437 lines
18 KiB
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437 lines
18 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-25-edge}{%
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\section{Chapter 25: Edge}\label{chapter-25-edge}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``My dear Betrayer, I resent this accusation of selling you out to
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the heroes. No coin changed hands, it was really more of a bartering.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Traitorous
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\end{quote}
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``I shouldn't need to bring up the grave consequences that would of
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dealing with that entity in any way,'' Vivienne noted calmly.
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Maybe a little too calmly, I thought. She wasn't angry -- I'd learned to
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read that in her -- but she was\ldots{} weary, maybe. Like she was
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seeing the same lay of the land I did, and was horrified at what might
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come of it.
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``Heh,'' Indrani said. ``\emph{Grave} consequences. You know, because
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he's the Dead --''
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``Masego,'' I interrupted. ``Would you please smack her?''
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``Do I get to pick where?'' Archer leered.
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There was a pause.
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``No,'' Hierophant replied pensively, and tried to slap the back of her
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head.
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He ended up caught in a wristlock instead, and the two of them toppled
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to the floor when he called on sorcery to try to toss her away. The two
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of them fell wriggling as Indrani tried to get on top -- no surprise
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\emph{there}, I mused -- and the council was forced off the road until
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Hakram rose to his feet, grabbed a water pitcher with a sigh and upended
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it on them both. Archer yelped, Masego looked peeved and I turned the
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droplets freezing cold out of petty spite.
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``Back in your seats,'' I ordered.
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I looked away even as Masego evaporated the water on his robes,
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pretending deafness when Archer asked him to to the same for her.
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Juniper growled, which got both their attentions. \emph{Both of you
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could kill her with barely any effort}, I thought amusedly. \emph{But
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all she needs to do is growl a bit, and you straighten your backs}.
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``Militarily speaking, cooperation with the Kingdom of the Dead would be
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both boon and threat,'' the Hellhound said. ``Its armies have been
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strong enough to weather five crusades: there's no way the Proceran
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borders can hold if he comes out in force.''
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``Which would leave us with a fresh liability,'' Hakram said calmly,
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seated again. ``Namely, that the Dead King would be out in force.''
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``Forget armies,'' Thief said flatly. ``If it becomes known we struck a
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pact with the Hidden Horror there is not a nation on Calernia that will
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be willing to treat with us. The cost of that absurdly dangerous
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alliance would be that we are made pariahs forevermore. I cannot stress
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this enough: even the summoning of demons would go over better. The only
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person to have ever struck alliance with the Dead King was Dread Empress
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Triumphant at the peak of her power. That will be the precedent everyone
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sees us through, from that point on.''
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``We're already fucking pariahs, Thief,'' Juniper grunted. ``I won't
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pretend working with the Horror would be pastries and flower crowns, but
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let's be honest: what would we actually \emph{lose}?''
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``Any semblance of legitimacy, for one,'' Vivienne hissed.
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``I do not speak in endorsement,'' Hakram said mildly, cutting through
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before it could escalate. ``But Juniper is not incorrect. We are in
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varying states of hostility with the Empire, the Principate, the
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Dominion and the Thalassocracy. The League has already refused to
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negotiate with us, twice. It may be that situation will change in the
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future, but it has not yet. As it stands the costs of this decision
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would not be a direct loss, only the denial of possible change.''
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``Eh, no need to trumpet it around anyway. We could just be secret
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allies,'' Archer said. ``Doesn't the old guard love that kind of stuff?
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He'd probably go for it.''
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I sipped at my aragh, leaning back into my chair. Indrani wasn't wrong.
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``There's more than a few steps between alignment -- however temporary
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-- and alliance,'' I finally said. ``Ideally, we would use the King as a
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distraction with full deniability. I don't think anyone in this room
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wants him to actually \emph{win} in any measurable manner. If he can
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launch a failed invasion that takes the pressure off Callow, though,
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that might be a notion worth entertaining.''
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``If the dead cross the lakes into northern Procer, it will be
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butchery,'' Vivienne said coldly. ``Hannoven might be able to resist,
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heavily fortified as it is, but Cleves and Hainaut? They'll break,
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Catherine. You know this. Hundreds of thousands murdered and made into
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abominations. Akua's Folly, forged anew half a dozen times.''
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``It would be,'' I said slowly. ``If they were taken by surprise.''
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There was a long moment of silence in the room.
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``Are you proposing,'' Juniper gravelled, ``that we \emph{double-cross}
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the Dead King?''
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``I mean,'' I hedged, ``I wouldn't put it exactly like that.''
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``That means yes,'' Masego helpfully informed Archer in a whisper.
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``It's the Callowan uprising. She doesn't like to admit to betrayal.''
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The Hellhound opened her mouth then closed it, licking her lips.
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Solemnly, she reached for the bottle of aragh and poured until her cup
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was nearly overflowing.
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``If you would elaborate, please,'' Thief said quietly.
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``So we have a nice chat with Trismegistus,'' I said. ``Shake hands,
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kiss his dead babies -- let's not kid ourselves, he's bound to have a
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few of those -- and plan an offensive. We leak the plan to Procer at
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least a month ahead, enough time so they can evacuate everything. We
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time it correctly and Malanza's army will be in a position to march
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north to fight a delaying action until the rest of the crusaders can
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reinforce her.''
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Juniper choked on her drink.
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``Hasenbach would have to send most her armies to hold the north,''
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Hakram said quietly. ``And suddenly we gain a great deal of leverage.
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The Army of Callow could easily strike her back and collapse her supply
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lines. Or, if she makes peace with us, ferry her armies through Arcadia
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before either Cleves or Hainaut is entirely overrun.''
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``There would still be a great many deaths,'' Vivienne said, but she was
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hesitating.
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``No civilians, though,'' I said. ``Soldiers. Loss of property as well,
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but I'm less than sympathetic to the monetary plight of princes trying
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to invade my homeland. We can limit the terms of engagement for the Dead
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King as part of our deal.''
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``That will no longer hold the moment we betray him,'' Thief reminded
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me.
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``We can delay that until Procer's in a position to give a good fight,''
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I said.
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``It should be remembered,'' Hakram said. ``That if it ever comes out we
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were involved in the matter, we'll be discarding every scrap of goodwill
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we have so far accumulated through our restraint.''
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``We'll deny it. Not like they'll have proof, so it'll be the Hidden
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Horror's word against ours if he even bothers to say anything. And, to
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be blunt, Juniper's not wrong. Goodwill hasn't cut it so far,'' I
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admitted. ``And I think we could get a lot of it back by throwing in
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with the crusade against the Kingdom of the Dead, even if it comes to
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that. If it takes leverage to get things done, Hakram, I'm willing to go
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that far.''
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``I don't like it,'' Vivienne said. ``This\ldots{} scheme is not as bad
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as I first thought it would be, but playing with fire doesn't do the
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danger of it justice.''
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``Neither do I,'' I said. ``And I think we can all agree this is a last
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ditch plan, not the first arrow out of the quiver. I'd much rather cut a
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deal with Hasenbach herself or the Pilgrim if I can, and I intend to try
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that as soon as this council is done. But if they're not game, then I
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think we have to seriously consider this.''
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I met her eyes unflinchingly, and saw the war taking place behind them.
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Between the patriot and the decent woman. Better than anyone else in
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this room, she knew how dangerous the army standing on the other side of
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the Vales would be to Callow. Thief had always been lukewarm about
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making treaties with Procer, reminding me there was a reason \emph{Red
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The Flowers} was a popular song in the country to this day. On the other
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hand, she was not a killer. She had killed, to be sure, and arranged the
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death of others. But it was not in her nature, and unlike me she'd never
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grown used to it. Making common cause with something like the Dead King,
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no matter how false the premises, ran against the grain for her. There
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was a reason it was to her I'd handed the means to kill me. Of all the
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Woe, she was the only one I could trust to pull the trigger if it came
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down to it. Her moral compass wasn't exactly pristine. I knew that. She
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was, after all, a thief. And capable of dark things to keep Callow
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whole. But she'd yet to lose that spark of decency that none of my other
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friends could truly claim to have. Not even Hakram, for all that I loved
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him more than any other. The moment passed, and I did not need to wait
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to know which part of her had won. The repugnance on her face made it
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clear enough.
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``Before this plan is seriously entertained, there is a great deal to
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address,'' Thief said.
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\emph{Your people becoming warped by your presence}, the Grey Pilgrim
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had said. \emph{Old traits grown more vicious and acute.} Was I slowly
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breaking down my own contingency? I shivered in a way that had nothing
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to do with cold.
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``Agreed,'' Hakram said. ``Namely, why the invitation at all?''
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Juniper set down her cup and it rang empty against the table. She wiped
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her mouth.
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``That's had me wondering,'' the Hellhound said. ``It doesn't seem like
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he'd need us, at first glance. Out of all his possible allies the gates
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make us arguably the most immediately useful for an offensive in Procer,
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but our strategic value is limited.''
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I glanced at the two bickerers in the back, since this part of the
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conversation was exactly why they were here. Masego as our expert in all
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thins arcane, one who'd had access to Tower archives to boot, and Archer
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as the pupil of one of the few people who was known to have entered the
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Kingdom of the Dead and returned.
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``I can tell you a few things about how Keter is run, and the lay of the
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city,'' Indrani said. ``But not much more than that. The Lady speaks
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fondly of him, but that's not surprising -- he's probably one of the few
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entities kicking around she can't kill.''
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Less than useful. I glanced at Hierophant, who was frowning.
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``The only precedent I can think of for the Dead King making alliance is
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Dread Empress Triumphant,'' he said. ``He was not her equal, but neither
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was he her vassal. During none of the crusades directed at his realm did
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he seek Praesi assistance.''
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``He's launched offensives into Procer before,'' Juniper said. ``We have
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records of the battles. But they always seemed more like large-scale
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raids to me. Cities were sacked more to grab people than to grab
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territory, and I can't recall an instance he went deeper south than
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northern Brabant.''
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``\emph{Three Hundred Years Against the Dark}, Amalia Holtzen,'' Hakram
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murmured. ``I have read the volumes as well, and always found the
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mentions of his presence with the armies to be somewhat dubious. Nowhere
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as powerful as a necromancer of his purported strength should be.
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Chronicles are the crusades are hard to get by, for us, but in those
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he's said to have fought heroes. There can be no comparison between the
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power displayed there and in Holtzen's volumes.''
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``He can raise Named with some of their power still attached,'' Archer
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said suddenly. ``The Lady's fought a few.''
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I blinked at Indrani. Was she implying that Ranger took walks into a
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poisonous undead-infested wasteland just so she could scrap with -- I
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forced myself not to think about that too deeply. Ranger was fucking
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insane, trying to figure her out would lead me nowhere.
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``You're implying he hasn't led his armies in person since Triumphant,''
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I said, eyeing the others.
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``Father has long suspected he cannot easily leave the Hell he rules,''
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Masego noted. ``Though the scarcity of solid information on the entity
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prevents this from being proper theory. The Tower has suppressed most
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writings ascribed to Trismesgitus since Dread Emperor Revenant was
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overthrown.''
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His brow creased, after that, but he said nothing.
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``Hierophant?'' I pressed.
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``It would-`` he began, then stopped and sighed. ``There have been
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always been rumours of some High Lords having records of the Secret Wars
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that Dread Empress Maleficent the Second never managed to erase.''
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``The what?'' Indrani said, leaning forward.
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``Bunch of Emperors tried to invade the Dead King's personal hellscape
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through hell,'' I told her. ``Malicia mentioned them to me once. It went
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about as well as you'd expect. Maleficent the Second loosed a bunch of
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demons to erase the whole mess, since it was bad enough Ater itself was
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about to be invaded.''
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``That would have been\ldots{}'' Thief said slowly. ``Well, I doubt
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there's a word harsh enough for it.''
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``Yeah, there's a reason Imperial histories aren't bedside reading,'' I
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said. ``Unless you enjoy vivid nightmares, anyway. I think I get what
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you're trying to avoid saying, Masego. If any Praesi city has those
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records, it'll be Wolof.''
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The dark-skinned mage inclined his head in agreement.
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``It has always been the heart of sorcery in the Wasteland,'' he said.
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I thumbed the collar of my cloak. Where the soul of the former heiress
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to Wolof was currently kept in captivity.
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``Diabolist might know more, then,'' I sighed.
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``She doesn't deserve to get out again,'' Vivienne said darkly.
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``It' be a simpler world,'' I said, ``if people always got what they
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deserved.''
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I breathed out slowly.
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``I grant you leash,'' I said. ``I grant you eyes and ears, tongue and
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feet, at my sufferance.''
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Akua Sahelian made her entrance with the languid grace of a cat at play.
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My eyes narrowed immediately. There should have been hole in her chest
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where I'd ripped out her heart with my bare hands, but she stood intact
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before me. More than that. No dress of red and gold clung to her form:
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she wore instead a long gown of trailing darkness, jewels of pure frost
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glittering around her neck.
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``Your Dread Majesty,'' Diabolist bowed, smiling pleasingly.
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``Huh,'' Archer said. ``Even dead she's still a looker.''
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I blinked, eyes turning to Indrani.
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``You can \emph{see} her?'' I hissed.
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Masego inhaled sharply.
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``Anchor,'' he said, sounding reluctantly impressed. ``You made your own
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prison into an \emph{anchor}. That is impressive.''
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``A compliment from a practitioner of your skill is worth hearing,''
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Akua said, inclining her head in respect.
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``Yes, Cat,'' Archer contributed helpfully. ``We can see her.''
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I glanced at Vivienne, whose fists had tightened so harshly the knuckles
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were turning white. Still and silent, she was glaring at Diabolist.
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``Akua,'' I said flatly. ``Explain.''
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``She devoured part of the mantle, I would say, and wove herself into
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its very fabric,'' Masego said before she could reply.
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``An accurate assumption,'' Diabolist agreed.
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``And so now you're\ldots{} healed?'' I guessed.
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``Bandaged might be more accurate a term,'' she suggested.
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``With Winter,'' I murmured. ``Interesting.''
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I drummed my fingers against the table and exerted my will. Her hand
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rose, her eyes widened in surprise and she began choking herself.
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``That seems unnecessary,'' Masego said as the sound of rough
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strangulation filled the room.
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``I wouldn't have been able to do that before,'' I replied without
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looking at him.
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My eyes were still on Akua.
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``Nothing without a price, eh Diabolist?'' I said calmly. ``You've given
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me a much deeper hold, with that little trick.''
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``She cannot die through this,'' Hierophant sighed. ``Only feel pain,
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which a caster of her calibre would have long learned to ignore.''
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I released my hold and her hand fell as she weakly caught her breath.
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``I've not grown any fonder of surprises, Akua,'' I noted. ``You're
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rapidly heading towards a place where your occasional usefulness is
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inferior to the risk you pose. I shouldn't need to tell you the
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consequences of that, should it come to pass.''
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Diabolist bowed deeply.
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``Your chastisement has been heard,'' she said.
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``Might want to do that again, just to be sure,'' Thief said, smiling
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viciously.
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``If you want to tear out butterfly wings, do it on your own time,''
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Juniper grunted. ``Sahelian, do you have knowledge of the Dead King?''
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``I have made study of him as a worthy example,'' Akua replied. ``The
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horrors he has wrought are second to none.''
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``What does he want?'' Hakram asked plainly. ``As an entity, what is he
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after?''
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The dark-skinned beauty -- Archer, much as it pained me to admit it,
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wasn't wrong about that part -- cocked her head to the side. Thief's
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fingers clenched even tighter.
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``I am bereft of context,'' Diabolist said. ``And so cannot make
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accurate assessment. A creature whose existence has covered the span of
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millennia cannot be summarized in a single sentence.''
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Eyes went to me. No one was going to release information to the shade
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without my say so.
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``He's invited Cat to Keter to discuss an alliance or something like
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that,'' Indrani said, picking at her fingernails.
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I rubbed the bridge of my nose. Of course she would. Archer wasn't one
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to keep her mouth shut around a pretty anything, much less about things
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she barely cared about.
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``How interesting,'' Akua Sahelian drawled, and there was a glimmer of
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something wicked in her eyes. ``I suspect that what Trismegistus seeks
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is a return of the favour. An invitation.''
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I exerted my will and she slapped herself across the face.
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``Once more,'' I said, ``only without the smug cryptic boasting.''
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``You used to have a better sense of humour,'' Diabolist sighed.
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I raised an eyebrow and eyed her hand. She got on with it.
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``This is supposition, I must warn,'' Akua said. ``In matters
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Trismegistan, certainty is scarce luxury. It is known to my bloodline
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that the Dead King took the field to lead his armies during the Secret
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Wars. An event without reflection in his many petty wars with the
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Principate.''
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I studied her.
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``You're implying there's conditions to him being able to leave his
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personal hell,'' I finally said.
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``Indeed,'' Akua agreed. ``When crusades laid siege to his realm he took
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the field to humble the Heavens, yet never when he sought to break
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Procer. If, indeed, he ever sought such a thing at all. This absence
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might have been taken a weakness of contentment with what he has already
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achieved, if he had not also fought the Legions across a dozen
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hellscapes in person. I believe that asymmetry in action to be
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indicative of a\ldots{} restraint. A leash, if you would.''
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There was a spark of humour in her dark eyes when she spoke that last
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sentence looking at me.
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``He was allied with Triumphant, during her conquest of the continent,''
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Hakram said quietly. ``Histories have always seen that as Evil standing
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with Evil. But considering this\ldots{}''
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``It might have been a condition,'' I finished. ``To let him out at
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all.''
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``That sounds,'' Indrani grinned, ``like \emph{leverage}.''
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