466 lines
22 KiB
TeX
466 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-19-recovery}{%
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\section{Chapter 19: Recovery}\label{chapter-19-recovery}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``To seek to ascertain the worth of even a single a soul through
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morality is to force unnecessary mysticism onto a simple matter. As in
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all things, supply and demand determine the price.''}
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-- Extract from ``Bought and Sold'', a collection of the teachings of
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the Merchant Prince Irenos, founder of Mercantis
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\end{quote}
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``I'll admit it,'' I said. ``I was expecting a library.''
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My previous trips into dreamland had not led me to expect a great deal
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of nuance in the matter, though admittedly that'd been my own mind.
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Might just be that Masego was a little less straightforward in his way
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of looking at the world. The lack of swamp and shambling horde certainly
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implied as much. Instead Hierophant's dream was order gone mad. A pane
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of crystal under my feet, tethered to the centre of the massive
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structure by a long length of gold, kept me aloft. Unfortunately that
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did little to put my old fear of heights from rearing up its head. It
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was one thing to leap down from the sky when I knew my legs would
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unbreak themselves within moments, another to have only a thin sheet of
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crystal being the only thing keeping me from falling into endless void.
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``Fucking Hells, Masego,'' I muttered. ``Would it have killed you to put
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up a railing?''
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Aside from the very real possibility of falling down forever, I had to
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concede there was a strange beauty to what I saw. It reminded me, in a
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way, of the depiction of astral spheres I'd once seen in Black's mansion
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in Ater. Though, instead of circling the sun the way mages had along ago
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proven Creation did, everything here was circling the sphere of
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shivering translucent flame held within a deep basin of gold. From it
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spanned long tubes of gold holding up lesser spheres all wildly
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different. Crystal and frost, roiling wind and swarms of small silver
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constructs. My own platform, like all the others, circled around the
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central sphere with a slow and measured ticking sound. I could glimpse
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gears and cranks beneath the basin that kept it all moving along. I
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shivered, though there was no wind here. Perhaps \emph{because} there
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was no wind. There was something subtly wrong about what lay before me,
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though I would not deny its eerie splendour. It was not a perspective,
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the way the cold machinery behind Black's eyes could be understood. It
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was\ldots{}
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``A way of understanding Creation,'' I finished out loud.
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My voice felt dim and there was no echo. The void swallowed it all. My
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platform kept moving, and I shook myself out of the fugue. Odds were
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that I'd be able to find Masego within the sphere at the heart of this.
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I looked down at the gold support beam and winced. It was round, after
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all. If I slipped after making my way down\ldots{} Well, I wasn't sure
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what the consequences of falling into the void would be, but considering
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Hierophant's mind was bound to have some very nasty defences I suspected
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it would not be pleasant. Not that my own little journey into Winter
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dreamland had been a treat. My fingers clenched. \emph{Don't think about
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it}, I told myself. Winter had been trying to grind me down, by
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lingering on the remembrance I was only playing its game.
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``So shimmying across that beam is a bit of a stretch,'' I decided.
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``That leaves trying to move from sphere to sphere.''
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I turned my gaze to the moving structures. While I couldn't discern the
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exact pattern yet -- some beams extended at specific sections of the
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rotation, while others withdrew -- I could at least grasp the likely
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length of the beams. And, more importantly, if one was ever going to
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come close enough for me to leap across. One, two, three -- no, just
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two, that last one was moving back without warning and staying there.
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It'd have to do. I considered allowing a full rotation to take place
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just so I'd avoid running into any surprises, but there were no
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guarantees the pattern would remain the same every time. And, by the
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looks of it, this was going to take a while. Not all spheres were
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rotating at the same speed, but mine was fairly slow. Hard to properly
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measure time and distance in here, but I'd guess at least two hours for
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a full turn? Leaping uncertainly would be a risk, but so would be
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waiting that long when I was uncertain of the relative time flows in
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here and outside.
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``I understand you're a man of deep and complex thought, Zeze, but
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you're not making this easy,'' I sighed. ``You know what's the worst
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people have to deal with, in my mind? Condescension Queen and Lady
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Backstab. And that one endless horde of dead trying to kill them, but
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let's be honest -- that's not exactly out of our wheelhouse.''
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I'd kind of expected one or both of the twins to materialize and mouth
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off after that, but I remained alone. Shame. Probably could have made
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rope out of intestines, maybe used bones for a hook. I paused.
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``I'm not being unnecessarily gruesome there,'' I defensively told the
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void. ``I don't know how to make rope out of hair, and to be solid
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enough to hold my weight skin would have to be tanned first.''
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Nothingness did not answer. Pointedly so, I felt.
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``Well, fuck you too,'' I muttered.
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It wasn't murder if they were projections of your unconscious mind, I
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comforted myself. Probably. I'd never looked up if the Empire had laws
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on the subject. Testing the platform beneath me, to my distaste I found
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it rather slippery. That was not going to be pleasant. I tried to see if
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Winter was willing to get involved, but I was reaching for nothing. No,
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I thought. Not nothing. It was just \emph{distant}. Interesting, but it
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wasn't helping me in the slightest at the moment. The first outer sphere
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passed close after I spent half an eternity dawdling in the middle of
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nowhere, but I let that one pass. The sphere was wind and barely
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contained. Too much of a risk. The second rotated close after the rest
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of eternity passed me by, and I winced. Fire. Silver flames that
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flickered without a sound. Well, it wasn't going to be pleasant if I
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stumbled into those but it was still better than falling. The boots on
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my feet were old, nothing like those I now wore though I vaguely
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recalled having owned that pair before being apprenticed to Black. The
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wiggle room for my toes was nice, but the softness of used leather less
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so. I had to balance my weight carefully when I took a running start.
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``Nonononono-'' I valiantly screamed, realizing with horror halfway
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through the leap that the sphere was withdrawing.
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I had no power to call on, no mantle or Name that could save my hide at
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the last moment. The stark understanding of my helplessness brought back
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something I'd begun to forget -- fear. Not the dim worry for events yet
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to come that haunted my every hour since I'd taken the crown, but the
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colder thing that was having to look death in the eyes. I twisted
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forward, and my fingers caught the edge of the platform. My life was not
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owed to my own merits. The sphere had just withdrawn only slightly.
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``Oh Hells,'' I panted, forcing my other hand to clench so the trembling
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would stop while I brought it up to clasp the platform's edge.
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I felt sweat drenching my back, another sensation I'd near forgotten. My
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palms were growing moist as well, and that was a lot worrying since they
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were the only thing between me and falling.
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``Godsdamnit, Masego,'' I said. ``Godsfucking-``
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I took a deep breath, then pulled myself up with grunt of effort. It was
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awkward, and my palm slipped when I got my leg over the ledge. I ended
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up falling awkwardly on the side, rolling in panic towards the fire to
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avoid the fall. Wait, had there really been enough --
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\emph{The Conjurer was an utter fool, yet somehow he still lived despite
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Masego's best efforts. His lips twisted into a sneer and he traced Form
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and Force, weaving the formula his words shaped through them. Air
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clustered into three arithmetically perfect spheres and shot forward,
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though in his irritation he had allowed the proper angle to/}
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\emph{Seven full months had he studied the theory. It was the simplest
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working he knew, transmutation of power into heat and light, yet his
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every deviation from the original formula to craft his own had resulted
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in failure. The numbers were perfect, he knew it, but somehow the spell
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would not/}
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\emph{``We're not bleeding people, Apprentice,'' she said accusingly.
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``We're not that desperate.'' He blinked, more out of sheer affront than
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surprise. What kind of a blunderer did she take him for? He opened his
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mouth to snap/}
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-- I rolled out of the silver flames, my body shivering. That had
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felt\ldots{} I patted my own stomach, reassured to find it flat. For a
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moment there'd been a disconnect and I'd expected to find otherwise. I
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closed my eyes and laid there for a moment before slapping my own face
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with an open palm. The sting snapped me out of it and I dragged myself
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into a crouch.
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``Memories?'' I murmured, glancing at the sphere.
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Maybe. I'd felt genuinely nettled throughout all three glimpses. The
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third time had even been directed at myself, which was giving me a
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headache since his recollection of that conversation was a lot more
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vivid than my own. There'd been a common thread. It might be the same
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for every sphere, a sort of archive. Gods, his mind was so weird. I was
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starting to feel a lot better about the murder swamp in my own. I shook
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myself out of the trance. The rotation had continued while I was
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elsewhere, and for longer than I'd thought. I couldn't even see the
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crystal platform I'd started on anymore. Still, screwed as that had been
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I was in a much better position now. There were twice as many spheres
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circling close to this one than there'd been for the last, and I picked
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on that looked like an orb of pure white marble for my second leap.
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There was no nasty halfway surprise this time. Time was hard to gauge,
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in here, but by my fourth leap I felt like I'd made some decent
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progress. I was more than halfway through, though difficulties had come
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with the advance. This close to the centre of the structure the spheres
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moved a lot quicker. And, I saw with a frown, the platforms around them
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were smaller. Not a lot of room for mistakes there.
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I bid my time, reluctantly, until I picked one out whose rotation seemed
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steady and the sphere on it not too dangerous. A slower one passed by,
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but I wasn't going anywhere near something that looked like a hole of
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darkness sucking in everything if I could help it. A constantly moving
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jigsaw of ivory wasn't honestly much better, I'd admit to myself, but at
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this point there was only so much pickiness I could afford. With another
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heroically shrill scream I leapt, and it went perfectly. Angle and
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swiftness, all aligned as they should be. Then my boot touched the
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crystal, and with a sinking feeling I realized it was rough instead of
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smooth. Which wouldn't have been much of a problem if I'd adjusted my
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stance before jumping. I had not. I stumbled with all the grace of cart
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rolling down a hill, my forehead going into-
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\emph{He did not understand why the orc kept seeking his company, though
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as long as he came with a shatranj board Masego would not refuse the
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company. Campaigning, much as Father had implied, was a dull thing to
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suffer through. It was only when Hakram sat across him, sliding open the
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shutters holding the pieces, that he realized he'd been awaiting
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Adjutant. That he had no ceased his dissection earlier because there was
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nothing more to learn from the subject, but because he'd been looking
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forward to their evening game. ``White?'' Hakram offered and/}
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\emph{``It's a sprite,'' Archer said, shaking the glass bottle. He'd
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known at a glance, of course, and the angry buzzing of the lesser spirit
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indicated displeasure at the rough handling. ``I am not unfamiliar with
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them,'' Masego replied. ``They are quite common in western Callow.'' The
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strange woman chuckled, tossing the bottle into his lap. He hastily
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grabbed it. ``Magelight's supposed to be hard on the eyes,'' Archer
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said. ``If you're going to keep reading after dark, use that instead.''
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He started in surprise. Had she caught it for him? Why would she/}
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\emph{``They were the rooms of the Wizards of the West, you know,''
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Thief said, leaning against the threshold. Masego did not quite succeed
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at hiding his start. She'd emerged without warning, as was her wont. Not
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even Summer's light cast a shadow on her aspect. His eyes swept across
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the room, finding only furniture and a bath in the Soninke manner.
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``There is no trace of their presence,'' he informed the woman. She
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shrugged. ``Figured as much,'' Thief said. ``But there's old stories
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about the location making it easier to align with `otherworldly powers'.
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Thought you might want to have a look.'' The tone was defensive, he was
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certain. It held all the right markers. Did/}
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My face was less than an inch away from shifting ivory as I balanced
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uneasily on my feet. The roof of my mouth was dry. I licked my lips,
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retreating half a step. That'd been much more intense than the last.
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More nuanced as well. I'd felt the confusion shifting to understanding
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like it was my own. I still remembered what it felt like, people's faces
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being so hard to read. Was that how he felt all the time? I'd thought he
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was uncomfortable with touching because it was the way Warlock had
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raised him, but that hadn't been the way at all. I just\ldots{} hadn't
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known what the touching was for, and I'd hesitated to act until I could
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correctly identify the reason. It'd been like living a world full of
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masks, so very few of which I could read. Slowly I calmed down. Touching
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my face helped, the touch of my own fingers on my own flesh. I didn't
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even bother to assess how much time had passed, since I already knew I
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wouldn't like the answer. The spheres moved, but I waited patiently for
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my openings. Another two leaps, and as I stood besides a sphere of
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lightning-infused amber I timed my last one.
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I'd underestimated how massive the central sphere truly was. At least as
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large as the royal palace in Laure, and the gold basin that held it was
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even larger. The trembling translucent flame in front of me was unlike
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the other globes I'd encountered. It was not full, only a thin barrier.
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Through it I could make out lights and shapes, some still and others in
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movement. Steeling myself, I marched through. Heat licked at my skin,
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ignoring my clothes, but there was no rush of foreign memories. Inside
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the sphere, as I had thought, Masego awaited. He was far from the only
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thing in there. Constellations of instruments of all kinds filled the
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firmament of this place, gold and silver and obsidian and a hundred
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other tools -- some I had seen before, others never even imagined
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existed. They all clustered around Hierophant, who stood with his back
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to me as he studied something I could not make out.
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``Distraction,'' Masego said absent-mindedly. ``Kill it.''
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The only other living entity in the sphere moved. I looked back at my
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own face, my twin snorting and unsheathing her sword. Not my twin, I
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thought. She didn't wear the same clothes as me, neither in this place
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nor back in Creation. She wore the same plate I had that day when we
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fought the Princess of High Noon, and her smile was too broad to be
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entirely human. It was a caricature of daring and insolence, not
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something lips could actually do.
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``Masego,'' I called out.
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``Ah, apologies,'' he replied patiently. ``\emph{Please} kill it.''
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Flicker.
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The other Catherine was no longer that. Archer idly nocked an arrow, the
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boundary between her scarf and her face blurred. Her appearance was even
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stranger than my not-twin's had been. She was less detailed, like a
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rough painting of herself. It was when the string went as furthest back
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as it could that she sharpened, and in that moment she was
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\emph{stunning}. The hungry gleam in the eyes, the easy arrogance in her
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stance. She wasn't more beautiful than the real Indrani was, but there
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was an \emph{intensity} to her that I'd never seen in Archer. Like she
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was leaving an indelible mark on this moment. The surprise of it slowed
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me down, and throwing myself to the ground did not help quite enough.
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The arrow went through my chest and I grunted in pain.
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Flicker.
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Adjutant slowly spun his axe as he advanced towards me. More statue than
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orc, all that he was set in stone. The weight of his presence was
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feather-light, at first, but the longer it was there the heavier it bore
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down on me. He bared fangs of carved bone as too-clever eyes followed my
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rising to my feet. The eyes were the most expressive part of this statue
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of Hakram, inhumanly perceptive. As if they were the only living part of
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him. I broke the arrow's shaft, biting my lip to avoid screaming.
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``Hakram,'' I said. ``Don't do it.''
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He kept advancing.
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``Hakram,'' I barked. ``I \emph{order} you to desist.''
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Still advancing. Fuck.
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``Masego,'' I screamed, and then not-Hakram was upon me.
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The moment he struck, he was a statue no longer. He turned into flesh
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and blood, strength uncoiling like a trebuchet released. I tried to
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catch his wrist, but I might as well have been wrestling that trebuchet.
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He smashed me into the ground effortlessly, painfully jarring the
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arrowhead still in my chest.
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``Zeze,'' I yelled. ``Don't you-``
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``Wait,'' Masego said.
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The entity froze, axe a hair's breadth away from my throat. Hierophant
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turned, and I grimaced at the sight. No blindfold on his face, i here.
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Hollow burnt-out sockets studied me, balls of Summer flame hovering
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within.
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``I know you,'' he said.
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``Catherine,'' I reminded him. ``Your friend.''
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He frowned. His face blurred, then became calm again.
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``Are you quite certain?'' he asked.
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\emph{Shit. He doesn't remember anything that's in the spheres outside,
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does he?} I had no idea how much of the man I knew was standing in front
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of me.
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``Masego, you need to wake up,'' I said. ``I came here to get you
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back.''
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``Don't be absurd,'' he chided me. ``There is so much left to study.''
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He gestured towards the thing his body had been hiding and my eyes
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widened. It was a sphere like those outside, though much smaller. The
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ball of Light was wriggling violently, a wound in it kept open by silver
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pincers.
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``It is much clearer, without the noise,'' Hierophant told me. ``We are
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making great progress.''
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I forced a smile.
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``That's good,'' I said. ``Tell me more about that. I want to see. But
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I'll need to get up, for that, and there's a blade at my throat.''
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Flicker.
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I saw Thief's face, for a heartbeat, and then the entity was gone.
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Masego was gesturing.
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``Come, come,'' he said. ``You're familiar with the Ligurian theory of
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magic, of course.''
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I got up, hand on my throat.
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``Of course,'' I lied. ``It's my favourite.''
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He offered a beaming smile. His face blurred and he was calm again.
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``You're not trying to trick me, are you?'' he asked.
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``Of course not,'' I hastily replied. ``I uh, just really hate the
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Jaquinite theory.''
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Gods, I really should have listened more closely when he talked about
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that. Was being an occasionally shitty friend going to get me killed?
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That'd be fitting piece of irony.
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``As you should,'' Hierophant sniffed. ``Procerans. Their idea of a
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proper formula is to get down on their knees and \emph{pray}.''
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``Just the worst,'' I agreed, slowly coming closer.
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He gestured again for me to stand by his side.
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``Now, the Gigantes do shroud their sorcery behind unnecessary
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claptrap,'' he lectured. ``But I believe Gharan the Wise was correct
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when he theorized they are the eldest race on Calernia to have developed
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a comprehensive method for use of the Gift.''
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``Only makes sense,'' I said.
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I was close enough to knife him, now, but would that actually help?
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Academic question anyway, I didn't have a knife and not-Thief could be
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anywhere. I glanced at the sphere he was inviting me to watch, and my
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vision swam. I could almost make out something. A memory, though I
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didn't live it like the others. Marchford. Night, with hundreds of
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columns of fire moving according to my will. A ritual repurposed, my
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first real stride towards understanding the deeper mysteries of High
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Arcana. I closed my eyes.
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``You were the Apprentice, then,'' I said.
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``Just a title,'' he dismissed. ``As milestone that denotes
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understanding reached, but of little practical worth.''
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``You're not anymore, though,'' I said. ``You're the Hierophant. How did
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that happen?''
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A little heavy-handed, but I had a lot of detachment to bludgeon through
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here. Subtle wasn't going to work. Masego smiled. His face blurred. He
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was furious.
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``Distraction,'' he said. ``Unimportant.''
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``Name transition isn't important?'' I probed. ``How often have you seen
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that phenomenon?''
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His face blurred, returned to calm. I'd survive to hear a reply, then.
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Apparently improving one's vocabulary really \emph{was} a life-saving
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skill, who knew?
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``Not enough,'' he said. ``But it is all contaminated. Too much bias.
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Not enough left to examine after removal.''
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``Oh, that's all right then,'' I shrugged.
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He nodded, pleased at my agreement.
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``Difficult research isn't for everyone,'' I continued. ``I'm sure
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someone will eventually get around to explaining it to you.''
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His face darkened.
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``I do not need to depend on the findings of others,'' he said.
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``Obviously you have to,'' I said. ``I mean, you're just not capable
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enough to study it with the bias intact. You've said it yourself, it's
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too much.''
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I would have felt a lot worse about trying to trick him in this state if
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he hadn't ordered me shot moments ago. Hierophant dismissed the sphere
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of Light with a wave of the hand, and reached out. Plucking out a
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distant sphere of water in a way that should not have been physically
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possible, he set it in front of us.
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``It can be done,'' he insisted. ``Simply a matter of discipline.''
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``I look forward to your findings, then,'' I smiled.
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His face blurred, and remained that way.
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``You interfere with the process,'' he said in an utterly flat voice.
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``I would never,'' I said and snatched his hand, forcing it into the
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sphere.
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White light, blinding. A knife going through my back.
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``No,'' Hierophant's voice barked. ``No, \emph{go away}. Catherine?''
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I dropped down on my knees. Was that blood in my mouth? Fuck, it was
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just a stabbing. Thief was nowhere that good at killing people, I called
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bullshit. The spots went away and I looked at Masego's mortified face.
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``Hey, Zeze,'' I grunted. ``Been a while.''
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``Cat,'' he murmured. ``You're -- no, doesn't matter. I can end it.''
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His fingers threaded through mine, softly, and as he squeezed we woke.
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