415 lines
19 KiB
TeX
415 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-68-poised}{%
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\chapter{Poised}\label{chapter-68-poised}}
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\epigraph{``Obviously you can't kill me now: your enmity is with the Dread
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Emperor of Praes, and I've already abdicated. I am now but a humble
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shoemaker, and what kind of hero slays a shoemaker?''}{Dread Emperor Irritant, the Oddly Successful. Later noted to have
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made surprisingly nice shoes during his three abdications.}
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``So is there, like, a branch of sorcery all about lakes?'' I mused.
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``Because if I'm going to keep using variations on the same trick it
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feels like there should be.''
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Akua's brow arched, expressing a monologue's worth of disdain without
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her speaking a single word.
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``Lakeomancy,'' I suggested. ``Catherine Foundling, foremost lakeomancer
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of her age. I could get a stele done like the old emperors -- you know,
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basically a whole monument's worth of bragging.''
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``It would be lacusomancy,'' Diabolist sighed. ``And there is no such
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thing. Even hydromancy is not a true discipline, properly speaking. Like
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most physical effects it falls under the broader aegis of
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manifestation.''
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``That just means we're pioneers, Akua,'' I grinned. ``Look at us,
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bravely exploring the many ways you can steal, drop or otherwise move
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lakes.''
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``Stolen is something of a misnomer,'' the shade noted, looking down.
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``We've only borrowed it, practically speaking.''
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Well, she wasn't wrong. Great Strycht had proved as much of a wonder as
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Great Lotow, in its own way. It was, well, the easiest way to put it was
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that it'd been a port. Not unlike Mercantis the city had been raised on
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a large island, though instead of a river it'd been a lake that
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surrounded it. A lake that was about as large as half of Daoine, which
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was rather impressive. Useful, too. It hadn't been this large
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originally: the basin had been artificially deepened and broadened
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before tributary rivers were dug into the stone to feed it. Tunnels and
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waterfalls, some coming from underground sources but others from the
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surface peaks of the Everdark. Lake Strycht was the freshwater source
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for an entire third of the inner ring, feeding a complex array of canals
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and sluice gates that were constantly fought over by sigils. The city
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itself was a bloody mess -- scraps between sigils had sunk entire chunks
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of what'd once been a single island, leaving some sort of demented urban
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archipelago instead -- but it was full of old sigils and would have been
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horridly difficult to assault. Drow ships were pretty much either rafts
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or small woven reed boats relying on oars. We'd seized a few, but it
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would have taken weeks of constant back and forth to get even a small
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army across.
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Besides, the good people of Strycht had made it clear that we were not
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only unwelcome but currently at the top of their `murder and harvest'
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list. I'd sent a few of my lords -- the Peerage, Akua had taken to
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calling them, and the name had kept -- to make polite inquiries about
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holding a council to discuss the dwarven threat and the cabal founded to
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answer it. They'd, uh, not taken well to that. Long story short, Soln
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and its fellows had harvested a few Mighty in a spurt of traditional
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drow diplomacy before making a tactical retreat back. They'd made enough
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of an impression that all seven cabals dedicated to maintaining control
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of the waterways had been called upon. Strycht was going to be swimming
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in old monsters before the month was out, and until then they'd taken to
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raiding my sigil's camps on the shore. The damage had been limited and
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we'd mostly come out on top due to sheer numbers and Winter fuckery, but
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after the initial probes they'd identified the weaknesses in our
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defences and begun concentrating on those. My sigil had taken the Hylian
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ways out of Lotow after stripping it clean of everything remotely
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food-adjacent and absorbed another six sigils on its way to Strycht, but
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while it'd massively swelled it was still a far cry from a real army. It
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was a confederation of tribes, if anything, bound to me by oaths and
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fear. Not exactly the kind of troops used to maintaining proper watch
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rosters and fielding patrols. So with the situation steadily worsening
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and the opposition refusing to talk, I'd decided a rebuttal was in
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order.
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So I'd confiscated Lake Strycht.
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It'd taken about two days to empty most of the basin even with two gates
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as large as we could make them. Taking every last drop had proved
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impossible: the tributaries kept feeding it and the basin wasn't even so
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there'd been pockets of water remaining. Still, in my estimating about
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nine tenths of the initial lake had been shunted off into Arcadia. What
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had once been water was now a stinking marsh of mud clogged with drying
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weeds and fish. It was a good thing we'd never attempted a crossing,
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because when the lake ebbed low some creatures were revealed that even
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Praesi would flinch at. Some kind of massive oily octopi with barbed
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tentacles, blind pale lizards the size of houses and long eels with an
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inexplicable amount of teeth. Most the monsters had gone through the
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gates, those that didn't either settling in the larger puddles or going
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wild as they died stripped of water. It'd been a display of power meant
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for the recalcitrant inside the city, now perched atop hills or small
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plateaus surrounded by mud, but it'd also been a form of diplomatic
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pressure. I'd just killed half a dozen rivers crucial to keeping an
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entire chunk of the inner ring from going thirsty and done a great deal
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more damage to Strycht itself.
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That lake had been their granary. They lived off the creatures swimming
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in it, of the weeds and plants now dying for lack of irrigation. The
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city's drow had wells and cisterns, but the population here was easily
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triple of Great Lotow. They'd beginning running out soon, and after that
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they'd be forced to sally out for puddle water with my Peerage waiting
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in ambush. The Mighty would be able to stick it out until reinforcements
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arrived, sure, but what about the rest? Nine tenths of their people were
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going start withering on the vine. Even if the cabals proved victorious
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against me in a few weeks, sigil-holders would lose most their sigils to
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thirst. And they had to know that even if they got my head on a pike,
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there'd been no guarantee of getting the lake back. How many years would
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it be until the tributaries filled back even half of Lake Strycht? So
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I'd sent a handful of my Peerage forward again, to revisit the subject
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of a council. I'd instructed Ivah to make it clear that if they really
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pushed me they might just get the lake back directly on top their heads,
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which ought to make at least a few of them reconsider. Once we had a
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foothold in the city, well, if the rest dug their heels in I wasn't
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above ordering an assault. I'd glimpsed what my Peerage was capable of,
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during our passage through the ways.
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I was glad of the oaths, because I wasn't sure I could win the fight if
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it ever came to that.
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``I don't know about borrowed,'' I said. ``I'm considering keeping the
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lake, or at least a portion of it.''
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The slight shift in Akua's stance indicated surprise, though I knew
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better than to think she hadn't allowed it consciously.
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``There is no lack of usable geographic features in Arcadia,'' Diabolist
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said. ``Archer has brought forward the interesting notion of-''
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``Yes, Indrani wants me to start dropping mountains,'' I sighed. ``I'm
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well aware.''
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``There are also volcanoes in what was once Summer,'' the shade reminded
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me. ``Actually triggering an eruption when we need it would be
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significantly more difficult, but not outright impossible.''
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``There's basically everything in Arcadia, if you look long enough,'' I
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grunted. ``That's not why I'm thinking of redeploying the lake.''
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``Decoration?'' Akua drily suggested. ``I suppose it's never too late to
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acquire taste, though I must warn you `monster-infested underground
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lake' is rather \emph{passé}. Very sixth century.''
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Ugh, and she probably thought she was actually funny.
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``Well,'' I brightly replied, ``as the foremost lakeomancer of my
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generation-''
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``There is no such thing,'' Diabolist insisted.
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``- it occurs to me I've been mostly, um, dropping large bodies of water
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on people,'' I said. ``For tactical purposes.''
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``As one does,'' Akua agreed.
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``It seems like a very narrow use of the ability,'' I said. ``When I
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have an entire region of Callow that, between you and Summer, was
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effectively ravaged.''
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Scarlet eyes narrowed.
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``You want to move the lake to Callow,'' she said.
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``I'd have to consult governors and landowners,'' I noted. ``And someone
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familiar with farming practices. But it occurs to me that Summer-torched
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land might benefit from fresh irrigation. Hells, there might even be
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enough fish left for actual fishing.''
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``And you want to use a lake born of Creation. because moving an
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Arcadian body of water might very well have\ldots{} unforeseen
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consequences,'' Akua murmured. ``Wise.''
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I passed a hand through my hair.
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``Look, there's so many problems I can't solve with killing,'' I said.
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``So it might be time to consider other solutions. One of the reasons
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Praes has been such a murderous shitshow play of correspondingly shitty
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and murderous thespians is that the Wasteland is exactly as termed. If I
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take a lake from somewhere else and sell it to whoever's holding the
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Tower, it could tip the balance the other way. The Empire wouldn't start
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starving its way into an invasion every other decade.''
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Horrifyingly enough, Diabolist was \emph{beaming}.
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``You want to steal pieces of Creation and auction them off to
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nations,'' she said. ``Dearest, this might be the first of your designs
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I can say I wholeheartedly endorse.''
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``It's not stealing,'' I protested. ``You can't \emph{own} a lake. I
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mean, legally yes and nobody better take mine, but when you think about
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it in a religious sense-''
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``You are preaching to the choir, my heart,'' Akua intervened.
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``Admittedly the choir is made of damned souls, but let us not pretend
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talented singers are usually headed for the Heavens.''
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``Why am I talking to you about this?'' I muttered. ``Of course you'd be
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on board, this is basically Dread Empress Sinistra's plan only with
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riches instead of hero-delivered death at the end.''
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``It could be useful to mark some mountain peaks rich in ore, when we
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return to the surface,'' Diabolist suggested. ``Mercantis would pay a
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fortune for access to mines where there can be no dwarven claim. And
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Callow itself is famously poor in precious metals: acquiring a source of
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mintage would be quite useful.''
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The worse part was that it wasn't actually a bad idea. Gods knew my
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kingdom could use the coin and the mines both. What I hated most about
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Akua was how useful she could be when she put her mind to it, which was
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always.
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``Something to consider in the future,'' I said.
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She studied me carefully.
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``There is more,'' she noted.
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``Someone broke one of my cities last year,'' I frostily replied.
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``And so you have hordes of refugees in need of shelter,'' Diabolist
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said, delicately avoiding the subject. ``As well a myriad of standing
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structures about to be permanently vacated.''
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Not to mention a treasury that'd effectively be a glorified war chest
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and granary until the Tenth Crusade ended, which meant no funds for the
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kind of reconstruction that southern Callow badly needed. Hakram had
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produced miracles in keeping the tent cities clothed and fed, but come
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winter things were going to get ugly. The Waning Woods were too far, and
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absurdly dangerous to take lumber from if you went any deeper than the
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very outskirts. I'd seen it coming, of course, and we'd set aside wood
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and coal for fires, but it wouldn't last all the way through the cold
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season. And Great Strycht was now a pack of very nice stone districts
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set atop hills and plateaus, many of which would fit inside a gate. It'd
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be tricky to get them through without wrecking them, of course, but not
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impossible. And even ruins would make great building materials, if worse
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came to worse. There'd be more cities ahead, too. I'd be leading the
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drow to the surface and until I could settle them where I wanted them to
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be there'd be a need for something to host them, but it didn't
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\emph{all} have to be used for that.
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It was a little ironic that I'd waited until Thief was gone to start
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thinking about stealing cities.
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``There is merit to the notion,'' Akua said. ``And though you now seem
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intent on civilian use, there is another side to the coin. If you can
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take a fortress\ldots{}''
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I could just leave it in Arcadia for later, then plop it out as field
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fortifications while on campaign. Near instantly. Juniper might just
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forget to hate Diabolist to the bone for a few heartbeats, if she heard
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about this.
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``They're not heavy on fortifications so far,'' I said. ``I wouldn't get
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my hopes up.''
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``We've not yet penetrated deep into the inner ring,'' she replied.
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``There may yet be opportunity.''
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I didn't disagree. If I could get my hands on even just a fort, it'd be
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a nasty surprise to pull on my foes down the line. Field battles against
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the Dead King would be a chancy gamble even if the entire Grand Alliance
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was mobilized, this kind of sudden upset might be able to turn the tide.
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The first time it was used, at least. Neshamah wasn't the kind of enemy
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that'd fall for the same trick twice. We stood there for some time in
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silence, the mood shifting as the conversation ebbed. The sight of the
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cavern before us wasn't something a few days could get me used to, I
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silently admitted. The sheer \emph{size} of it was staggering. It had
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the length and breadth of a province, the walls so distant even my eyes
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found them hard to discern, but the ceiling was what awe me every time.
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It was uneven, betraying that this was no singular cave but hundreds of
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them carved into a single place by what must have been decades of hard
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labour. I'd never seen anything taller save for the Tower itself, and
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the Tower was millennia of Praesi madness made into edifice. What kind
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of people had the ancient drow been, to make this?
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What had broken them so deeply they'd become a pack of rats scavenging
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their own ruins?
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``Not even Keter is match for it in scope,'' Akua softly said, gaze
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following mine. ``Fitting, I suppose. The Crown of the Dead is a mere
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gate to the Dead King's true realm, impressive as it is. This must have
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been one of the beating hearts of their empire.''
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``Don't you have a bureaucracy to run?'' I said.
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``Subordinates must be assessed,'' she replied. ``At my behest you
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granted Centon much power. If it proves incapable of discharging its
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duties without my constant supervision, replacement must be found.''
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And by that we both knew she meant Centon would be harvested and another
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drow raised in its place. Not killed, I'd set down rules about that, but
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Night could be taken without killing. The disgrace would probably cut
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deeper than death, though. Ivah certainly hated speaking of how it'd
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come to have that name in the first place. It was cold-blooded of
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Diabolist, but then I expected nothing less from her. Your average
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Wasteland aristocrat made lizards look warm in comparison, and Akua
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Sahelian had remained on top of that pack for years.
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``Sometimes I wonder what it takes to make someone like you,'' I said.
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``But then I remember all I heard about your mother, and I stop
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wondering.''
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Her lips quirked.
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``And what exactly did you hear, dearest?'' she asked.
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``Black called her brilliant,'' I said. ``Said that she'd managed to
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survive Malicia's rise while supporting her enemies with little loss of
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influence. He was wary of her.''
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``High praise, coming from the Carrion Lord,'' Akua noted. ``Mother was
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a creature of nuances.''
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``You must have hated her,'' I said. ``That story you told me about your
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friend. No child should have to live through that. Not even you.''
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``I suppose I did,'' the shade murmured. ``But not in the way you mean.
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You -- your people -- marry personal hatreds with your actions in a way
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we are taught not to.''
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``Praesi keep grudges too, Akua,'' I said. ``Take revenge. There's an
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entire hall of screaming heads in the Tower speaking to the truth of
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that.''
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``I do no explain myself well, I think,'' Diabolist said. ``I was raised
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to treat Akua Sahelian and the heiress to Wolof as different persons. I
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could hate, and take revenge, as the first. The second must be a
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creature suborned only to ambition. Those among my people who do not
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learn to separate one face from the other die young.''
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``That's absurd to me,'' I admitted. ``I can understand necessity
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dictating your actions. I leapt down that slope years ago. But you can't
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just pretend it's two different people, Akua. It's still you. Your
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actions. I didn't somehow fight the Diabolist and spare you. It's all on
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your head, like it's all on mine.''
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``Perhaps in Callow that is true,'' she mused. ``But in the Wasteland?
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We must clasp hands with those who've slain our kin, stabbed our
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predecessors in the back, stolen riches and appointments. It is a
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necessary distinction, Catherine. We can make sport of each other, so
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long as it is that. We would all lose for the stripping of that veil.''
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``Then shouldn't you?'' I said. ``Lose, I mean. Your entire philosophy
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is that conflict breeds strength, yet I can't call what you describe
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anything but fragile.''
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She quietly laughed.
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``How harsh a judgement you cast on my people,'' she said. ``Will you
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hold all others to the same standard? The severe Ashurans, strangling
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their own kind with a rope of rules and tiers. The quarrelsome
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Procerans, who war with all under the sun out of hungry ambition. And
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even your own, Catherine. How many teeth-clenching grudges has Callow
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followed to dark endings?''
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``None of the others wound Creation bartering for power,'' I said. ``Or
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bleed thousands upon thousands in rituals. I have axes to grind with my
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enemies, Akua, but I know what they are. Where their limits lie.''
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``Then the issue is of means, not philosophy,'' Diabolist said. ``And so
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for the greatest monster of all, you need look no further than your
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teacher. What \emph{limits} does the Carrion Lord have?''
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``And he, too, will be held to account,'' I quietly said. ``For what he
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has done and may yet do.''
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``Ah,'' Akua smiled. ``And are these the words of Catherine Foundling or
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the Black Queen?''
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``That's my entire point,'' I said. ``They're the same person. That's
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what responsibility means.''
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``And mine is that your decisions will always be a choice,'' Diabolist
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said. ``Between what the woman wants and what the queen requires.''
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I waved a hand dismissively, tired of the argument. Her logic only held
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up because it was a closed circle.
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``But since you asked,'' Akua said, looking at the distant city. ``I
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despised my mother. For what she did. For what she wanted from me. But
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it was Tasia Sahelian that was my enemy, and her I admired until the day
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she lost.''
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``Because she was brilliant,'' I said.
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``Because she was everything I was taught to want,'' she mused.
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``Powerful and cunning and every bit the match of our Empress.''
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``Until she lost,'' I said.
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``I severed our relations before I could be dragged down with her,''
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Akua said. ``But I would not call that revenge. It was not a matter
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between us but between the Diabolist and the High Lady of Wolof.''
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``And do you regret it?'' I asked. ``Leaving her behind.''
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I wasn't sure, I thought, what I was looking for. Humanity, maybe. Some
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speck of a person who had more to her than Wasteland iron and villainy.
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But what would I even do with it, if it was found? There was no saving
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someone like Akua, and I did not want to try. A hundred thousand souls
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demanded otherwise. The shade's face was distant, lost in her thoughts.
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``I do,'' Diabolist finally said. ``What a strange thing that is.''
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``She was a lot of things,'' I said. ``But your mother was one of
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them.''
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``She was,'' Akua Sahelian agreed.
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Her lips quirked.
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``I should have killed her myself, mother to daughter.''
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