
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Winter into dying flesh. There was Night in this one, though unlike the
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one in the corpses it was not reaching for me. Neither was it hostile,
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though. It was just there. A tool in someone's hand, firmly grasped.
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``How's it looking?'' I asked.
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``More than halfway into the grave,'' Diabolist said. ``Which eases my
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work a great deal.''
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I didn't need to ask her why. What instincts my mantle had granted me
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made me aware that Winter held dominion over death and decay, among
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other things. I'd dabbled in necromancy as the Squire, but I remained an
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amateur at the art. When Akua had ridden my body, she'd raised an army
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of dead Procerans without even using a ritual.
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``It's a recurring pattern, with you,'' the shade said. ``That you use
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and demand others use powers in way that seem ill-suited to them.''
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``Power's a tool,'' I said, repeating someone else's words. ``The only
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limit to its use is your own cleverness.''
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``Spare me the Carrion Lord's lessons, if you would,'' Akua said. ``I
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have heard them before. My point stands. Even as the Squire your use of
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your limited necromantic abilities was admittedly inspired. Never before
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had I seen someone kill their own flesh to better wield it.''
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``Desperation is a sharp teacher,'' I grunted.
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``So it is,'' Diabolist mildly said. ``Still, you extend this philosophy
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beyond the boundaries I expected.''
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I scoffed.
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``How's that?''
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``This entire enterprise, dearest,'' Akua said. ``To be frank, I am
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still somewhat at a loss as to why we now tread the passages of the
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Everdark.''
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``You were there when the decision was made,'' I reminded her. ``I --''
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``Need an army, yes,'' she interrupted. ``Surely that is not all of it?
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I surmised this to be the excuse you gave to mask deeper purpose.''
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``I don't lie when holding council with the Woe, Akua,'' I said. ``Even
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when you're there.''
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Scarlet eyes considered me skeptically.
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|
|
|
``Then you truly came to gather a host of drow?'' she said. ``That seems
|
|
ill-advised.''
|
|
|
|
I frowned at the casual dismissal. Still, I'd let her out of the box for
|
|
a reason. She had a better grasp on the corridors of power than any of
|
|
the Woe, and if she had something to say it was worth hearing. Not
|
|
necessarily heeding, but at the very least listening to.
|
|
|
|
``You're aware of our military situation,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``I am, to an extent,'' she agreed. ``The Battle of the Camps thinned
|
|
the ranks overmuch, which led you to seek the Dead King in the first
|
|
place. There was need for the hosts of Procer to be sent elsewhere and
|
|
bled. This has already been achieved, Catherine, by the Empress' own
|
|
pact.''
|
|
|
|
``Look deeper,'' I said. ``What's the thing that keeps Callow afloat?''
|
|
|
|
``Farming,'' she replied without missing a beat. ``I do not disagree
|
|
with you on the implication, my dear. Your kingdom has weathered a
|
|
large-scale rebellion, the invasion of the Courts and my own works. If
|
|
the Army of Callow recruits as heavily as it must to be more than a
|
|
border garrison, there will be lack of field hands come harvest. Which
|
|
would have consequences more disastrous in Callow than most realms,
|
|
admittedly, as it boasts little but fertile fields.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{My own works}, she'd said. Almost nonchalantly. Three words for
|
|
over a hundred thousand souls. The urge was there to simply tear her in
|
|
half. Pop her head with a squeeze of my fingers, have Winter itself
|
|
devour her from the inside. I pulsed with the need of it\emph{. And you
|
|
feared I might grow attached, Vivienne,} I thought. \emph{That I might
|
|
come to see her as more than the useful devil on my shoulder.} I
|
|
mastered myself, kept the flare of rage away from my face. Not even a
|
|
slight cooling of the air betrayed it. I'd learned the ways of my mantle
|
|
well. It would not do to punish her for this, no. Best she keep speaking
|
|
those words, those barbed reminders of who it was I had murdered into my
|
|
service.
|
|
|
|
``Then you know why I need another force on the field,'' I said. ``One
|
|
that can take the losses I can't afford.''
|
|
|
|
``There are others you might have sought,'' Akua noted. ``Lord Black
|
|
still fields legions, and his fondness for you is well-known.''
|
|
|
|
``Black's running a game in Procer,'' I said. ``I don't know what it is
|
|
yet, because I don't know what he's really after. If he intended to
|
|
depose Malicia, his opening was just after Second Liesse. He went to the
|
|
Vales instead, prepared for the crusade. He had most of a year,
|
|
Diabolist. To plan and plot. It's not \emph{happenstance} that the Vales
|
|
were collapsed and he's wandering the heartlands of the Principate. He's
|
|
trying to accomplish something. The Gods only know what it is, if even
|
|
that. I'm not getting in the middle of that mess without a very good
|
|
reason.''
|
|
|
|
``You have ties to the sole Court of Arcadia,'' Diabolist noted.
|
|
``Bargain might have been struck there.''
|
|
|
|
``You think that's better than the drow?'' I snorted. ``Last time I went
|
|
for a spin with the King of Winter, I got taken for a ride. I doubt I've
|
|
learned enough in the last year to turn that around, and you can be sure
|
|
that any pact made with Arcadia will result in the fae having a
|
|
permanent foothold on Creation. I might as well start calling on fucking
|
|
demons -- those are easier to put away after you let them loose.''
|
|
|
|
``The Dread Empire-''
|
|
|
|
``Was a possibility I considered,'' I interrupted flatly. ``Of course,
|
|
to get my hands on any of its armies I'd need to climb the Tower and
|
|
make it stick. Which means I'll likely have to assault a few of the most
|
|
heavily fortified cities on the continent with my already mangled
|
|
forces. Possibly fight Malicia's loyalist Legions as well. Losses are
|
|
certain, and even if I win I inherit a mess. Ashur's still sacking the
|
|
coasts, Akua. I can't call myself Empress and just\ldots{} leave them to
|
|
it. Not to mention the dangers inherent to killing the person that let
|
|
the Dead King out. Could mean he has to retreat, which would fuck over a
|
|
now even more wounded Callow. We'd have to go back and negotiate,
|
|
assuming he's even willing. Or it could mean he's loose with
|
|
\emph{absolutely} \emph{no leash on him}.''
|
|
|
|
``I believe you underestimate the amount of support a bid for the Tower
|
|
would find in the Wasteland,'' Diabolist said. ``There are promises that
|
|
could see many flock to your banner.''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, I know all about those kinds of promises,'' I murmured. ``There
|
|
are some prices even I balk at paying. I will not wade into a snake pit
|
|
just to try turning the snakes on my foes, Akua. I have no intention of
|
|
ever ruling Praes.''
|
|
|
|
``You may not have a choice,'' Diabolist mildly said. ``Though I shall
|
|
let the matter lie. It will come to your door without any need for my
|
|
advocacy.''
|
|
|
|
``You should hope not,'' I replied. ``If Praes is made my problem, I
|
|
will not be gentle in how I solve it. Should we go over our other
|
|
options? The League won't talk with me if the Hierarch won't, and the
|
|
man is both mad and stubborn as a mule. The Chain of Hunger cannot be
|
|
treated with to any real degree, the elves would shoot any envoy of mine
|
|
on sight and the closest thing the Gigantes have to an ally -- Levant --
|
|
is currently at war with me. You think I'm stalking these fucking
|
|
tunnels because I want to? \emph{I need the men} \emph{and there is no
|
|
one else}.''
|
|
|
|
The last sentence came out in a hiss, almost like a wound lanced of pus.
|
|
|
|
``I understand,'' Akua said.
|
|
|
|
``No, you don't,'' I replied. ``I drew a line in the sand, after my
|
|
coronation. That if all I could accomplish was make a ruin out of
|
|
Callow, I would melt the godsdamned crown and go into exile. Or walk to
|
|
the gallows, if that was what it took. The crusade was always going to
|
|
come, there was nothing I could do about that. But now, Diabolist, even
|
|
if my armies win the coming battles the kingdom is fucked. We were
|
|
already a bad summer away from widespread food shortages, when I left.
|
|
How do you think it will go if the fields are empty at harvest? Either
|
|
this works, or I'm done. I capitulate, do whatever is necessary for
|
|
Hasenbach to offer terms that aren't complete subjugation and kill as
|
|
many problems as I can before I die.''
|
|
|
|
``You are what keeps this together, Catherine,'' Akua warned me. ``If
|
|
you abdicate, the kingdom collapses into anarchy. Malicia will likely
|
|
invade and even the League might be swayed by such a tempting feast. Do
|
|
you think Callow can weather the Dead King without you?''
|
|
|
|
``The question isn't `will it bad?','' I said. ``Of course it'll be
|
|
awful. Even if I clean up every loose end I can before going, it'll be a
|
|
shitshow. The question that needs to be asked is `will it be worse if
|
|
I'm wearing the crown?'.''
|
|
|
|
``The only reason Callow was more than a waypoint on Cordelia's way to
|
|
Ater is that your power gave the Principate pause,'' Diabolist said.
|
|
``This is\ldots{} navel-gazing in the worst of ways. Do you think you
|
|
are responsible for every disaster to plague your homeland?''
|
|
|
|
``They happened on my watch,'' I said. ``I had a responsibility. If I'd
|
|
fucking bled you like a pig at Liesse, no matter the consequences to me,
|
|
a hundred thousand people would be alive today. Winter went after
|
|
Marchford because it was my demesne. Summer torched a third of the south
|
|
to match Winter. And the Liesse Rebellion\ldots{} well, you weren't the
|
|
only person I should have killed then and let's leave it at that.''
|
|
|
|
``It is absurd to pretend to you did not mitigate the damage
|
|
inflicted,'' Akua flatly said. ``You dispersed the Courts yourself. To
|
|
clarify, you drove back forces as older than the First Dawn at the mere
|
|
cost of a \emph{few leagues of burned land}. Who else could have brought
|
|
the invasions to an end at even twice that cost? And let us not pretend
|
|
to you were the only possible pawn for Winter's king. The Courts did not
|
|
emerge in Praes, where bargains would have been eagerly taken, or
|
|
fractious Procer or the squabbling lands of the Dominion. Why, I wonder?
|
|
It is almost as if Callow was easiest prey, the most vulnerable locale.
|
|
You ended the Liesse Rebellion on lenient terms, your mere existence
|
|
enough to soften the stances of both the Carrion Lord and the Empress
|
|
against those who raised banner against the Tower. Not a matter in which
|
|
either would otherwise have been prone to so mild a response. Had you
|
|
not been on the field at Second Liesse, I would very likely have slain
|
|
your teacher and triumphed. You seem under the misapprehension that the
|
|
rest of the continent fights over Callow because you bear the crown.
|
|
That is disingenuous. Callow suffers because it is \emph{weak}. Because
|
|
greater powers can afford to make it a tool to expunge their own
|
|
troubles. The Principate, the Empire, half the heroes that flocked to
|
|
the Tenth Crusade. Do you truly believe your kingdom, even under a
|
|
villainous queen, is greater threat to Good and Calernia than the
|
|
Kingdom of the Dead? Than the Chain of Hunger?''
|
|
|
|
``There's a balance of power,'' I said. ``The Grey Pilgrim admitted as
|
|
much.''
|
|
|
|
``Indeed,'' Akua sneered. ``The Principate cannot afford too many powers
|
|
sworn to Evil at its borders, is it? Yet you could have been made
|
|
friend, through the right treaties. Can the same be said of the Hidden
|
|
Horror? Yet is is Callow that was marched upon, and Praes beyond it.
|
|
Because if the First Prince had called for a crusade against Keter, none
|
|
would have answered. Because against the Kingdom of the Dead the
|
|
Principate did not believe it could win, and Callow was \emph{weaker}.''
|
|
|
|
``You stated the very reason,'' I grimly smiled. ``Against Keter, she
|
|
did not believe she could win. And so the strategic reality was that a
|
|
villainous queen in Callow was unacceptable. You're also dismissing the
|
|
fact that it was your own fucking doomsday fortress, built on a massacre
|
|
of my countrymen it is worth remembering, that served as the rallying
|
|
cry for this mess.''
|
|
|
|
``I will not defend what I did,'' Akua said. ``There is nothing
|
|
defensible about failure, and my means were abhorrent to you. Yet I will
|
|
remind you that Procer loomed at the gate long before my works took
|
|
place. I served as an excuse, it is true. And for my sins judge me as
|
|
you will, for that is your right and privilege as victor. Yet even had
|
|
you slain me long before, excuse would have been found sooner or later
|
|
-- Praes ruling Callow was no more acceptable than your bearing a crown,
|
|
after all. You are a justification, Catherine. You are not a
|
|
\emph{motive}. At best, you were ancillary to the reasons forces went
|
|
into motion.''
|
|
|
|
``I could have gone the other way,'' I said. ``I was made an offer, in
|
|
Liesse. If I'd signed up with the Heavens-''
|
|
|
|
``You would have been slain, fallen upon by the full roster of the
|
|
Calamities and your own allies,'' she said. ``The Black Knight, deeming
|
|
your existence a failed experiment, would have set to ensuring Callow
|
|
was incapable of rising in rebellion when Procer came calling. I need
|
|
not remind you of the manner of methodical butchery your teacher is
|
|
capable of.''
|
|
|
|
``So that's your fine wisdom?'' I mocked. ``Thousands died under your
|
|
watch but it's all right, because thousands would have died either
|
|
way?''
|
|
|
|
``Yourself and the Woe, the Fifteenth you assembled painstakingly,''
|
|
Akua said. ``All of these are the only reason anyone of import on this
|
|
continent considers Callow \emph{worth treating with}. Gods Below,
|
|
Catherine, do you think without your casting a long shadow the Empress
|
|
would have waited this long to act? That the Carrion Lord would not have
|
|
excised treason out of your kingdom? The First Prince may claim to
|
|
despise all you stand for, yet she stills speaks with you. Because you
|
|
wield power, warrant fear, and this means the land you rule over are
|
|
more than a subject to squabble over after someone wins the war. Without
|
|
the might you have assembled, the only Callow that exists is that which
|
|
other powers allow to exist. Is this the sorrow you mull over late into
|
|
the night? That your acts, though bloody, have made your homeland actor
|
|
instead of \emph{spoils}?''
|
|
|
|
``You don't know that,'' I said. ``If I'd never taken Callow in hand,
|
|
heroes could have risen. They have before, with reliability that borders
|
|
on law.''
|
|
|
|
``The same heroes the Empire repeatedly smothered in the crib for
|
|
decades before your birth?'' Diabolist gently said. ``Or perhaps foreign
|
|
heroes, from the same nations now marching on you.''
|
|
|
|
``It's better to be Proceran vassals than a wasteland, Akua,'' I tiredly
|
|
replied. ``And despite my best efforts we seem to be headed that way.''
|
|
|
|
``I know few things about your people, and much I thought known has been
|
|
proven false,'' the shade said. ``Yet how many of them would agree with
|
|
what you just spoke?''
|
|
|
|
``A crowd has only one voice, and no wisdom to utter,'' I quoted. ``My
|
|
people aren't always right, especially when pride is on the line.''
|
|
|
|
``And so now your argument is that you know better,'' Akua said. ``That
|
|
you should make the choices for them. Yet you deplore having done that
|
|
very thing. With some defeats to show for it, yet also admirable
|
|
successes. What brave soul do you happen to use for comparison, then? I
|
|
am curious what world-shaking sage would have steered Callow
|
|
unfailingly, had you not been at the helm.''
|
|
|
|
``Asking for whoever would have risen not to have lost the second
|
|
largest city in Callow is hardly unfair,'' I barked back.
|
|
|
|
``You turn blind eye to the realities of the time,'' Akua noted.
|
|
``Another Named would not have benefitted from your relationship to the
|
|
highest tiers of Praesi power. They would have been forced to rebel
|
|
while under hunt of the Calamities, raising essentially the same army
|
|
that was crushed by your teacher with perhaps a few additions. Likely,
|
|
they would have needed to rely on help from the Principate to stay
|
|
afloat, which would have begun the Tenth Crusade with Callow the midst
|
|
of a bloody civil war instead of when its borders were garrisoned. It
|
|
would have been a nonentity at the peace table afterwards. Perhaps I
|
|
would have been slain by such a replacement, perhaps not. It is arguable
|
|
at best if the resulting body count would not have been superior, and
|
|
beyond debate that the destruction would have been more widespread. The
|
|
Courts of the Fair Folk would then have found that deeply divided and
|
|
damaged land much easier to make sport of than it was under your aegis,
|
|
however flawed.''
|
|
|
|
``You don't know any of that,'' I said. ``It's speculation.''
|
|
|
|
``Which does not seem to be of import, when you castigate yourself,''
|
|
the shade said. ``Your usual hypocrisies leave a better taste in the
|
|
mouth. You are not even alone in those, truth be told. The First Prince
|
|
calls you a warlord, though she herself rose through war to the throne
|
|
through the same means. Levant was warring against the Principate not
|
|
even two years ago, and Ashur was happily trading with the Wasteland but
|
|
months before the Tenth Crusade was declared. I am indifferent to the
|
|
moralities of this, admittedly, but they seem to matter to you and it
|
|
rather beggars belief that all these rivals must now be considered
|
|
righteous merely because they march against you.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm not saying they deserve to win any of this,'' I got out through
|
|
gritted teeth. ``I'm saying it's self-defeating to fight them for the
|
|
kingdom's sake if the price of that fight is to break the fucking
|
|
kingdom.''
|
|
|
|
``The Kingdom of Callow is already broken,'' Akua frankly said. ``You've
|
|
succeeded at keeping it from falling apart entirely after evicting
|
|
Praes, which is already impressive. Catherine, four years ago there
|
|
\emph{was} no kingdom. There were only the provinces, ruled by the
|
|
edicts of the Carrion Lord. In that span, your pried your homeland out
|
|
of the Empress' grip with minimal destruction and forced a semblance of
|
|
order onto a realm that was under occupation for several decades. All
|
|
the while fending off repeated interventions from the two largest
|
|
nations on the surface of Calernia. This strange expectation you have
|
|
that anyone, including you, taking up the crown would lead to miracles
|
|
is rather naïve. Nation-building is not the stuff of months, my dear,
|
|
which is more or less what you managed to wrest away from more powerful
|
|
and experienced rulers trying to deny you even that.''
|
|
|
|
``So I'm the lesser evil,'' I bitterly smiled. ``There's a familiar
|
|
tune. Been a while since it last managed to lull me to pleasant sleep.''
|
|
|
|
``It is most easy to fall short of a paragon of victory existing only in
|
|
your thoughts,'' Diabolist said. ``You speak as if you believe you
|
|
somehow hoodwinked an entire kingdom into following you.''
|
|
|
|
``I didn't exactly ask for opinions before the coronation,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``And yet Callow did not rebel,'' Akua mused. ``The remaining highborn
|
|
and your officials obey your orders. You have brought every Named of
|
|
note in the kingdom into your service and called the guilds, even those
|
|
calling themselves \emph{dark}, to heel. Your army, which is now for the
|
|
most part made of your countrymen, followed you into war willingly. You
|
|
are not a Fairfax, it is true. Also largely irrelevant, as they are all
|
|
dead. Considering the founder of that dynasty was a mere knight, a Named
|
|
with a distinguished military record can hardly be considered lesser
|
|
origin.''
|
|
|
|
``Eleanor Fairfax ascended to the throne by popular acclaim,'' I flatly
|
|
denied.
|
|
|
|
``She was a skilled and charismatic warlord with the power to make a
|
|
claim on the throne and popular backing to press it,'' she meaningfully
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
``Also the blessing of the Heavens,'' I drily said. ``I seem to be
|
|
missing that part.''
|
|
|
|
``Now we argue theology,'' Akua said. ``Can no crown be worthy without
|
|
affirmation from Above? I've yet to hear of Cordelia Hasenbach receiving
|
|
this accolade. Strange that it would be required of you alone.''
|
|
|
|
``You're ignoring the part where I'm a villain,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``You have devoured your own Name and taken Winter in its place,'' she
|
|
said. ``You share foes with Below, perhaps sympathies with some who
|
|
strive against Above. I have yet to hear you offer a single prayer to my
|
|
Gods, Catherine. Even if it were so, the hypocrisy here would be a deep
|
|
one indeed. Where is this outrage when a Tyrant rises in Helike? Stygia
|
|
pays dues only in brimstone, and Bellerophon is a maddened altar of a
|
|
city. And yet no crusade darkens their doorstep. A standard upheld only
|
|
when convenient is no such thing: it is merely a tool.''
|
|
|
|
``It's a pretty song you sing me,'' I admitted. ``That I am not always
|
|
right, but just enough. That my enemies are no better.''
|
|
|
|
``And yet,'' Diabolist said, ``you believe not a word of it. Why?''
|
|
|
|
I thinly smiled.
|
|
|
|
``Because it was what I wanted to hear,'' I said. ``And you're Akua
|
|
Sahelian.''
|
|
|
|
It was two hours before Mighty Kodrog woke, and we spent every moment of
|
|
them in silence.
|