507 lines
21 KiB
TeX
507 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-27-into-dusk}{%
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\section{Chapter 27: Into Dusk}\label{chapter-27-into-dusk}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The existence of death is the first lie we are taught. There is
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little difference between a corpse and a man, save the journey of the
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soul. They who learn to slip this noose find the threshold of
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apotheosis, for in the denial of passing they have taken themselves
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beyond the yoke of fate.''}
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-- Translation of the Kabbalis Book of Darkness, widely attributed to
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the young Dead King
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\end{quote}
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I'd almost expected an army to be waiting on the other side when I
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opened the gate into Arcadia, but it seemed my bag of unwelcome
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complications was full at the moment. And to think, it'd only taken war
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with half the continent and every hero the Heavens could put together
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before we'd reached that point! Sadly, I was not unaware that the moment
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I started believing we'd reached the bottom of the barrel some Choir
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would pop in, yell \emph{surprise} in a monotone and reveal there was a
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false bottom below leading into another barrel entirely.
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``What's the word they have in the Free Cities, for the snake that eats
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its own tail?'' I asked Hakram.
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``Ouroboros,'' he replied, hairless brow cocking.
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There it was. In summary, my life was a veritable ouroboros of bad
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decisions feeding into increasingly horrible messes. I had to own up to
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at least that much, headed as we were towards what might just be the
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worst decision yet.
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``You're brooding,'' Adjutant said.
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``I don't brood,'' I replied without missing a beat.
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He rolled his eyes.
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``You are looking thoughtfully into the distance, a melancholy air on
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your face,'' he said.
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``I'm a complicated woman, Hakram,'' I said. ``You can't begin to grasp
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the depths of my ponderings.''
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Archer snorted ahead of us. Unkindly so, I decided.
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``Like \emph{you} can talk, Indrani,'' I sneered. ``You're about as
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complex as a rock.''
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``Geology is a broad and complicated field of study, actually,'' Masego
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said.
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Archer preened.
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``See?'' she said. ``Even Zeze agrees I'm a woman of many facets. Unlike
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some others that won't be mentioned.''
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She turned to grin at me.
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``Oh, things are going badly,'' she mocked in a high-pitched voice.
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``Better stab my way out of it. But stabbing is bad, for some
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inexplicable reason. What a difficult dilemma.''
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I flipped her off.
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``Don't expect silver at the end of the trip, wench,'' I said. ``Mouthy
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guides don't get handouts.''
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``That'd be very inconsiderate of you, Catherine,'' Vivienne mused.
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``She's been such a peach so far. I'll hold onto the coin for her, if
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you'd like.''
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``You've already robbed the treasury once, Thief,'' I replied flatly.
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``Try something fresh, for Below's sake.''
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It was pretty inevitable that a journey this, well, boring would see us
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turn to bickering to pass the time. Hierophant had been rather miffed
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that we'd kept the supplies to a bare minimum, since it meant he
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couldn't spell himself atop a horse and crack open a book while we
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guided his mount. It'd taken three days before he stopped dropping hints
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this was all very uncivilized. The Woe's only tagalong was my trusty
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Zombie the Third, and \emph{she} at least wasn't complaining about
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carrying most our supplies in her saddle-bags. It was a dark day indeed
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when the dead flying unicorn was the most trustworthy of my companions.
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I glanced up and sighed when I saw the sun was only beginning to reach
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afternoon height. We had hours left before making camp.
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``We'll reach the outskirts of Winter by nightfall,'' Indrani suddenly
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said. ``I know this place.''
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I followed her gaze and found a mound of earth covered in dead grass,
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maybe half a mile away. We hadn't seen any structures in days, not since
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we'd passed the demesne of the Count of False Blooming. Three weeks
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since we'd left Callow, and only now was the throb in the back of my
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mind that indicated the location of our path out beginning to feel
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measurably closer.
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``I don't think this is really Winter anymore,'' I said quietly.
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Hierophant, who'd been trailing behind and repeatedly weaving cooling
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spells around himself so he wouldn't sweat for the exercise, put a
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spring to his step so he could catch up.
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``You perceive our surroundings as different, even though they do not
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appear to be,'' he said.
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I chewed over that for a while before speaking.
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``Before I could feel\ldots{}'' I grasped for the word. ``Currents, in
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this place. Skade felt much different from the Summer territories we
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campaigned on. Archer says we're supposed to be in Winter, but it
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doesn't feel anything like that to me.''
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``The wedding of the king and queen of Arcadia might have affected the
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very nature of this realm, then,'' Masego murmured. ``Interesting. If
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the effect is permanent, centuries of research on the fae might become
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useless.''
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``The less anyone has to do with fae, the better,'' I said, not unaware
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of the irony involved.
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``Unfortunate that we do not have the time to study the phenomenon in
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depth,'' Hierophant said. ``Your word alone is not enough. You are
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ignorant and possibly under influence.''
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Archer smothered a laugh and Hakram went suspiciously still, like he was
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trying not to smile. I looked at Masego for a long beat. It'd been said
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so mildly I knew it wasn't actually an insult, but sometimes I did hope
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someone would eventually manage to badger some tact into him.
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``That was insulting, Masego,'' Vivienne called out from Zombie's other
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side.
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``Was it?'' Hierophant said, glass eyes flicking to the side. ``But it
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was all true.''
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I patted his shoulder gently.
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``We don't call people ignorant, Masego,'' I told him.
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``But the overwhelming majority of them are,'' he said, aghast.
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``And I could spit in your morning tea, but I don't,'' I said. ``Because
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refraining from doing that makes interacting more agreeable.''
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He looked less than convinced.
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``If they are never informed of their ignorance, how will they be made
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aware of the need to remedy it?'' he pointed out, evidently believing
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this was reasonable.
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``Remember our heroic battle cry, Zeze,'' Indrani called out.
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His expression cleared.
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``Ah,'' he mused. ``Lies and violence. I understand.''
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He turned to me and offered a beaming smile.
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``You are well-read and conversant in magical theory, Catherine,'' he
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said. ``Well done.''
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Hakram let out a sound that aimed to be a giggle but came out like a
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dozen angry cats being ground between millstones. I rubbed the bridge of
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my nose.
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``Thank you, Masego,'' I said, reaching for calm.
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He nodded, pleased, and trotted ahead to speak with Archer.
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``I \emph{am} well-read,'' I complained at Hakram in a low voice.
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``Compared to him?'' the orc chuckled. ``There's libraries that would
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feel inadequate.''
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Yeah, fair enough. It wasn't like there weren't gaps in Masego's
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knowledge, but it was hard to beat personal tutoring by an incubus that
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preceded the Empire and a sorcerer that cut open Creation to find out
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how it worked.
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``I find it interesting, though,'' Hakram murmured. ``What you said,
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about it feeling different.''
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I glanced at him, silently inviting the orc to elaborate.
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``Have you noticed?'' Adjutant said. ``The further we stray from
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`Winter' territory, the less\ldots{} alive the landscape become.''
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``Winter's never exactly been a field of flowers,'' I pointed out.
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He conceded that with an inclination of the head, but did not further
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agree.
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``The mound Indrani used as a marker,'' he said. ``There was dead grass
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upon it.''
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``And?''
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``Does it look to you like it was killed by snow?'' he said.
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Frowning, I took a closer look. When snows in Callow melted, the grass
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below came out yellow or green. From what little I'd seen anyway, I
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didn't usually campaign in winter and I'd been raised in the city until
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nearly seventeen. The grass above the mound, though was\ldots{} grey. I
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did not feel dead of natural causes. My fingers drummed against my side
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absent-mindedly.
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``Warlock once told Malicia that Arcadia has a degree of symmetry with
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Creation,'' I said.
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``So you've told me,'' Adjutant agreed.
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``That doesn't make any sense, Hakram,'' I said quietly. ``I mean,
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fitting journeys through Arcadia with a bird's eye view of Calernia is
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pretty much impossible but we shouldn't be anywhere close to the Kingdom
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of the Dead. Maybe halfway through the Proceran leg of the trip.''
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``There is much we do not understand about the Dead King,'' the orc
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said. ``It is known he ruled a great kingdom, once but there is hardly
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any mention of it in the histories.''
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``Because it was \emph{ancient},'' I said sceptically. ``And it's not
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that unusual. No one knows what Ater's original name was, or even the
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name of the kingdom centred around it. That's what happens when people
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fuck around with demons.''
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I'd been taught at the orphanage the reason for the existence of the
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`Nameless Kingdom' was likely a demon of Absence, or that the Miezans
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had used a Censure after facing entrenched resistance. The latter theory
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wasn't all that popular, since they were known to have use that only a
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handful of times across the entire lifespan of their empire.
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``There are Callowan and Praesi oral histories contemporary to what
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would have been the Dead King's predecessors,'' Hakram said. ``Yet no
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mention of a great power in the north.''
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Which didn't mean all that much, since back in those days most current
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nations didn't even exist and those that had were pretty much
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unrecognizable when compared to what they now were. But he did have a
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point, kind of.
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``So you think that he, what?'' I said. ``Shunted off parts of the
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kingdom into Arcadia?''
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``The elves have done the same with the Golden Bloom twice now,''
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Adjutant said. ``It is not impossible. A sorcerer capable of conquering
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a hell would certainly be capable of achieving as much.''
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``If he was active outside his kingdom and his hell, someone would have
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heard of it by now,'' I said. ``I doubt he could gain a foothold in
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Arcadia without going to war with the courts, anyway. And \emph{that}
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would have made waves.''
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``It would now, certainly,'' Hakram said. ``Sorcery has been refined for
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centuries, states capable of sparing attention outside their borders and
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immediate threats have emerged. When most the continent wielded stone
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axes, however? A different story.''
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Shit. That might actually be true. If it had all turned into myth
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millennia ago, whatever stories would have existed about it might have
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grown so different and twisted they were useless as a cornerstone.
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``Lots of ifs,'' I finally said.
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``We will find out soon enough,'' Hakram said. ``But there are few
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entities in existence we should be warier of underestimating than the
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Hidden Horror.''
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And on that cheerful note, we joined the others.
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---
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``So,'' I said. ``Anyone else have a bad feeling about this?''
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``Yes,'' Hakram bluntly said.
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``Haven't had a good one in years,'' Vivienne admitted.
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The other two minions ignored me. Indrani's eyes were bright and
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excited, her stance coiled like she could barely keep herself from
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running forward. Masego, on the other hand, had gone eerily still aside
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from his hands and eyes. Which all moved from rune to rune traced in the
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air, as he let out little noises of surprise or delight whenever one of
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the colours or shapes changed.
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I decided to leave him at it a little longer, eyes turning back to the
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eerie sight displayed before me. It was a kingdom. Or, at least, the
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shattered remnants of one. I had not chosen that word lightly: it was
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not a whole but a collection broken shards left wherever they fell,
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dropped by the hand of some unknowable god. Some shards seemed like they
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fit together -- for half a mile a lake's shoreline could be seen, with
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fishermen dragging their boats out under the noon sun -- but others were
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almost painfully disparate. I saw a city street lead into a dark forest,
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a river flow out of a crowded fair and those were the least of it. In
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the distance I glimpsed warriors fighting in the pitch black darkness of
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a plain, next to the almost idyllic view of the sun rising over a
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peaceful farm.
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``Indrani?'' I said.
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``No fucking idea, Catherine,'' she said with relish. ``I don't even
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think the \emph{Lady} has seen this before. She would have mentioned it
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for sure.''
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Less than reassuring. Either this place was hidden a lot better than it
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seemed, or even the likes of Ranger preferred to avoid it.
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``I'll get the obvious out first,'' I said. ``This looks like the
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Kingdom of the Dead. Before, well, the last part of that.''
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``It could be ancient Procer,'' Hakram noted. ``It too has large lakes.
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So does Callow, for that matter.''
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``No it isn't,'' Vivienne quietly said. ``Look as far as out as you can
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see, slightly to the left of the centre.''
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I squinted before seeing what she was speaking of. It was city. Much too
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small to be Ater, but it begged for the comparison anyway because at the
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heart of it jutted a tall spire of dark stone. Atop it was a smaller
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globe, hovering in the air, and I'd seen that illustration before in
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books.
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``Keter,'' I said. ``Crown of the Dead.''
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``Inaccurate,'' Hierophant said. ``This is, for lack of a better term,
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an echo.''
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His lips were twitching into a delighted smile, as if he couldn't
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believe his luck.
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``And what does that mean exactly?'' I asked.
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``Reverberation,'' he said, sounding awed. ``An event touched Creation
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that was so great and momentous it forced reflection within Arcadia.
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This has fascinating implications, Catherine. There have been few
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rituals so powerful in Calernian history, but the Diabolist's working at
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Second Liesse could be considered in the same league. There might very
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well be an echo of that battle somewhere in this realm.''
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My fists clenched. So there was a repeat of one of the darkest failures
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to my name to be found somewhere around? Charming.
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``Can it hurt us?'' I asked.
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``I cannot speak with certainty,'' Hierophant said.
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``Guess,'' I flatly ordered him.
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He looked irritated.
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``I can theorize,'' he stressed pointedly, ``that we are in such
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misalignment with the echo we cannot physically interact with it. With
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the proper spells perhaps sound could be obtained, but touch or smell
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are much more difficult. It would take weeks of rituals.''
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``Which we won't be doing,'' I said.
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``\emph{Cat},'' Archer complained. ``Think about it. There's bound to be
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heroes and villains there. We could fight people that had been dead for
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millennia!''
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``Maybe on the way back,'' I lied.
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She pouted.
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``Masego, how is this possible at all?'' Hakram asked. ``I was under the
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impression that Arcadia spanned the whole of Creation as a mirror of
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sorts. Was the Dead King so powerful all the world shook from his
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transgression?''
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Hierophant clicked his tongue.
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``That is a misunderstanding,'' he said. ``Consider Arcadia as a single
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object being looked upon by an infinity of perspectives. To every one,
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it is a different realm. Across the Tyrian Sea, it likely has completely
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different name and seems inhabited by completely different entities.
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Even the marriage of Winter and Summer is contained within the span of
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our gaze only, unlikely to have tremors beyond. It is so with this echo
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as well. Something that was momentous on our understanding of the world
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is not necessarily so elsewhere.''
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``And so Triumphant wept, for she ruled but a fraction of the world and
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knew it to be vast beyond her reckoning,'' Vivienne quoted softly. ``We
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are not so important as we like to believe.''
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``We can debate the philosophical implications of this later,'' I said.
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``I'm fairly certain our gate out is in not-Keter. Masego, you're sure
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that if we walk through a battlefield we won't get stabbed?''
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``From our perspective, all of this is akin to light painting smoke,''
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Hierophant said. ``We will pass through as if they were ghosts.''
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He paused.
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``Some ghosts,'' he clarified. ``There is actually a very board spectrum
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of-``
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``And forward we go,'' I interrupted cheerfully. ``I'm not sure I trust
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my ice to get us through the water parts, so we're talking the long way
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around through-``
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I paused, glancing to the right.
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``A town burning plague victims,'' I finished with a sigh. ``Charming.
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Let's get a move on, I'm not spending any more nights in this place than
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I have to.''
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That didn't turn out to be a problem, as it happened. Arcadia had a
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night and day, though sometimes they weren't matches everywhere, but
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this place obeyed different rules entirely. Every shard seemed to have a
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lifespan before it returned to the beginning, and most that took place
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during day or night remained so. There seemed to be no rule or reason to
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the few shards that lasted longer. We marched through an entirely empty
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green field for three days and nights as if it were entirely natural,
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then pushed through a similarly empty mountain pass where the same bird
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began to swoop down in the same manner every quarter hour. Hierophant
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found a way to allow us earshot after half a week, though the sounds
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came muted. Unsurprisingly, Indrani pushed for us to pass through as
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many battlefields as possible. We took a break to the side of a pitched
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battle between a few hundred soldiers decked in iron screaming as they
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charged down a hill and half as many soldiers wearing obsidian and
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copper breastplates. The howlers were winning even though the opposition
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had a handful of mages. Those to be seen were a joke compared to even
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Legion mages: it took clusters of four or five chanting for a while to
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toss around the kind of lightning bolts my senior mage officers sent
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down without breaking a sweat. I sat down and watched the killing as the
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other ate.
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``I recognize some of what they're saying,'' Hakram told me, standing by
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my side with the remains of his jerky in hand.
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``The obsidian guys?'' I said.
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He shook his head.
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``The iron men,'' he replied. ``Some of what they're screaming has
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common roots with Reitz.''
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The Lycaonese tongue, spoken only in the mountainous northwestern
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stretch of Procer.
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``That's four times we run into them fighting the others,'' I noted.
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``And they win more often than not.''
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``An invasion?'' Adjutant said.
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``Maybe,'' I frowned. ``We haven't seen them hit anything larger than a
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village yet, so raids are more likely.''
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We ran into our first real city shard two days later. Masego had been
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getting progressively more irritated by his inability to explain why we
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could pass through buildings and people but not mountains or hills, but
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we stumbled unto something that perked him up. Inside a towering house
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of bricks we found a circle of twelve men and women standing by a wide
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basin of granite and spilling blood inside from their arms. The oldest
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among them, a withered old crone, chanted incantations in a language
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none of us knew that were repeated by the rest. I allowed a half hour
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break, if only to get him in a better mood. Hierophant in a mood was
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pleasant for no one.
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``Early scrying,'' he told us, kneeling by the ghostly ritual. ``It is
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Trismegistan in nature, that much can be known by the cadence, but they
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use no runic stabilizers at all. It is primitive, I'll grant you, but
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the sheer \emph{skill} involved\ldots{} Even Father could not use so
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complicated a formula purely by voice.''
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We moved on before long. We were all getting restless, the eerie scenes
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beginning to take a toll, but none more so than Archer. The longer it
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went on, the more often she started taking walks after we set camp. It
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was a bad idea, in my eyes. We knew too little about the dangers of this
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place to wander aimlessly. But more than any of us Indrani had the
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wanderlust, and I could see how remaining within the dotted lines was
|
|
getting her temper closer to the surface. I extracted a promise for her
|
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not to leave for too long, and left it at that. I'd expected that if any
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trouble found us it would be through her, but I ended up choking on my
|
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words. It was Masego that wandered away without a word, face pale. It
|
|
surprised me, considering the shard we were travelling through was a
|
|
battle. One with precious little sorcery involved. The iron men were
|
|
fighting the soldiers of obsidian again, by far the largest engagement
|
|
we'd seen. At least two thousand on each side, and the obsidian soldiers
|
|
were taking a beating. In large part, I saw, because of the empty circle
|
|
at the heart of the field. Two silhouettes were duelling there. A
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|
middle-aged woman with a crown of iron, wielding a heavy mace of stone.
|
|
Against her fought a man in a tunic of shimmering copper, wearing a
|
|
circlet of gold-linked rubies. His iron sword was broken in a parry, and
|
|
then the iron-crowned queen pulped his skull on the grass.
|
|
|
|
It was there I found Masego. He wasn't looking at the fighting, at the
|
|
circle of screaming soldiers from both sides surrounding the duel. No,
|
|
he stood slightly beyond that. His form dispersing a soldier. He was
|
|
looking at pale-skinned man in furs, chest mostly bare and his neck
|
|
covered with necklaces of iron and silver. The stranger Hierophant was
|
|
staring at was beautiful, I decided. One of the most striking men I'd
|
|
ever seen. It was like someone had ripped out the fantasy of a warrior
|
|
consort and given it flesh.
|
|
|
|
``Masego?'' I called out.
|
|
|
|
He did not answer. I hurried to his side, laying my hand on his
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|
shoulder.
|
|
|
|
``Are you in danger?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
Mutely Hierophant shook his head. After a long moment he spoke.
|
|
|
|
``That,'' he said, pointing at the man, ``is my father.''
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