478 lines
21 KiB
TeX
478 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-66-tremors}{%
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\chapter{Tremors}\label{chapter-66-tremors}}
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\epigraph{``It is a small-minded man who needs a reason to create a ritual
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that would crash the moon into Creation.''}{Dread Emperor Malignant III, before his death and second reign as
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Dread Emperor Revenant}
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The Urulan Sigil broke within an hour of its chief dying at my hands.
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It was a valuable lessons as to how I should handle drow in the future.
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Decapitating a Proceran or Praesi army, for example, wouldn't
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necessarily take them out of the fight. The Legions, after the Reforms
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anyway, had been built with the notion in mind that the highest-ranking
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officers were natural targets for heroes or resistance fighters.
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Redundancies and a clear order of succession for the chain of command
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had been set into their framework. Princes of Procer, on the other hand,
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might be the undisputed rulers of their hosts but they also tended to
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delegate the practicalities of campaigning to trained career officers.
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In both cases, putting the head of the army's leader on a pike would be
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damaging in many ways but not outright scatter that same army. Sigils
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weren't armies, though, they were tribes kept together only by the
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strength of the sigil-holder. When I'd tossed Urulan's severed head into
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the middle of the battle, the glue keeping the sigil together had
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crumbled. Their kind, when it came down to it, let their actions be
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dictated by the invisible balance of martial strength. If the attacker
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was capable of killing the sigil-holder, odds were that the individual
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who'd done it was capable of wiping out the rest of the sigil on their
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own. Best to bargain, if possible, or flee if it was not.
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Unsurprisingly it was the Mighty that kept fighting the longest. Dzulu
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could afford surrender more easily, knowing that they weren't worth
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harvesting to the enemy's upper ranks and that whoever was in charge
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there would always be a need for warriors to send into the meat grinder.
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What did they care under which sigil it happened? Drow did not fight for
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plunder in the way that most tribes and clans would, not exactly. To
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amount to anything they needed Night, and war was certainly the easiest
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way to accumulate that -- but when there was a clear winner, doubling
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down on a losing fight was not to their advantage. Mighty, on the other
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hand, knew they'd be hunted and harvested after a defeat. Used as spoils
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instead of coin or food. Surrender might be feasible if assurances were
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made, but that was not custom. Drow, for obvious reasons, preferred to
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raise the strength of their own Mighty rather than bring into the fold
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those defeated. I was part of a broader trend in their ways, one I was
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only now beginning to really grasp: as far as the drow were concerned,
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maybe nine tenths of their own kind were essentially irrelevant. Matters
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of life and death were settled by a handful of Mighty on both sides,
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with dzulu and nisi serving as tools and ornaments to whoever came out
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on top.
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What that meant, practically speaking, was that the moment Mighty Urulan
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died this stopped being a battle and started being clean-up. It could
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still have turned south on us, if we hadn't been careful. The Urulan had
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outnumbered us three to one in Mighty and if they managed to cull my own
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numbers the idea of continued resistance might have taken hold. Corpses
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would have been harvested, fresh demigods raised and sent after our
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`champions'. Our saving grace, in this case, was Ivah. My Lord of Silent
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Steps had no real interest in fighting minions, and had gone after the
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enemy's Mighty relentlessly. It would have been one thing if those had
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been allowed to gather together, but instead they'd found themselves
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ambushed and taken out one by one by a titled drow who was no stranger
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to these kinds of fights. Archer's sweep on the other side had met with
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only cursory resistance before she stopped as ordered. When it became
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clear neither she nor her escorts were inclined to advance any further,
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the forces sent out to meet her had doubled back to meet my own assault.
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Too late, however, to turn the tides. Their sigil-holder was already
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dead.
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A few had tried her flank anyway, but after the second time she shot a
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jawor in the throat the moment it left cover their enthusiasm had
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mysteriously waned.
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I spent the rest of the battle watching over my forces like a hen
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watching her chicks, not exactly holding their hand but ensuring that if
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they got in over their heads I could swiftly step on the opposition. To
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my surprise, even when we began taking sections of the Crossroads
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holding mostly nisi I never found the need to call my warband to order.
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My Mighty were oath-bound to decency, but the dzulu were not. Still, it
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had been made clear to them that wanton slaughter would not be allowed,
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or rape -- though apparently that latter crime was near unheard of among
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drow, who treated sex as more a chore than a pleasure and rarely
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bothered unless they were nisi -- and in the end they did not test my
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laws. I wondered if they would have pulled at the leash, had I not
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personally slain Urulan and its strongest rylleh. My general distaste
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for what passed as drow nature whispered yes, but I might be doing them
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injustice. I held no illusions about the moral fibre of a people whose
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main occupation was murder, but there was something about them that
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brought old words from Black to mind\emph{. If you have the ability to
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accomplish something, it is your right to do so.} I hadn't understood
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back then how deep a look into him that little sentence offered, or how
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close to the same Praesi philosophy he disdained it was in practice.
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But there was a ring to it, an underlying sense that I saw mirrored in
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the way drow thought. The pragmatic monsters who'd shaped the woman I
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was today -- and the plural was not a mistake for Malicia had been a
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teacher too, if not a willing or gentle one -- kept to a faith
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worshipping only ability, the capacity to carry out one's will. That was
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a face given to their beliefs by the complicated games of the surface,
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though, where every little act was part of a broader war of growing
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sophistication. Down here the varnish of civilization had been stripped
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off, and the face given to that god was rawer: power. Just power. If you
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were strong enough, your rules were the only rules there were and they
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would not be questioned or disobeyed unless someone stronger than you
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contradicted them. I might be ordering them to act in ways that broke
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their customs, but as long as I remained the larger monster those orders
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would be observed for that, too, was custom. And perhaps deeper one than
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the rest.
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``So is it me or do you always get all silent and philosophical after a
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big fight?'' Indrani mused.
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She swaggered in, her coat flecked with blood and a satisfied smile on
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her face. For someone who disdained the trappings of civilization,
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Archer had taken well to battles. Grown to enjoy them more than I'd
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thought, her sense of what victory being so personal it should not lend
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itself well to a clash of armies. A reminder, I mused, that people could
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continue to surprise even when you believed you had the measure of them.
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``I never liked this part,'' I admitted as she came to stand beside me.
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``The clean-up. When the blades are out and shields collide I can almost
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feel what the songs sing of, but the aftermath spoils it. The return to
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the bare realities of what took place.''
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It'd barely qualified as a skirmish, by the numbers. More soldiers had
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been involved in the war game that'd won me command of the Fifteenth,
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and arguably much more complex tactics. How many people had actually
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fought today? Five hundred, maybe. And of those less than a hundred had
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actually had an impact on the outcome. There were not even two hundred
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dead in the aking of the Crossroads, though the way their corpses had
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been dragged and laid down in rows along the largest avenue made it seem
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more than it should. Most those bodies were already bereft of Night,
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their killers have wasted no time claiming their due, but enough
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remained that the auction to come would be the largest yet. Indrani
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sighed.
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``It does get on my nerves, that the best parts of you are also the most
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irritating,'' she said.
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I snorted and left it at that, the two of us sharing a rare moment of
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comfortable silence. She tended to fill those religiously, almost as if
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she were afraid of the absence of noise, and so I savoured the rare
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respite.
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``Should I ask why you're wearing clothes too large for you?'' she
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finally asked.
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``No,'' I grunted.
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``Well, the pants are tight enough they make your arse look
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\emph{amazing},'' Indrani said. ``But the whole long sleeves thing makes
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you look like a Mercantis trader.''
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``You know what, I'll take it,'' I said. ``Still going to need to change
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before speaking with whoever comes up, though.''
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``Talk with Diabolist first, maybe,'' she said. ``It's not like
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\emph{she's} wearing real clothes, but she is disappointingly not naked
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all the time.''
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Thank the Gods for that. Indrani would never get anything done if Akua's
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admittedly impressive assets were permanently on display.
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``I will,'' I replied. ``Not right now, though. She's still taking count
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of our acquisitions.''
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``Of course she is,'' Indrani drawled. ``It's almost like she's
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maneuvering herself into being the obvious pick for who ends up stuck
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watching over the drow when we get back upstairs.''
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It was easy to forget, sometimes, that Archer's lack of manners was more
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choice than inability. In some ways she was as sharp as Hakram when it
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came to reading social currents.
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``She can manoeuvre all she wants, she's not getting the job,'' I said.
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``I'm still debating who'll oversee when I'm not around, but she's not
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in the running.''
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``Vivienne?'' Indrani suggested.
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``She doesn't have the right edges,'' I reluctantly admitted. ``They'll
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challenge her. I'm considering Larat.''
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``Now there's a real philosophical question,'' Indrani drawled. ``How
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many treacherous lieutenants it too many treacherous lieutenants?''
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``One, but we make do with what we have,'' I sighed.
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``We make do with what we have,'' Indrani repeated grimly, squinting
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forward in a poor imitation of a frown.
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``I don't sound like that,'' I protested.
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She hunched her shoulders and raised her chin, trying for noble sorrow
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but mostly looking like she had stomach cramps.
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``I beat up empires but I'm real conflicted about it,'' Indrani
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declared. ``A fairy queen named my crew the Woe because I'm so tragic
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and misunderstood.''
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``Screw you,'' I grinned. ``You're part of it too.''
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``I once finished the last of the stew even if I don't really need to
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eat, because I'm just the \emph{worst},'' Indrani solemnly added.
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It surprised a splash of laughter out of me, and once it started it
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didn't stop. The two of us ended up standing there like fools,
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sniggering at nothing much at all. It was a released I hadn't known I
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needed, and I could not help but be grateful for it. I'd thought before
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that Indrani was most beautiful in fleeting moments, when the part of
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her that was more glorious alive than anyone I'd ever known came to the
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surface and it was all you could see. I'd not been wrong, I decided.
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Strange as it was, she more attractive to me now -- laughter glinting in
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hazelnut eyes, slightly breathless and making sport of all the world --
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than she would have been half-naked on my bed wearing little but lace.
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``I did make a promise, while fighting Urulan,'' I teased.
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``Oh?'' she said. ``What-''
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My hand slipped around her waist, beneath the coat, and she allowed
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herself to be dipped down. Her eyes wide, I watched her lips part and
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leaned down to kiss her. She tasted, I thought, like spices -- but soon
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enough all I could think of was the hungry heat of her lips against
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mine, the way our teeth clicked together awkwardly before she teased me
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with her tongue. She threaded her fingers into my hair, forcing me
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closer, and when we finally parted she was flushed and out of breath.
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``Gods,'' she said, ``you are so \emph{short}.''
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Naturally, I dropped her. She fell into a sprawl with a loud yelp,
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perfectly capable of landing on her feet but never one to allow
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practicalities to get in the way of theatrics. I wiped my lips, then
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shrugged.
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``There, promise fulfilled,'' I mused. ``Back to work.''
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``\emph{Really}?'' she whined. ``You're going to get me all worked up
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and then just leave?''
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``I'm sure you'll get over it,'' I grinned, and turned my back to her.
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She cursed me loudly as I sauntered away, feeling more human than I had
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in a very long time.
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---
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I found Diabolist seated like the queen of an industrious grey-skinned
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hive, drow gravitating to her and Centon for translated instructions
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before darting away to carry out her bidding. They were getting in the
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habit of obeying her, I saw. Not the Mighty -- they saw her, I
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suspected, more as an obstacle to climb than a superior -- but the
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nascent pack of dzulu officers and supervisors had grown used to taking
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her orders. They saw little of me, on a daily basisl. Primly perched on
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a flat stone, Akua was a vision in her long dress of silver and blue.
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While high-necked and seemingly conservative, her clothes were cut to be
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rather flattering to her frame: they suggested rather than revealed, but
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the suggestion was not mild. Scarlet eyes remained on me as I strolled
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at her side, plopping myself down next to her. I glanced at Centon.
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``Dismissed,'' I said in Lower Miezan. ``All of you.''
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The nisi, though that status might just be remedied to today, bowed low
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and repeated the order in Crepuscular. Within five heartbeats we were
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entirely alone in the avenue.
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``Catherine,'' Diabolist greeted me. ``Another victory for your tally.''
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``It was the opening measure,'' I replied. ``The real pivot comes when
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the deeper sigils decide on their response.''
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``There have been scouts,'' she noted. ``No Mighty yet.''
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``It's coming,'' I said. ``They can't afford an unknown her for long,
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not when we control the top floor of the Column.''
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``As you say,'' Akua murmured, inclining her head. ``I had the privilege
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of witnessing your duel with Mighty Urulan, from a distance.''
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I hummed.
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``And you have thoughts,'' I said.
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So did I, and I was curious to see if they aligned.
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``If I may speak frankly?'' Diabolist said.
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``Never too late to start,'' I drawled.
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``Yes, yes, very clever,'' she sighed. ``I have begun to worry,
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Catherine. Urulan was perhaps in the twenty strongest drow of Great
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Lotow, and likely close to the bottom of that division. It
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fought\ldots{} better than I expected. You came close to death more than
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once.''
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``It was a wakeup call,'' I softly agreed. ``We haven't been taking them
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seriously enough, have we? Lotow's not one of the big cities when it
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comes down to it. There's leviathans lurking ahead.''
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``You have grown used to being able to walk away from wounds that would
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kill even Named,'' Akua said. ``And so developed what I can only call
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sloppy habits. I've heard descriptions of your encounters with heroes at
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the Battle of the Camps, the Saint in particular, and cannot help but
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think this is a trend and not an instance.''
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``In that, we are in agreement,'' I said.
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Some of the fights I'd been in, lately\ldots{} Black would weep to see
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them. I'd always been more inclined towards brawling than finesse, but I
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was starting to realize there was a reason my teacher had never seen his
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relative lack of power compared to his predecessors as a weakness. When
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you had a good enough hammer, everything started looking like a nail.
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That was a lot more likely to get you killed than lack of juice. I'd
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begun to rely on abilities that I should only ever use as a last result,
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and at some point I was going to run into someone who'd kill me for it.
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``You use only the thinnest slice of what Winter is capable of,''
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Diabolist said. ``Perhaps exploration in depth is in order.''
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``You want me to fight like you,'' I smiled. ``Distance, control, never
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committing.''
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``Not your usual fare, I know,'' she said. ``But you are no longer the
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Squire in any significant sense. Your repertoire has expanded.''
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``Tricks are useful,'' I admitted. ``And I do need to learn how to use
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the kind of great workings you threw around when riding my mantle. But
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you're wrong about the rest.''
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Her eyes narrowed.
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``You intend to take the opposite path,'' Akua said.
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``The basics,'' I mused. ``I've been neglecting those, since I took my
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mantle. Thinking it was all right to get into fights because I'm hard
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enough to win them. But many of those should never have been fights at
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all.''
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``Fight no battle save that which you must, for war is best won away
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from the field,'' Diabolist quoted thoughtfully.
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``Theodosius?'' I asked.
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``Terribilis the First,'' she replied. ``You intend\ldots{}
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contingencies for the coming meeting with the drow, then.''
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``They're useful things, contingencies,'' I muttered, looking up at the
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bare stone of the cavern ceiling.
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It was about time, I decided. The opening was there.
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``Marker,'' I said. ``It's time for us to have one of our regular little
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chats, Akua.''
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``Is it?'' Diabolist said. ``I cannot recall-''
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She paused. Her face went blank and I smiled ruefully.
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``\textbf{I compel you to answer my questions and do so truthfully and
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completely},'' I Spoke.
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The shade shivered, the order sinking into her.
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``We have done this before,'' Diabolist said.
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``We have,'' I murmured. ``Have you walled off any memories or
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knowledge, or considered doing so?''
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``I have not,'' Akua replied.
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``Do you have any hole or holes in your memories?''
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``I do not,'' she said, then cocked her head to the side. ``I do not. Oh
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my, you \emph{have} been thorough.''
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I had. I'd known from the start that I wouldn't outplay her with words,
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she'd always been better at that. But I had other ways to even the
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scales.
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``Have you plotted or acted against my interests?'' I asked.
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``I have not,'' she replied, sounding amused.
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``What are your current short-term and long-term objectives?''
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``I seek to prove myself as necessary to the running of your sigil,''
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she said. ``And in doing so, remain undeniably useful so long as you
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have use for the drow. My only long-term objective is survival.''
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``How do you intend to secure your survival?''
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Her lips thinned. She never enjoyed that one.
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``I must first learn the exact wording of the oath I believe you gave
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Thief, to see if it can be escaped through a technicality,'' Akua said.
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``I must then prove myself invaluable to your own objectives so that you
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will allow me to do so. I must be reconciled to Vivienne Dartwick, or
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she must be removed from the situation. If the wording if without flaw,
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I will seek to obtain a manner of resurrection that preserves most of
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what I am.''
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Nothing new, then. Good.
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``Have you manipulated the greater or lesser oaths, or both, so that you
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can exploit them in any way?'' I asked.
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``I have not,'' she said.
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The same answer as every time I'd asked the question, but it was worth
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checking to be sure.
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``Do you know why I insisted the oaths be sworn to the Sovereign of
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Moonless Nights?''
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``I do not,'' she said.
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Ah, too broad.
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``Do you have theories as to why I did?'' I asked.
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``I do,'' Diabolist drawled. ``Shall save us the time and elaborate?''
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I ignored her. If not prompted, she could lie.
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``What are these theories?''
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``I believe you intend to divert yourself or your mantle in the future,
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and so dissociated oath-keeping from your personal identity,'' she said.
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``I am not certain if the beneficiary would be an object or an
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individual, but suspect it will be the former Prince of Nightfall.''
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Wrong, but she didn't have to know that.
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``Is there any other part of my soul you would like me to bare?'' Akua
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asked. ``You must have other questions.''
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I had to keep it short -- too long and the risks increased she might
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notice -- and I usually used my last question to make sure she hadn't
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picked up on anything. I could do that tomorrow, though, at no great
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loss. And there were some things I'd gown curious about.
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``Why do you flirt with me?''
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She laughed, full-throated.
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``I know you have difficulty remaining emotionally uninvolved when in a
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sexual relationship, and you have a known weakness for powerful women,''
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she said. ``I also believe that contact between us would temporarily
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allow me to regain full physical senses, which is promising as I find
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you attractive enough sex would not be unpleasant.''
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I waited for a moment.
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``It also infuriates Thief when she overhears,'' Akua added reluctantly,
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forced by the order. ``Which I deeply enjoy.''
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``That might be the most human I've ever seen you act,'' I said.
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She languidly shrugged.
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``And now?''
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\textbf{``From and including the word `marker' I spoke earlier today,
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you will remember this conversation as idle chatter from the moment this
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sentence ends},'' I Spoke.
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Her form rippled and a heartbeat passed.
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``Amusing as this was, I believe there might be more pressing matters at
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hand,'' Diabolist said.
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``You're right,'' I said. ``Let's talk contingencies, then.''
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Still under control for now.
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I'd ask again tomorrow.
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