452 lines
22 KiB
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452 lines
22 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-heretics}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Heretics}\label{interlude-heretics}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-heretics}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Heretics}
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\epigraph{``It is common practice among the lower classes of Praes, who lack
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surnames, to name their children after themselves in the hopes of
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confounding any devils coming to collect on debts.''}{Extract from ``Horrors and Wonders'', famed travelogue of Anabas the
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Ashuran}
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Masego had not missed court.
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At least this was not Ater, where a formal session would be held in the
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Tower with corresponding pageantry, but Thalassina was wealthy enough
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its ruler was near as indulgent. The floating fountains and illusory
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interior garden were proof enough of that. High Lord Idriss Kebdana was,
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he'd been told, an old ally of the Empress. Two years ago that would
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have made him Masego's ally as well, but things had since changed.
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Catherine and Malicia were enemies now, and he'd already had to give
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thought as to how he would attack the Tower's vicious set of protections
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when that enmity finally led to blows. He'd considered killing High Lord
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Idriss, since he was already here anyway, but he \emph{was} a guest. It
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was apparently very different to kill someone on the battlefield
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compared to killing them in their bed -- which was irksome since
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practically speaking the end result was the same -- so he'd eventually
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decided against it. Still, he'd made a note of the weaknesses in the
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city's wards. If the Army of Callow ever had to assault Thalassina, he
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was confident he could collapse the central array with the right ritual.
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``A glass, Lord Hierophant?''
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His eyes moved under the cloth to study the pair who'd approached him.
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Twins. Soninke, or close enough: native Thalassinians tended to be mixed
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blood, taking in appearance after the last infusion from either side.
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The man had the Gift, and heavily enchanted robes. An utter waste, he
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thought with disdain as he took them in. Silk might be costly and take
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well to sorcery, but it also dispersed it at an unusually high rate. The
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Yan Tei supposedly had their ways around that, but secrets from across
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the Tyrian Sea were not easily obtained. Those robes would require
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regular maintenance just to keep up\ldots{} warmth, shifting patterns of
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gold and a lesser illusion anchored in the man's face? What a waste of
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the art. Three different workings in this difficult a material: they
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were throwing away a skilled mage's time just by owning it. The woman of
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the pair was offering him a delicate transparent glass filled with wine.
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His eyes narrowed in on it, finding no poison within. Unusual. They put
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poison in everything at events like this.
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``That won't be necessary,'' Masego replied.
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He belatedly remembered to add a slight inclination of the head as
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thanks, as was polite.
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``I would have thought you eager to taste a proper Wasteland vintage,
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after your years abroad,'' the man said with a friendly smile.
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``I usually can't tell where wine is from,'' he admitted. ``Not without
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alchemical tools.''
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They both laughed, which surprised him. Had someone told a joke? He
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should pay closer attention to the conversation then. The woman laid a
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hand on her brother's arm and leaned forward as she laughed, the
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elaborate straps of her dress shifting. It was a strange apparel, he
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thought. Thalassina was known for its seaside breeze, would she not get
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cold walking outside attired in this way? Maybe it was a dress meant
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purely for receptions like these.
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``Still, it must be pleasing to have returned home,'' the woman said.
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``The provinces are not known for their\ldots{} comforts.''
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She was leaning forward again. Must have a bad back.
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``I usually sleep in the Observatory,'' Masego noted. ``So I wouldn't
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know.''
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``Ah, the famous Observatory. I have heard much of it, lately,'' the man
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smiled. ``Your own work, it is not? Would it be indiscreet to ask how it
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functions?''
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The blind man cocked his head to the side.
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``Have you read Serebano's ten volumes on scrying?'' he asked.
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There was a heartbeat of silence.
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``I have not,'' the man said.
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``Then there would be no point in telling you,'' Masego replied. ``You
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lack the necessary grounding to understand the basic underlying
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tenets.''
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The man's smile grew stiff, though his twin seemed amused.
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``Then I will obtain copies, my lord, and perhaps we can pursue that
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discussion at a later date,'' the other mage said.
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``If you'd like,'' Masego said. ``Although I've been told I should kill
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anyone who tries to figure it out without permission, so that seems
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counter-productive of you.''
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``Is that so?'' the male twin blandly said.
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His face had gone blank. \emph{Ah, I offended him}, the mage realized.
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It must have been that he'd made it clear the man was ignorant. His
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friends kept telling him it was impolite to do that, though they might
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as well ask him to stop remarking that the sea was wet. Ignorance was
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everywhere.
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``I am told you've never visited Thalassina properly,'' the female twin
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said.
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Masego wondered if it was too late to ask for their names. It probably
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was. Father had provided him a list with names and descriptions, but
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he'd needed something to wipe an acid stain and he hadn't felt like
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getting up to fetch a cloth. That might have been a tactical mistake of
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sorts, he reluctantly conceded. In his experience, if you asked people
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their name after conversing with them for more than four sentences they
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tended to get angry.
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``I am uncertain what you mean by properly,'' he said. ``But I have only
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ever seen a few streets and parts of this palace.''
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``There is much I could show you, then,'' she replied smilingly. ``It
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would be a grave sin if I never offered to escort you to the seastone
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walls or the corals.''
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He was uncertain what religion had to do with sightseeing, but
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Thalassinians \emph{were} known for their strange practices.
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``If my work allows,'' he said.
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By reputation, the corals were rather beautiful. Also filled with old
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wards and traps for any seeking invasion through the sea, which to be
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frank interested him rather more.
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``My sisters knows the city well as any native,'' the other twin said
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encouragingly. ``And I've no doubt the company of your own kind will be
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a balm after your time amongst the savages.''
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``Most legionaries are actually well-behaved,'' Masego noted. ``And I
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spent little time with them regardless.''
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They laughed again, to his growing confusion. He went over the spoken
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words carefully. His own kind? He'd thought they meant humans, which was
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rather odd since as far as he knew the Army of Callow was human in
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majority. Assuming they were not idiots, which he almost never did in
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situations such as these, they might have meant `his kind' as Praesi
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instead. Oh. Was he supposed to be feeling patriotic since the Empire
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was at war? But then he was technically at war with it, since his
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friends were, so the logic was not sound. Baffling.
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``You meant Callowans,'' he tried.
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``I suppose some are barely civilized,'' the male twin mused. ``They did
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spend a few decades under our rule, after all. And they are now led by
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the Carrion's Lord castoff, no doubt thanking all their Gods for her
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Praesi education.''
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``I was not aware my uncle had cast off anything,'' Masego noted.
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``Except scruples, but he's always insisted he was born without those.''
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Which had led to a thoroughly wasted evening when he'd been nine and
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trying to find those in his anatomy charts, worried Uncle Amadeus was
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missing an organ. The woman smiled over the rim of her cup.
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``There is no need to be coy, my lord,'' she said. ``We have kin in the
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capital. The breach between the two is common knowledge in the right
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circles.''
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Who had Uncle Amadeus been arguing with recently? The Empress, he
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remembered, but that hardly fit the rest of the conversation. Did they
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mean Catherine?
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``It must have been tedious to humour the fools,'' the man drawled.
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``Yet you did benefit: an unprecedented Name. Your foresight is to be
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praised.''
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Oh, they'd been insulting his friends the whole time. Maybe. He should
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check to be certain, Hakram had noted it was important.
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``By the fools, you mean the Woe,'' he asked.
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``What greater fools are there?'' the woman laughed.
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So now the list. They were nobles, since no one else would be allowed
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here. They weren't visibly being forced to speak to him. There'd be no
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collateral damage to innocents. Was it legal? Probably. Callow had some
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kind of treason law about insulting the queen, didn't it? It counted.
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``Right,'' Hierophant smiled, and raised his hand. ``\emph{Boil}.''
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Casting without proper incantation had become much easier since his
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transition, save when he was molding miracles. As a rule Trismegistan
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sorcery put greater emphasis on precise manipulation of magical energies
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than the use of mediums like incantations and runes -- they were a
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crutch to visualize and measure, not a requirement -- but that same
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precision made it difficult to actually dispense with those mediums. The
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acceptable margin of error before collapse in a Trismegistan spell
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formula was barely a tenth of what it would be in a Petronian equivalent
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or, Gods forbid, a \emph{Jaquinite} one. As a result Trismegistan
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sorcery usually produced superior results for inferior costs while
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serving the same purpose, but also required greater skill and longer
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practice from of the mage using it. The portion of practitioners that
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could transcend those limitations was small, and even among those such
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transcendence was usually reserved for a few especially well-studied
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formulas. It was possible to lower the bar so badly any blunderer could
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tinker with the spell, of course, as the Legions had done with their own
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arcane roster. But only at the expense of every single boon save
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flexibility.
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Fortunately, Masego's sensitivity to the forces he manipulated through
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his will had greatly increased since transition. He'd initially been
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disinclined to rely on anything as fallible as \emph{senses} when using
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magic, but he'd overcome that reluctance after proving he could
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reproduce that sensitivity through adjusted measuring tools. Indeed,
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he'd since come to theorize that aside from magical capacity -- one's
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inborn talent to use sorcery -- there might be a second, more discreet
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aspect to the Gift. Sensitivity to those same energies, which he'd
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ventured on parchment might be what distinguished mages capable of using
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High Arcana from those who could not even after a lifetime of dedicated
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study. It might even finally solve the mystery of why the Taghreb
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produced fewer mages than Soninke stock but a proportionally higher
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amount of mages capable of using the higher mysteries. Many Taghreb
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lines had twined with creatures, after all, wich were said to have a
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natural grasp of magic humans did not. The paired screams of the twins
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as their blood boiled in their veins and began to waft out through their
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eyes and nostrils shook him out of his thoughts. Ah, yes, that was still
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happening.
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The spell had been crude, its formula still fresh and untested, but
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being able to affect blood without a sympathetic link or a ritual whose
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sheer power would make the matter irrelevant was excitingly new grounds
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for him. He paid close attention to the rate at which their blood
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evaporated, committing the numbers to memory, and was rather irked when
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they both only died after ten heartbeats. Much too long, it meant part
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of the heat was being dispersed into the broader body. He'd have to
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scrap the entire containment vector, and since that was tied into almost
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every part of the formula that effectively meant scrapping the entire
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spell and starting from scratch.
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``Masego.''
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Papa's tone was chiding, and there had been a time where that would have
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given Hierophant pause. Before Keter. Before he'd seen Tikoloshe walk
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the grounds of what had become the single most significant magical
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phenomenon in Calernian history without speaking a single word of it to
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his son. Much had been cast into doubt by that revelation. If Papa had
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been human there might have been uncertainty about his motivations, but
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unlike humans devils were\ldots{} direct. Unequivocal in what drove
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them. There were only two reasons that Tikoloshe would have failed to
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fulfill Masego's desire when he so easily could, and both were ugly
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things. \emph{So} \emph{which are you, father -- a stranger or a slave?}
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Either was betrayal, if owned by different pair of hands.
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``Father,'' he simply replied.
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``That was unwise,'' Tikoloshe said, eyeing the corpses.
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Masego frowned.
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``It would have been better to test the spell on animals beforehand,''
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he conceded. ``But pigs are expensive and the physiological differences
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really are rather minor.''
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Whispers spread across the hall in the wake of his words. No doubt they
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were agreeing with him. Apes were even better for experimentation,
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admittedly, but those could only be obtained from across the Tyrian Sea
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and they were \emph{ridiculously} costly to import. Even the small ones
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that didn't know any tricks. He'd asked around. Well, asked Vivienne to,
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which was basically the same thing. Papa sighed. More than a few nobles
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flushed at the sight.
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``That is not what I meant,'' he said. ``You should apologize to High
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Lord Idriss for disrupting his reception.''
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Masego's brow rose. Wasn't it already enough that he hadn't killed the
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man? He'd been very courteous so far.
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``Will he apologize for them insulting my friends?'' he asked peevishly.
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``He is not responsible for their words,'' Tikoloshe said.
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``Then it has nothing to do with him'' Masego said.
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``Mas-''
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``\emph{Enough},'' Hierophant hissed. ``Father asked for my help and so
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I came, but my patience is running thin. I agreed to lend my time, not
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\emph{waste} it. There is work to do, and none of it takes place here.''
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He could be at the Obervatory right now, plumbing the depths of a
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hundred Hells. He could be with Catherine, taking apart drow sorcery and
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learning from ancient secrets. He could be picking at the minds of the
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Wild Hunt to understand what set them apart from the other fae but no,
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instead he was at court, talking with blind children who -- Masego took
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a deep breath. He would not get angry. Not over this, when the true
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source of his anger was other. He would be fair, and hold only the
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responsible to account. They'd shown him. It was \emph{better} when the
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world worked that way. And when it didn't? You just had to make it.
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``Enjoy court, Father,'' he said through gritted teeth. ``I am done with
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it.''
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---
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Wekesa watch his son stride away in a swirl of dark robes, leaving
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silence behind him. A few heartbeats and then whispers bloomed, even as
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servants took away the corpses of the Serali twins. Their father was
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stuck halfway between terrified and furious, his little gamble to curry
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favour having proved rather costly. But this was court, in the end, and
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so the conversations moved on. Lord Hajal Serali's blunder would be the
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talk of the city for a few weeks and that would be the end of it. The
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man was not so influential as to risk taking revenge on a Named, not
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unless Alaya tacitly allowed it. Which she would not. Warlock had set
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this as a condition with his old friend before sending for Masego. So
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long as certain boundaries were observed, the Eyes would disappear
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anyone even considering raising a hand at his son. Tikoloshe returned to
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his side, and decades of marriage told him his husband was feeling
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rather irritated even if his face betrayed none of it. The two of them
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were given a wide berth after they reunited, the implicit courtesy
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nothing less than his due. He and his son were the only thing that stood
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between Thalassina and a sack, after all. Idriss might get snippy about
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the dead bodies, but he would not forget that.
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Wekesa was not above simply leaving if he felt like it, and had made
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that much abundantly clear.
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He was here on Alaya's behalf, not the High Lord's, and she knew better
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than to ask to tedious a favour of him. Wekesa had not thrown away his
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hours teaching imbeciles when Amadeus had requested it, and he would not
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do the same fighting this chore of war if he had to watch for knives
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aimed at his family's back. Not even for a single battle, however
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interesting in nature. If Procer and its crusading fellow insisted on
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testing the Wasteland he'd discipline them appropriately, but what did
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he care if Nok and Thalassina burned? He had no laboratories or
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correspondents in either: there was nothing to defend. If Kahtan or
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Okoro were on the line it would be a different story, but they were too
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far inland to be threatened by Ashuran raids. Tikoloshe came to stand by
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his side, almost close enough to touch, and Wekesa idly brushed his
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fingers against the rune-carved jewels on his belt. The contamination
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ward bubbled out a heartbeat later.
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``He used to be such an obedient child,'' his husband mourned.
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``He's an adult now,'' Wekesa said. ``With the opinions of one. He won't
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always agree with us. He's no longer the little boy that used to chase
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the hem of our robes.''
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The incubus made a moue. It was a wonder, Warlock thought, that even
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after all these years the sight of that could cause a low stir of desire
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in his belly. He'd never taken another lover after wedding his husband
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-- how could any mortal man be half as good in bed as a creature born of
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desire itself? -- and still it amazed him he'd never felt the need to
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seek a partner outside their marriage. It wasn't like Tikoloshe would
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have minded, though he'd certainly gotten more possessive over the
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years. Love, Wekesa thought, was a strange thing. For what else could it
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be he felt, when other desires failed to move him?
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``In public, `Kesa?'' Tikoloshe said, sounding flattered.
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``It's nothing they've not speculated about,'' he replied, sliding a
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hand around his husband's firm waist and bringing him close for a kiss.
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There was little chaste about it, but they did not linger.
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``You're attempting to distract me,'' Tikoloshe sighed. ``It won't work.
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This is more than growing up, Wekesa. He is angry with us. Which one I
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cannot tell, but-''
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``I know,'' Warlock admitted. ``And while I mislike Foundling, she has
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done wonders to keep him even-keeled. He would not act so sullen without
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a reason.''
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Amadeus' apprentice might be a little twerp as arrogant as she was
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ignorant, but she'd done right by his son. He'd seriously considered
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asking Alaya to keep her alive just for how she benefited Masego, but
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the situation was too far gone. It'd become a mess between her and
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Amadeus, and while those were rare they also tended to get exceedingly
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nasty. \emph{He should have adopted some orphan years ago and settled
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the paternal urge}, Wekesa thought. More than once he'd hinted
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fatherhood might do his friend some good. He and Alaya acted like they
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were married half the time, a shared child would only have served to
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channel that tension more productively.
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``Then he's learned something that angered him,'' Tikoloshe said.
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``While he was abroad.''
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And there was the trouble, for while Wekesa knew neither of them had
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been perfect fathers he was genuinely surprise anything he'd done would
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wound his son this way. He should have spent more time with Masego when
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he was younger, instead of studying. That was one of his great regrets,
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for he'd not truly understood back then that those days would never come
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again. All those he cared about, save for his husband, were Named. He'd
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gotten in the habit of treating long partings as being of little import.
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Yet where would his son have learned to resent this? None of the Woe
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were close to their parents according to the reports, save for the
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Thief, and her father hadn't even known she was moonlighting as an
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apprentice to a member of the Guild of Thieves. Trust and closeness
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could be different matters, true, but it was still baffling.
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``I cannot think of what would have led to this,'' Warlock admitted.
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``He's been to Keter,'' Tikoloshe murmured.
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``That matter is long buried,'' Wekesa frowned.
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``The Dead King-''
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``Would not deign to indulge in games with a mortal mage, however
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talented,'' Warlock flatly stated.
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``Then it might have been the journey,'' his husband replied.
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Wekesa did not contradict him. The reflection of Keter in Arcadia must
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be highly perilous, but he knew little of it. Hye had passed through
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there once, but getting anything useful out of her was near impossible.
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It wasn't that she lied. That would have been of some use, as even
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boasts and exaggerations would hold a kernel of truth. No, it was the
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opposite: she was concise to the point of uselessness. \emph{I walked
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through Arcadia and then cut my way out and then I beat up dead people
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all the way to Hell.} That was the whole sum of how she'd described her
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experience assaulting Keter through the realm of the fae, to Warlock's
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despair. Trying to tease more information out of her inevitably ran into
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the wall of Ranger genuinely believing she'd given him all she needed to
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and getting irritated if he implied otherwise.
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``Perhaps a conversation is in order,'' Wekesa finally said.
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``Perhaps,'' his husband gently mocked.
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He grimaced. It would be a delicate matter to approach, even more so if
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it proved to be a correct guess. Warlock was not unaware that decades of
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being able to dictate on what terms he interacted with almost everyone
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else had atrophied some his former social finesse. On the other side of
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the room, Lady Gharim dropped to the floor screaming and clawing at her
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face. Her veins had turned dark, thick with rot. Sloppy spellwork.
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``People,'' the Warlock said loudly enough his voice could be heard by
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all attendees, ``should be aware of their own limitations.''
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His gaze lingered on the dead woman, who might still be alive if she
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hadn't tried her hand at an eavesdropping spell. Contamination wards
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were not forgiving.
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``I believe we will take our leave, High Lord Idriss,'' Tikoloshe
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smiled. ``And let that particular reminder linger in our absence.''
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The hall was silent, at least for now. Whispers would resume as soon as
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they left.
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|
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It was not the first death of the night, and it would not be the last.
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