487 lines
21 KiB
TeX
487 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-54-scavenger}{%
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\section{Chapter 54: Scavenger}\label{chapter-54-scavenger}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``One hundred and ninety-three: should your nemesis offer you a
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wager, a truce or delay for the first time always accept it. Villains
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with a fated heroic match have reached the peak of their power, whereas
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you and your companions can only grow.''}
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-- ``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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``That's a lot of dead bodies,'' Indrani noted. ``Like, battlefield a
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lot, not `the Woe has a bad day' a lot.''
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I ignored the attempt at humour. In someone else I might have attributed
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it to needing to cover up shock, but Archer didn't get those kinds of
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shivers. The benefits of being raised in a part of the world where every
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day a single misstep could get you killed by a raging monster-hunting
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lunatic. It was an uncomfortable truth that'd I'd gotten somewhat used
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to the sight of corpses as well, though not quite to my companion's
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extent. The drow who'd scuttled in behind us had gone still as statues,
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stricken by either terror or awe. I left them behind and waded into the
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pool of death. I knelt in lukewarm blood and guts, flipping over the
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nearest body to have a better look at it.
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I immediately withdrew my hand.
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``Cat?'' Indrani probed, catching up to me.
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``There's still Night in those,'' I said.
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I knew that because I'd felt the eldritch power react to my own. Not an
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attack or an attempt to meld, but\ldots{} almost like the darkness had
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been licking my hand\emph{. Like it recognizes something larger and
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meaner, and tries to make friends.} I shivered, and it'd been a long
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time since any kind of cold had caused me to do that. The dead drow was
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badly mangled. The face had been smashed in, skull crushed through the
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eye socket, but it had an earlier wound. A bloody hole in its chest,
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near the centre. I stuck my fingers in there again, ignoring the feeling
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the Night eagerly pressing against Winter, and popped open the ribcage
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to have a closer look. There was an organ in there that looked somewhat
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similar to a human heart, though it had way too many veins coming out of
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it and it stood deeper in the body -- almost next to the spine, which at
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least was easily recognizable in shape. It was more grey than white,
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though, and oddly granular.
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``That's going to be a pain to wash,'' Indrani commented, glancing at my
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now blood-drenched clothes.
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``It was a crossbow bolt that did this,'' I said. ``Look at the indent.
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It's similar to what Legion-issue makes on humans. Didn't go deep
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enough, so whoever did this had to finish them up close.''
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For all her many flaws, Archer had deep knowledge of the ways of
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murdering at a distance. When she turned her attention to the wound I
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was indicating her eyes narrowed.
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``That's a much bigger mark than the crossbows Robber's minions used
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would have made,'' she said. ``Bigger bolt, and much stronger impact.
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Honestly, it looks like it should have gone straight through.''
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Which would require much more force, if the head of the bolt was larger.
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Whoever had done this they had significantly better crossbows than the
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Legions of Terror fielded -- when it came to the power of a shot, at
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least. Hard to tell the rate of fire from a single corpse.
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``That points a damning finger already,'' I said.
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The Dread Empire was hardly the only nation that fielded crossbowmen,
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though they did field the largest amount by a significant margin. I
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could honestly think of no Calernian power that wouldn't have crossbows
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in a field army, save for the Chain of Hunger. But Praes used a goblin
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crank model that was a significant improvement on what the likes of
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Procer and the old kingdom used. Better rate of fire, better range,
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better impact. Whoever had done this used a superior model, and I
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couldn't think of any power that could boast of one. Not on the surface,
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anyway. Indrani leaned forward, jostling the corpse from my grasp, and
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then leaned back with a frown on her face. She was looking at the eye
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wound, the one that'd broken the skull.
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``Yeah, you're right,'' she said. ``Look at the angle. Hammer -- and
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it's absolutely a hammer that did this -- came down all wrong for
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someone of the same height. That's dwarf work, unless there's another
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bunch of murderous little people running around the region.''
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I dropped the dead drow entirely, slowly rising to my feet. For a
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butcher's yard, this place smelled nothing like rotting flesh and blood.
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There was that coppery scent wafting around, but aside from that?
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Another physical oddity for this already strange race. My gaze swept
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across the slaughter, looking for the lay of it. Some bodies had
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obviously been dragged and dropped, but others had been left where they
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fell and from those I could try to piece together the events that had
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preceded our arrival.
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``First volley hit them by surprise,'' Indrani said, come up at my side.
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``Look at the bodies there. Too many of them are face down, they were
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shot in the back.''
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I followed her pointed finger. The corpses were as she'd said, but that
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was not what drew my attention. The crossbows would have been fired from
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a passage leading roughly to my current left, but I could see it winding
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closer to my back. That should lead to either the Gloom itself or a
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cavern very close to it. Ivah \emph{had} said that the dwarves sometimes
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pierced trough the Gloom, sending an expedition through to mine or claim
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other sources of wealth.
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``Then the second volley went straight into the crowd, right there,''
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Indrani mused, finger moving towards a handful of dead bodies closer to
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the centre. ``That's interesting. You'll know what kind of tactics that
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is even better than me.''
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``Panic,'' I said. ``They were inciting a panic, so the drow would try
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to flee instead of fight back. Which means\ldots{}''
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Our two gazes swept towards the right side of the cavern, where the
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other passage out could be seen. It was broader than the other one,
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would likely allow for twenty through at a time. The corpses near it
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were piled almost hip-high, not a single one coming closer than twenty
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feet of the passage.
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``There was another force waiting there,'' I said. ``So they're numerous
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enough to afford splitting up at least, assuming there's a single
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dwarven expedition at work here.''
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``They did it cold and methodical,'' Indrani grunted. ``I'd guess they
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let the panic sink in before moving in the second force, so the drow
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wouldn't get desperate too early.''
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``It was mean to be a massacre since the beginning,'' I softly agreed.
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``They never intended to leave anyone alive.''
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``There's more. Look around. No structures in here, Cat,'' she pointed
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out. ``Nowhere to huddle in, not even the beginnings of a camp site. So
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why were there at least a thousand drow in the middle of fucking
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nowhere?''
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``You think the dwarves slaughtered the entire tribe,'' I said. ``Sigil,
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whatever.''
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``Whatever they're up to, it doesn't involve leaving survivors,''
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Indrani shrugged. ``This lot didn't give much a fight, by the looks of
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it. I'd bet they were bottom feeders who fled another battle and got
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cleaned up before the dwarves moved on.''
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``That's monstrous,'' I said, appalled. ``I understand hitting those who
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can fight back, but civilians? Gods, Archer, I wouldn't be surprised if
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we found children in the piles should we look for them.''
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``There's a sense to it,'' she replied. ``Hard sense, mind you, but
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still sense. Leave a bunch of Night-bearing corpses behind and the
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survivors will eat that. Possibly make trouble on the way out. No one
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can harvest if there'\emph{s} no one left.''
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``Fucking Hells,'' I said. ``Is there a single place on Creation where
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we're not going to find atrocities if we scratch the varnish a bit?''
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``This whole fucking place is an atrocity, Cat,'' Indrani dismissed.
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``All the dwarves did was heap another ugly day onto the pile.''
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My finger clenched. Her utter lack of sympathy for the drow was not
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without reason. But there was a difference between holding the
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responsible to account and shrugging off massacres. I'd wrestled with
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this before, when I had to make choices about the Empire. How many
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people in Praes could really be called at fault for the many sins of the
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High Lords? Farmers and shopkeepers did not get a voice in the run of
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the world, no matter whose banner they lived under. For every drow
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calling themselves Mighty and heedlessly partaking in the slaughter, how
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many thousands were just \emph{meat}?
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``Enough,'' I said. ``We've got too many worries for me to be angry with
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you.''
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The other Named shrugged.
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``Sure,'' she said. ``We might consider this a useful turn, if not a
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good one. We need to get deeper, right? If we follow in the wake of the
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dwarves I expect we'll have an easier way of it than on our own.''
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``We don't know why they're here,'' I reminded her. ``Or even were
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they're headed.''
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Indrani gestured down at the slaughter beneath us.
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``That's not the opening move of someone after a few rubies, Cat,'' she
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said. ``They're leaving no one behind, so it follows they're gonna be in
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the Everdark long enough they're worrying someone might raise a banner
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here before they return.''
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I reluctantly nodded. Not because I agreed following the dwarven
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expedition was our best bet, but to concede she was right about the
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logistics. The drow were terrified of the Kingdom Under, evidently with
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good reason, but this brutal a massacre wasn't something that would go
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unanswered. Even a rat bared its fangs when cornered. The entire affair
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reeked of calculated risk.
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``This complicates things,'' I finally sighed. ``It might be easier to
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find friends here, if the drow are under attack, but the price\ldots{}''
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``We're not picking a fight with the Kingdom Under,'' Indrani flatly
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said. ``Not even the Lady does that. You kill a single dwarf and they
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won't send a complaint, they'll sink cities underground and slaughter
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everyone remotely involved. Maybe their relatives just to be sure. It
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doesn't matter if by some miracle you manage to beat the army they send,
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Catherine. They'll keep sending them, just get across the point that
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\emph{you don't fuck with the dwarves}.''
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I glanced at her, surprised. I didn't disagree with what she'd said --
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odds were that if the Queen of Callow killed a dwarf then Laure would be
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a ruin before winter arrived -- but I \emph{was} taken aback by how
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vehement Archer was being about it. She'd always been, well, fearless.
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Occasionally to the point of foolishness, though that was not unusual
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for any of the Woe. Including myself. I'd been under the impression few
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dwarves ever came to Refuge, even though it probably the surface entity
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with the closest ties to the Kingdom Under. Save maybe Mercantis, but
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that was famously strictly business as all the relationships of the City
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of Bought and Sold tended to be.
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``You won't get an argument from me,'' I said.
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``Good,'' she said. ``You got more on your plate, anyway.''
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``How's that?'' I frowned.
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Archer pointed down at the pond of corpses.
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``That's a lot of Night, Cat,'' she said. ``Even if they were all
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nobodies, that's a great many nobodies. You just going to leave that
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lying there?''
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I'd been trying not to think about that, all the while knowing I would
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have to soon enough. I wasn't sure if I could devour the Night myself,
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but I did have Diabolist with me. If there was anyone would could tutor
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me in the basics of eldritch cannibalism it was Akua Sahelian. That'd
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still involve eating power from a source I only poorly understood,
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unaware of the possible long-term consequences. If Ivah had been upfront
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about what the Night was, then this could represent an extremely useful
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addition to my arsenal. I'd been running into old monsters more and
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more, of late. Older heroes, yes, but there was also the fact that the
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Dead King would be fielding an entire battalion of the most dangerous
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Named he'd been able to get his hands on. Having a much shallower bag of
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tricks than the opposition had cost me, in my last few fights, and I
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didn't have the time or the kind of opponents available that'd allow me
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to play catch up. Drawing on the ancestral knowledge of an entire race
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would, to be frank, be the perfect solution. That was the most obvious
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reason not to go through with this.
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It was too good a solution, too perfect. Like it'd been handpicked for
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my problems. Mundane coincidence was not unknown to Creation -- the Gods
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were not behind every stroke of fortune or disaster, even for Named --
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but this crucial a coincidence? No.~It wasn't happenstance. I would go
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as far as to say I was inclined to believe this was a bid from
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Below\emph{. Look at what you could get, if you start acting like a
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proper villain.} My last talk with the Dead King had involved a warning
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about the offers that would come knocking at my door. About the kind of
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stories that would be offered to me. I had not forgot it, even though it
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had been the least ominous part of what was spoken.
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``No,'' I finally said. ``I can't. It's too useful.''
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``Tell me you're not drinking dead drow juice,'' Indrani said. ``You
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don't know where it's been, Cat, it could be full of diseases.''
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``Not me,'' I said, glancing back at the rest of our band.
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The drow had gathered themselves while the two of us had been examining
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the massacre. None of them came within even spitting distance of the
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corpses, though, and from the looks of it one of them had thrown up
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against the cavern wall. Diabolist was still with them, though her eyes
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remained on the bodies. She was too well-taught to let her face betray
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her deepest thoughts, but the blankness of her expression was a hint in
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and of itself.
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``Shit, you feeding them to Dubious Witch?'' Indrani muttered. ``Vivi's
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going to have a \emph{fit} when she learns.''
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I waded back to dry land, boots trailing blood all over the stone. The
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drow visibly shrunk on themselves while Akua withdrew her gaze from the
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massacre's aftermath to meet my eyes.
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``Catherine,'' she greeted me. ``Have your deliberations come to an
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end?''
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``In a manner of speaking,'' I said. ``\textbf{Akua Sahelian, I forbid
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you to partake in Night}.''
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Diabolist shivered as my order sunk into the heart of her being, words
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writ into law. She threw me a reproachful glance, after gathering her
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bearings.
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``I would not have so blundered, dear heart,'' she said. ``Such power
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would not come without trappings or demands. I am more discerning in my
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usurpations.''
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``Then this shouldn't be a problem,'' I replied flatly.
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She could argue all she wanted that she wouldn't have done it, it was
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bad form to give an alcoholic the keys to a liquor shop. Even when they
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told you they didn't like the bottles on the shelves.
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``As you say,'' Diabolist murmured, bowing her head.
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I turned to the drow. I'd gotten used to them over our journey, well
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enough I no longer had trouble telling them apart. Ivah was the only one
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who talked regularly, even among each other. The former guide shifted
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uneasily when my gaze came to rest on it.
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``Ivah,'' I said. ``Are you still set on us parting ways?''
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Silver eyes narrowed.
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``I am reconsidering this matter, Queen,'' it said.
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``Good,'' I smiled. ``Then I have a bargain for you. I still need a
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guide to Holy Tvarigu, or at least someone who can take me to the path
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that leads there. If you're willing to be that guide, I can offer safety
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on the way there.''
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I paused, then glanced at the corpses behind me.
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``There would be other benefits, were you so inclined,'' I added.
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The drow's face creased in thought.
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``You would grant me right to harvest all of them?'' it probed.
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``So long as you can do it in a reasonable amount of time,'' I said. ``I
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want to get a move on as soon as possible. I don't suppose it's possible
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to take all of the Night at once?''
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``There are rites to do this,'' Ivah admitted. ``Yet I know them not. It
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could take more than hours to finish this. The act of harvest is
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tiring.''
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``If I may intervene?'' Akua asked.
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I nodded at her.
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``If simply gathering the Night is the issue,'' she said. ``I believe we
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can be of assistance.''
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``You can drain all those dry?'' I said, jutting a thumb at the dead.
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``The power itches to be held,'' Diabolist said. ``It would not fight us
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in this.''
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``And contamination?'' I pressed.
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I got the impression the shade had to hold back from rolling her eyes.
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``I have struck bargains with demons and devils most ancient,'' Akua
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said. ``This is ancient work, to be sure, and strong. It is also
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incredibly simplistic. I am no green warlock, drunk on the success of
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binding an imp.''
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``Gods, you sound like Masego only two parts more Evil,'' I muttered.
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``Fine, I didn't mean to impugn your talent at short-sightedly
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endangering the very fabric of Creation to try winning battles you ended
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up losing anyway on account of being kind of a fuckup.''
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I heard Archer choke behind me.
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``That was unnecessary,'' Diabolist said, sounding genuinely miffed.
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``Don't know about that,'' Indrani mused. ``\emph{I} got a laugh out of
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it.''
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Ivah's eyes were moving from one of us to the other in sequence as we
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spoke, face visibly split between fear and befuddlement. I suspected the
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Mighty weren't keen on banter with their underlings. What little I knew
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implied they were pretty direct about having their displeasure felt,
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though in all fairness that made me the pot mouthing off at their
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kettle.
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``The terms stand, with the addition that we'll help you gather Night at
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least this once,'' I told the drow.
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Ivah did not need to mull over it much longer.
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``I would accept your bargain, then,'' it said.
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I nodded, pleased.
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``Give me a moment to phrase the oath,'' I said.
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``That will not be necessary, Queen,'' Ivah said.
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My brow rose. Trust already? We'd only struck one bargain, and I'd
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needed it for urgent purpose. The silver-eyed guide smiled thinly,
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reading my surprise.
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``This will make me drow again,'' it said. ``Drow neither give nor take
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oaths.''
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``That's rather inconvenient,'' I frankly replied.
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Would it try to betray us the moment it had a bit of power under the
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belt? I wasn't overly worried about it hurting us, Secrets or no
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Secrets, but it'd be a pain to have to find another guide so soon after
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empowering the last one. A closer eye needed to be kept on it, then. I
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gave Diabolist a meaningful glance, getting the slightest of nods in
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response.
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``Let's get this done,'' I said. ``Akua, I'm getting the impression that
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improvising here would be a bad idea.''
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``Your discernment remains impeccable,'' Diabolist said, without a hint
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of irony.
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I smothered a grin. The diabolism quip had actually gotten under her
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skin, which was just delightful.
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``If I may?'' she said, extending her hand towards me.
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I nodded and she made contact with the bare skin of my neck. It
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felt\ldots{} like when we'd fought together against the Skein, but
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softer. Access granted but not power. Her thoughts bloomed right under
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my fingertips, little whispers of knowledge and intent.
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``Extend your will,'' she murmured.
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I closed my eyes. I could feel the Night wriggling in the bodies. She'd
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been right to say it was itching to be held: it responded eagerly to
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even the slightest of approaches. My mind covered the whole of the
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cavern -- close to the perception that emerged when others entered my
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domain, but somehow incomplete. There was no inherent understanding
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here. I was blindly groping my way.
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``Call it,'' Akua said.
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\textbf{To me}, I ordered. The Night slithered out of the corpses like a
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tide of snakes, eating through dead flesh. It hesitated, but I lashed it
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with my will and called it closer. It became easier the more I exerted
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myself, as if I'd overcome its hesitation. I spun it into a sphere until
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it grew larger than a person, then told it to contract. When I opened my
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eyes, there was only a pinprick of darkness hovering in the air before
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me.
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``Ivah,'' I said. ``Now.''
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The drow approached and bowed towards the Night, beginning cadenced
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whispers, but they fell away from my ears. I was looking into the small
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piece of darkness, and seeing beyond it. Through it.
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I was not the only one looking.
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There was a face, but I could only make out the barest contours because
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of the eyes: deep and perfect silver, they were glaring harshly in
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otherwise absolute darkness.
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\emph{Splendid}, a woman's voice spoke into my ear.
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``Who are you?'' I asked.
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\emph{Ah, perhaps not. Merely usurper. What an unusual creature you
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are.}
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I could feel her mind scuttling across my own, like a spider on glass.
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Feeling out the shape of it, tasting the power. It went both ways. Her
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soul, her mantle was no thick bundle of power. It was an impossibly
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large web of the thinnest possible strings, spread out so far and wide I
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could scarcely comprehend it.
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``You're not the Night,'' I said. ``I can feel you too, Named.''
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\emph{I sensed you tread the Gloom with stolen feathers. Felt you come
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to me, purpose on your lips.}
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``Sve of Night,'' I whispered. ``I seek audience with you.''
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\emph{So take it}, the woman laughed. \emph{What stays your hand?}
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``You're under attack,'' I said.
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\emph{All is strife.} \emph{The Tenets} \emph{will hold, or they will
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break. Only the worthy rise.}
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``Then you're willing to talk,'' I tried. ``We need to-''
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\emph{All paths lead to Tvarigu. I await you beyond the reach of dawn.}
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Silver light shone, blinding, and for a heartbeat I thought I saw her
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whole. A colossal silhouette, limbs outstretched and shivering in pain.
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Then I saw only the cavern and the concerned looks of my companions.
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``Fuck,'' I said feelingly. ``This just keeps getting better, doesn't
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it?''
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