427 lines
20 KiB
TeX
427 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-60-profiteers}{%
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\chapter{Profiteers}\label{chapter-60-profiteers}}
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\epigraph{``In the kingdom of the blind, the one-eyed man is lynched.''}{Praesi saying}
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Since my crowning I'd found it necessary to occasionally entertain
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`people of import'. It wasn't something I particularly enjoyed, but a
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shared meal and a bottle of wine was a decent way to take a good look at
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what influential individuals of Callow were up to. Most of the time it'd
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been members of the Queen's Council or envoys from my governors, more
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rarely emissaries from the northern baronies. Those dinners tended to be
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calm affairs, where more importance was placed on the conversation than
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the food. I rather preferred the dwarven take on it, all things told.
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After nibbling at rations for weeks, a slab of ribs lathered in sauce
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with a goblet of some kind of pitch-black liquor that smelled like
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berries and kicked like a mule were a delightful change of pace. The
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Herald had made a point out of being the one to offer them, even if
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another dwarf brought the plates, which I guessed to be some point of
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dwarven etiquette. The table was granite and low even by my standards,
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though it'd clearly been crafted with burlier types in mind: Akua and I
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didn't even come close to filling our side of it.
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The Herald and his interpreter -- not that he needed one, as it turned
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out -- had dug into their own plates without any mannerly pretences. I
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followed suit, rather enjoying the meat even though I did not recognize
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it. The liquor was a treat though, I'd own to that much. Diabolist was
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more interested in the fine make of the cutlery we were using than the
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meal, though she made sure to eat and drink enough no insult would be
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taken. The dwarves polished off their plates at admirable speed,
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knocking back the liquor all the while, and it was not long before all
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were finished. There'd been no attempt at conversation while the plates
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were on the table, not from their side anyway. I'd followed suit, in no
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great hurry, and Akua had followed my example. Soldiers took away the
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plates when we were done, bringing bowls of tepid water to the table
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where the dwarves soaked their fingers clean before wiping on cloths. My
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brows rose. They were a strangely clean people, for a race that dwelled
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in dirt. Still, I imitated them and saw with mild disappointment that
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our cups and bottle were taken away.
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``Diplomacy cannot be had over such mild drinks, Queen Catherine,''
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Balasi told me amusedly, having noticed my look. ``It would be
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unseemly.''
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``Your people have an enlightened sense of etiquette, Seeker,'' I
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replied. ``The liquor, may I ask what it is called?''
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``Black kasi,'' the dwarf said. ``I will part with a bottle as gift,
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should these talks be fruitful.''
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It'd been a long time since a bribe that baldly offered had tempted me
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even a little, I mused.
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``The stakes have been raised,'' I drily replied.
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Soldiers returned with four small wooden bowls and set them down before
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each of us. I studied mine curiously: oak, if I was not mistaken. Old
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and rough, never varnished or sculpted. A heavy glass bottle was
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brought, and the dwarven soldier bearing it very carefully poured maybe
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half a cup's worth of liquid into each bowl. It looked like wine, I
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thought, but vapour wafted off the surface and it was very clearly near
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boiling. I glanced at Balasi and found him staring at his own bowl
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reverently.
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``It must be allowed to seep,'' he told me. ``These bowls have never
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seen other purpose than the cradling of \emph{sudra}, and so the taste
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of old toasts mixes with the new.''
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``I'm honoured,'' I said, inclining my head.
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``As it should be,'' the Herald said. ``No such bottle has ever left the
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Kingdom Under. I doubt more than a dozen of your kind ever tasted
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\emph{sudra}, much less properly served.''
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It was utterly wasted on me, considering my tastes in drink had moved
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from `decent table wine' to `nearly flammable' since I'd taken up my
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mantle. It might be undiplomatic to say as much, though, and I
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\emph{was} curious about the taste. I inclined my head again, a little
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deeper this time. The Herald of the Deeps responded in kind.
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``You were introduced as Queen of Callow,'' the green-eyed dwarf said.
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``Yet your second name is Foundling, not Fairfax.''
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``There are no more Fairfaxes,'' I said. ``They were slain to the last,
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when the Dread Empire of Praes conquered Callow. I am first and only of
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my line.''
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``A worthy purpose, that will have earned no small burden,'' Balasi said
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approvingly.
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The Herald turned amused eyes on him, then back to me.
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``You will have to forgive my old friend,'' he said. ``He is quite the
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radical, even for a seeker of deeds.''
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``No offence was taken,'' I said. ``There was none to be found, in my
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eyes.''
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``I have told you before, \emph{delein},'' the deed-seeker snorted.
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``The ways of their kind may be chaotic, but they are not without
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merit.''
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``To each thing born, purpose and burden,'' the Herald chided. ``What
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you seek as correction is mere revelation. Our truth is absolute.''
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I was missing too much context to be able to truly follow that exchange,
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but some guesses could be hazarded. Purpose and burden, huh. There was a
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weight to that, one familiar to me\emph{. Name and Role}. Indrani had
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said that the deed-seeker were trying to win something other dwarves
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thought they weren't supposed to have. Considering their way of going
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about it was to hunt the most dangerous creatures around, their
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behaviour might just be an attempt to raise their `purpose' by first
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raising their `burden'. Interesting, and worth keeping in mind, but not
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ultimately why I was seated here with them.
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``From your question I take it you're not too familiar with surface
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affairs,'' I said.
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``They are neither my charge nor concern,'' the Herald said. ``Balasi is
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more knowledgeable of such affairs, though it has been some time since
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he last journeyed upwards.''
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``Last I heard, Praes was trying to invade your people and getting
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smacked around for the presumption,'' the deed-seeker said. ``Queen
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Moirin was ruling, I believe.''
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Queen Moiren, he likely meant. The grandmother of Good King Robert, the
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Fairfax who'd died on the Fields of Streges failing to turn back the
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Conquest. Anything they knew of the surface dated back at least a
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hundred years, then.
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``Callow was conquered, and under my aegis was made independent again,''
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I said. ``We are now at war with most the great powers of the surface,
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three of which have declared a crusade on Praes and would break my
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homeland on their march to the Tower.''
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``And so you come to the Everdark in your hour of need,'' Balasi said.
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``You must truly be desperate, to seek anything but corpses from the
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\emph{kraksun}.''
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``I've knocked at every other door,'' I said. ``The Dead King is on the
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march, now, and there are no limits to his hunger. This is no time to be
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squeamish about one's allies.''
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``The \emph{kraksun} will flee, or perish,'' the Herald of the Deeps
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said, and he spoke it not as promise or prophecy but as mere fact.
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As if there could be no doubt. Gods, maybe there wasn't. What little I
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knew of these people was enough to have me very, very wary -- and they
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were just the vanguard.
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``Such an outcome may very well be inevitable,'' Akua said. ``Yet the
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path by which it is reached remains shadowed, does it not? There is
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little purpose in entertaining us otherwise.''
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Balasi cast a look at me.
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``You allow your spirit a great deal of freedom,'' he said.
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``She has her uses,'' I mildly replied. ``And considering the costs of
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her service, she will be worked until she breaks.''
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Diabolist bowed her head at me, without the slightest hint of
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displeasure on her face. It could be true, I thought. The right of the
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victor, she'd called it. It could also be a lie, and I would never know
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until the end. My very own viper, always dangerous no matter how tight
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the leash.
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``How much do you know of this ruin of a realm, Queen Catherine?'' the
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Herald asked.
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I hesitated. Admitting ignorance here might see me hoodwinked. Dwarves
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were infamously disinclined to fair bargains. On the other hand,
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pretending to be an expert where I was not was just as dangerous in its
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own way. These were not people to trifle with.
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``Little in most matters, yet I have glimpsed deep in some,'' I finally
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said. ``My power is both kin and foe to the Priestess of Night's, in
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some eldritch way.''
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The green-eyed dwarf nodded slowly.
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``I have long studied their kind,'' he said. ``Seven wars we fought
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against them, two of them lost. Yet we won the last three, and the lands
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of their ancient colonies were swallowed in the Ninth Expansion. The
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echo of the last defeat saw them collapse, hiding behind the Gloom and
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turning their knives on each other. They are a pale imitation of what
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they once were.''
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``A ruin of a realm,'' I softly agreed. ``And the spider at the centre
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of the web lies waiting in Tvarigu.''
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``She is more monster than woman now,'' Balasi said. ``She devoured the
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Twilight Sages, it is said, and made them into the first of the Night.
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She has only grown since: her hand is on every knife, her lips wet with
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every red bite.''
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``A creature without purpose,'' the Herald said, and there was hatred in
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his voice. ``A burden on all her kind. You surface people quibble over
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devils and books, but the Sve Noc is breathing blasphemy. Voices were
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raised, when we warred against the goblins, and Ishti's Bargain extended
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as mercy. Yet there was only silence in the Deep Places, when call was
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made for war on the Everdark.''
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``I have known little but war since I was sixteen,'' I quietly said.
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``And so I know this: annihilation is a costly enterprise. To break an
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enemy is one thing, to destroy it wholesale another.''
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``Yet annihilation is the only path, so long as the Sve Noc draws
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breath,'' Balasi said. ``Many will die, for this purpose. It will take
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decades to scatter the greatest of the Mighty and lay siege to Tvarigu
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itself, perhaps as long as a century. We will not have that.''
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``The King of Death has turned his eyes to the wars of the surface,''
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the Herald said. ``Yet we have seen this before. It never lasts. The
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dead will return to the depths soon enough.''
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The green-eyed dwarf leaned in.
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``The Gloom must fall,'' the Herald of the Deeps said. ``You fled
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forward, I think, without seeing our host. It is not only that, Queen of
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Callow. We have brought artisans and tenders, masons and runescribes.
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Families as well as soldiers.''
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My fingers clenched under the table.
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``You intend to settle the outer rings,'' Akua said in my stead. ``To
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raise fortress-cities from which you can fight the war against the drow
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even after the Dead King returns.''
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``A long and bleak exile, for hundreds of thousands,'' Balasi said.
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``None who felt this to be their purpose expect to see their kin for
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many years. The Fourteenth Expansion will be a treacherous one.''
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``Yet if someone killed the Priestess of Night,'' I said. ``The Gloom
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would end. No exile, no hard decades of war severed from home.''
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``Slayers have been sent before,'' the Herald said. ``As far as we
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known, none lived to reach the inner ring.''
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``Yet you have taken \emph{kraksun} prisoner,'' Balasi said. ``Used
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them. A dwarf would be attacked on sight. A human, of sufficient power?
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That would be different matter.''
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I took a moment to let the implications of that sink in. Not that they
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wanted me to traipse through the Everdark and murder yet another demigod
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for their advantage -- that much I'd expected -- but the sheer scope of
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what they were undertaking. \emph{Hundreds of thousands}, Seeker Balasi
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had said. That was all of eastern Callow, I thought. All those people
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sent marching across some sorcerous barrier not out of fear or
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desperation, but because the empire of the dwarves had deemed it
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strategic necessity to destroy the drow. What kind of empire could do
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that? The sum whole of the Tenth Crusade, which had three great nations
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joined, could barely muster two hundred thousand soldiers. I'd read as a
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child that the Kingdom Under likely spanned two thirds of Calernia
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underground: that to the east it reached the heartlands of Praes, to the
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south it touched the upper half of the Dominion. To the west a gate was
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rumoured to exist in the coastal principality of Brus, though one
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scarcely used, and the Kingdom of the Dead had long been thought to be
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the northern border of the dwarven kingdom. I was no longer certain that
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was the case, to be honest.
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I'd read the words stating all that, ink on parchment, but never really
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understood them until now. Black had once called the Kingdom Under the
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only Calernian nation that could be considered more than a regional
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power. I'd not disbelieved him, I'd had no reason to, but neither had I
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truly taken the words to heart. Mighty as the dwarves were, they were
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barely Calernian in the end. Their presence was lightly felt, more an
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adjacent existence one must avoid provoking than a nation we shared
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borders with. I supposed that was true, in a way -- could an ant really
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have a border with a giant? And while the great nations of the surface
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had been tearing each other to shreds for yards of land or points of
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principles, the Kingdom Under had grown so great it could afford to send
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a few hundred thousand soldiers and settlers into the dark for a mere
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gamble. A possibly century-long roll of the dice that would shatter a
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people's spine over the knee of the King Under the Mountain if it
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worked. I wasn't a nobody, I knew. I'd done things that would be
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remembered in histories. In sheer power, there were only a handful of
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people on the continent that could be called my equal and even fewer my
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superior.
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All of that was dust in the eyes of the people I was speaking with. It
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was worth remembering that much, before I tried to strike a pact.
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``I supposed most queens would find it beneath their dignity to play the
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assassin for a foreign power,'' I finally said. ``Fortunately, I have no
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such qualms. You need the Sve Nocte removed and the Gloom lifted. I
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believe I can deliver this.''
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``Then we now speak of terms,'' the Herald said. ``You will want
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payment, for this service.''
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``I will,'' I said. ``Before that is discussed, forgive my ignorance but
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I am uncertain of what your title means. Does it carry the authority to
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make such a deal?''
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Balasi's face turned stormy and he pulled at his beard, but the Herald
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quelled him with a look.
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``I am the Herald of the Deeps,'' the green-eyed dwarf said, and his
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voice rang with power. ``Promises I make will be observed by all who
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call themselves dwarves.''
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I could taste the power in the air, the sharp tang of it. My eyes
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narrowed. \emph{Named}, I thought. \emph{That man is Named.} Until now
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there had not been so much as a mote of spillover, which was worth
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noting. I hadn't seen that kind of control since Black. The dwarf was
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either a religious or cultural figure of some sort, from the sounds of
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it. Some kind of priest? Curious as I was, it was not necessary to delve
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too deep in the ways of the dwarves to make a deal. Asking questions now
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would only distract from that.
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``Understood,'' I simply said. ``Shade?''
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Akua leaned in over the table. She knew what I needed, right now, and
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would be better at bargaining for it. Soldiers were the most direly
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needed. Drow would have made for useful shock troops but if I could
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field a few thousand dwarves instead? It was a clearly superior outcome.
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There was precedent for their kind warring on the surface, though only
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as mercenaries. After that, my desires were split between diplomatic
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pressure and gold. An infusion of gold would get Callow through the
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worst of the current troubles, at least in some respects. Trade with the
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League of Free Cities had not ceased, and Mercantis never closed its
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shores to anyone: what my kingdom lacked and could not make could be
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bought, if we had the coin. On the other hand, a quiet word from the
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Kingdom Under to any of the powers might solve a lot of my troubles.
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Even something as simple as declaring the Kingdom of Callow under
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protection for two years would free my hands to do so much. If I could
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actually rebuild in peace instead of sinking all the treasury into the
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army\ldots{} No doubt the Empress would continue striking through
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deniable means, but Thief was becoming better hand at the shadow games
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with every passing month. Breathing room would be godsent, and I could
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ask for starker price than that.
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``Her Majesty came to the Everdark to obtain an army,'' Diabolist said.
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``As the days of the kraksun seem numbered, we will need to secure
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another source of soldiery.''
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Seeker Balasi smiled.
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``You can have right of recruitment among them,'' he said. ``Any you can
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take into your service will be spared, so long as they depart.''
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That was a broad promise, I thought. If I managed to sway even a third
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of the drow, were they really willing to let them go? I supposed it made
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sense, from their perspective. So long as they left the Everdark, they
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were no longer a dwarven problem.
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``A right we possess, strictly speaking,'' Akua politely replied. ``As
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you made it clear you have no intention of pursuit beyond the span of
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the Fourteenth Expansion. Dwarves have served as mercenaries before,
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this would not be significantly different.''
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``It is against decree to war on the surface when the Kingdom Under
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seeks expansion,'' the Herald said replied. ``You will find no purchase
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here.''
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The deed-seeker frowned, then spoke to his fellow dwarf in their tongue.
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They traded a few sentences, then Balasi cleared his throat.
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``While not in official capacity, I could speak to a few of my
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fellows,'' he offered. ``Should you deliver, we could seek deeds in your
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wars.''
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``And how many of your fellows could we count on, Seeker?'' Akua asked.
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``Two, three hundred,'' Balasi said.
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``Not a significant enough force, I take it,'' the shade asked me in
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Mtethwa.
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``I already have enough monsters up my sleeves,'' I honestly replied.
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``What I need is solid foot to give the vultures pause. Three hundred
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wouldn't make Hasenbach or the Dead King think twice.''
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``Their deaths could be leveraged into greater dwarven involvement,''
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she suggested.
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``We'd also have to answer for that,'' I grunted. ``Pass.''
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``Then we return to recruiting from the drow,'' Akua said. ``Shall I
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press coin or influence?''
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``Coin first,'' I decided. ``Best we stand on our own, if we can have
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that that. But try to get protection if you can. Doesn't matter if it's
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short so long as we can call in the favour when we need it.''
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It would have been polite to call diplomacy what followed, but I knew
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haggling when I saw it. That Akua was arguing the murder of a lesser god
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was not cheap instead of loudly exclaiming fresh fish for silver was
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highway robbery did not make the substance of what took place any
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different. It was a delicate line to walk for Diabolist. We were useful
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to the dwarves, but not \emph{necessary} -- there was only so far she
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could push. I'd learned to put a leash on my temper, over the years, but
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I was still glad she was the one doing the talking. Balasi was
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near-openly trying to screw us, first suggesting a loan to the Kingdom
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of Callow instead of outright payment. As was always the way with these
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things, what was hammered out was a compromise no one was truly happy
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with. The treasury in Laure would be getting enough coin that Juniper
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should be able to raise the Army of Callow as she saw fit without
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picking clean every last copper, though after the expenses of feeding
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the southern refugees through the winter I suspected we'd have a rather
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tight belt when spring came around.
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Though Akua pushed hard for a degree of open support from the dwarves,
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the Herald personally killed the notion. What we got was a little more
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abstract, though in some ways just as useful: for the next five years,
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sale of weapons to any nation at war with the Kingdom of Callow would
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end. I would dearly like to see Cordelia Hasenbach try to raise half the
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countryside of Procer without a steady supply of cheap dwarven
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armaments. Unlike Praes, Procer had no large set of forges and smithies
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directly under the authority of the ruler: her options without the
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Kingdom Under propping up the war effort were few and rather
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unpalatable. Our right of recruitment from the drow was confirmed, under
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condition that they left the Everdark without fighting. It was at least
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two hours before everything was settled, Diabolist arranging for the
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payments and announcements being carried out through Mercantis as
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swiftly as possible. We ended as we began, drinks in hand: at the
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Herald's careful instruction we raised the wooden bowls and drank deep
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of the \emph{sudra}. It was smooth all the way down, I thought, yet no
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sweeter for it. There was a faint aftertaste that was almost coppery.
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Like blood.
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A fitting drink for this pact, then.
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