406 lines
19 KiB
TeX
406 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-61-remonstration}{%
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\section{Chapter 61: Remonstration}\label{chapter-61-remonstration}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Beware those who peddle sweet truths, for that which cleanses is
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rarely gentle.''}
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-- King Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand
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\end{quote}
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I tossed the bow and Indrani snatched it out of the air. She ran her
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hand down the length, checking it for damages, and only after she'd made
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certain it was in pristine condition did she turn her eyes to me.
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``How much did it cost you?'' she asked.
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``Not a copper,'' I said. ``Restitution was tacked onto to a larger
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bargain.''
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``We're going on a hunt, then,'' she smiled. ``It was about damned time.
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We've been creeping around for too long.''
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I wasn't all that surprised she'd caught on to the nature of my pact
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with the dwarves without being briefed. I had precious little to offer
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the Kingdom Under save for the work of my blade. I'd sent Diabolist to
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gather our drow while attending to Indrani myself, though that situation
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felt like trouble brewing. Leaving the prisoners behind wasn't on the
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table: the dwarves might interrogate them before breaking their skulls
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and throwing them on the nearest corpse pile, neither part of which I
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wanted to come about. Taking them with us on the further journey was
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trouble too, though. They'd know I'd talked with the dwarves, and there
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was no guaranteed they wouldn't open their mouths whenever we ran into a
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drow powerful enough it could give me a challenge. I was currently
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inclined to let them go after pulling ahead of the army by a day or two.
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They could live and die on their own merits, after that. Ivah was the
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only one I had plans for, though I was still hesitating over pulling
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that particular trigger.
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My mistakes had larger consequences than they used to, and nowadays
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there was no one to clean up behind me.
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The prisoners were awaiting us at the edge of the camp, Diabolist
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standing among their number while a few companies of dwarven regulars
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kept an eye on the proceedings. More out of principle than fear, I
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thought. The shackles had already been removed but still the drow looked
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uneasy, as if they expected the slaughter to begin any moment. The way
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some of the soldiers were very casually playing with their crossbows
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wasn't helping matters, and from the way grins split their beards the
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dwarves knew exactly what they were doing. I did not bother to offer our
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escorts any farewells before leaving. Goodbyes had already been traded
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with the two dwarves that mattered in the vanguard, and none of the
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other had done anything to deserve the courtesy. To the contrary, one
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might argue. Ivah had carefully remained close to me from the moment I
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arrived, and did not give distance until we'd left the large cavern. We
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went through another two dwarven chokepoints before finally leaving the
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territory they controlled, and only then did any of the drow let out a
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breath of relief.
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We took our first break around an hour later, when they began to tire.
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Where before the prisoners had offered only fear, there was now a touch
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of reverence in their eyes -- towards me, mostly, but Akua as well. From
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their point of view, we'd walked into the jaws of the wolf and gotten
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off without so much as a scratch to show for it. They might not know
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why, but they could not argue with the results. Our guide approached me
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while the others rested.
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``You spoke truth, Queen,'' Ivah said, and smoothly knelt. ``For the
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offence of doubting your word, I present myself for judgement.''
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I tore off a chunk of dried beef and popped it into my mouth, chewing as
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I considered the drow kneeling before me. Even on its knees, it was of a
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height with me sitting. Already I was missing the dwarves and their much
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more reasonable proportions. I could dismiss this out of hand, I
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thought. I'd often done this with my doubters in the past, especially
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when they had good reasons to doubt me. Those who had come into my
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service had done so after I'd proven myself, shown I could achieve
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results. This, though, this was different. I wasn't dealing with a human
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or an orc, not even a goblin. My grasp on drow culture was still weak,
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but I suspected that if I made it clear doubting me came without
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consequences then I was giving an open invitation to do so again. Akua
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had been just right enough I couldn't outright dismiss her, when she'd
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said it was worthless to offer people mercy when mercy had no worth in
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their eyes. I swallowed the last of the meat, then wiped my fingers on
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my legs. Measured response, I thought. My hand lashed out, swift as a
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snake, and the sharp tips of ice I'd formed at the end of the fingers
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raked across Ivah's right cheek. Four bloody clawmarks began dripping
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blood.
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The drow did not flinch.
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``A reminder,'' I said. ``When the doubt next comes. You may consider
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the matter settled.''
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Ivah rose on shaky legs, and I dismissed it with a wave of the hand
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after telling it Diabolist would see to the marks. Indrani slid next to
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me barely a heartbeat later. She'd been pretty blatantly eavesdropping,
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though I'd seen no need to stop her. She pressed a skin into my hands,
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and I did not need to take a sniff to know it wasn't water. Her breath
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made that clear enough.
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``So what's the plan?'' Archer asked.
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``We go to Holy Tvarigu,'' I said. ``And have a pleasant chat with the
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Priestess of Night.''
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``Seems to me like we'll need to have a bunch of pleasant chats to get
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there in the first place,'' she mused.
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``You and I are pleasantly chatty people, by reputation,'' I said.
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``It'll be a load off my back for us to return to the basics,'' she
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admitted. ``But you've got the look.''
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I glanced at her, finding her halfway between amused and annoyed.
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``The look?''
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``The one that says you're tripping all over your morals again,''
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Indrani said. ``It's led us to some \emph{beautiful} scraps, mind you,
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but never before a long spot of hemming and hawing.''
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``What do you care?'' I said.
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She blinked in surprised and I passed a hand through my hair.
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``I didn't mean it that way,'' I said. ``But this isn't us, `Drani. We
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don't have those talks. Did Hakram put you up to this?''
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``Vivienne asked that I keep an eye out,'' she said. ``On account of
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your last advisor around being `Ol Portal Dazzle. Worries were had that
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if you got in a bad place our little friend would be eager to give you a
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push over the edge.''
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``I haven't talked to her about this,'' I said. ``I don't intend to,
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either.''
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``So talk to me,'' Archer said. ``I'm here, and mostly sober.''
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``Do you actually give a shit about any of this?'' I bluntly asked.
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``I'm not saying this to be an ass to you. You never have before.''
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``I do give a shit about you, Catherine,'' she sighed. ``Even when
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you're being an utter wench to me. You think I'm down here for the
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scenery?''
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I bit my tongue. Taking out my mood on Indrani would be underserved,
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even if she was pushing me and she damn well knew it.
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``Why \emph{are} you down here?'' I finally asked.
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``Because that's where we went,'' she slowly replied, eyeing me
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dubiously. ``How hard was the stuff the dwarves gave you?''
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So that was how she wanted to play it, huh. Dumb. Usually I'd leave it
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at that, play it off with a quip or an insult. It was the way we worked,
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leaving things unspoken. But Gods, I was tiring of that. Of just\ldots{}
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letting things go.
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``You take orders from me, sometimes,'' I said. ``But I've never
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considered you my subordinate. If you'd chosen to go back to Callow with
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the others, there wasn't anything I could have done about it.''
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``Hells, Catherine,'' she sighed. ``Do we really need to do this?''
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``Don't we?'' I said. ``Indrani, there's maybe ten people in all of
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Creation I can genuinely call my friends and I can barely claim to
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understand half of them. I keep leading you into one ugly mess after
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another, and for some of you I understand. Vivienne's in this for the
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kingdom, and Hakram\ldots{} Hakram believes. In this, whatever it's
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become, even when I don't. I'm not trying to throw stones at you,
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Archer. There's just some days where I honestly wonder why you bother.''
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``It's not enough that you're my friends?'' she asked.
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``If that's your answer,'' I said, ``and I mean your real answer -- not
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us laughing this off and never mentioning it again -- I'll take it. But
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I don't want either of us to survive the other and look back in twenty
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years regretting we were too proud to actually have an honest talk.''
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Her eyes narrowed.
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``So, Ratface finally sunk in,'' she said, not unkindly. ``Was worried
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it might happen. You took it too well when we learned.''
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I flinched.
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``Cat, he-''
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``I used him,'' I said, with terrible calm. ``He was my friend, and I
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used him until it got him killed. It's\ldots{} \emph{Fuck}, Indrani. He
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still had so much left to do. Who does she take next, Aisha? Juniper?''
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\emph{How many people do I need to lose before I'm just a raving monster
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who just happens to lack a Tower to rave from?} The utter selfishness of
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that thought shamed me. They'd killed him and still I'd somehow made it
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all about me.
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``We're not going to die that easily,'' Indrani said.
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``We're not \emph{invincible}, Archer,'' I hissed. ``We just got
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savagely beaten by a dead elf and a giant rat, and those were the toys
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of what's waiting. All we got to show for it was Malicia taking home a
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victory once more, and fresh off that she took the knife to Ratface.
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We're in this mess and I can't protect any of you. You have to-''
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``Have a reason we're here,'' she finished quietly. ``Something worth
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the risks.''
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``You'd be fine without me,'' I tiredly said. ``Maybe even better off.
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I'm a fool for saying that, because I need you more than I can put into
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words, but it's the damned truth. You can leave this at any time and
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none of my enemies will follow. And let's not pretend they're not
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\emph{my} enemies, Indrani. We both know they're not really yours.''
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``Sure they are,'' Indrani replied.
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``The moment you leave back for Refuge, Malicia and the crusaders forget
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you ever existed,'' I said. ``That's not arguable, that's a fact.''
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She flicked my forehead. I reared back, more in surprise than pain.
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``That's the problem with you, Cat,'' she said. ``You say these sweet
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things, sometimes, but you still can't quite get out of your head.
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Refuge's not my home, it's a place I lived in for a while. The Lady
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being there is the only reason it exists and the only reason I ever
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went. You have this\ldots{} loyalty for Callow. I don't really get it,
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the place is war-torn shithole, but if it's a madness then most of your
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people have it too. I don't have that for Refuge, or really anyone in
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it. There's nothing to go back to.''
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``You could travel,'' I said. ``That what you really want, isn't it?''
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She laughed, harshly.
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``Gods, I can't get angry,'' Indrani said. ``It's infuriating but that's
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why it works -- because you're such a fucking idiot it can't possibly be
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manipulation. You think I want to leave without somewhere to get back
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to, Catherine?''
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``You could-''
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``Shut up,'' Archer interrupted. ``For once in your life, just shut up
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and listen. You're right when you say you don't understand us, because
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you somehow missed who you opened your home to. Do you know why Hunter
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was afraid of me, when I came to fetch him? Because I used to beat him
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in the yard. Bad enough he'd bruise for weeks even as a Named. Not
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because I hated him or because we had a grudge, but because seeing it
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happen put a twinkle in Lady Ranger's eye. I would have slit his
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godsdamned throat, if it had done the same. I fought everyone there was
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to fight in Refuge until I could crush them underfoot, and then I went
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out into the Waning Woods to find harder opponents. I don't need a
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cause. I don't need a reason. Every time I come out on top, I prove that
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I \emph{deserve} this. That I'm not a fucking charity case, some
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curiosity she picked up in Mercantis along with whatever artefact took
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her fancy that year.''
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``I'm not her,'' I said.
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``No,'' she replied. ``You're not. I trounced your ass the first time we
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met just so I could prove I was better than the Black Knight's pupil and
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somehow that just\ldots{} never became an issue. I thought you were some
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kind weakling, at first, too afraid for revenge or a rematch. But then
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you picked a fight with a demon and its minions, not because you thought
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you could win but because you wouldn't accept losing.''
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``That's not a virtue,'' I said. ``And that kind of thinking has gotten
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a lot of people killed.''
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``You keep your eye on the horizon, always have,'' she said. ``Makes it
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that you always end up missing what you actually \emph{do}. You opened
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your home to me. Your family. Shit, Cat, we might make fun of you but
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there's no one that doubts you'd murder your way through a kingdom for
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one of us. And you just handed that freely, asking nothing. Not even an
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oath. And now you're surprised we're willing to kill for it?''
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``That's not what I meant to do,'' I quietly said.
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``It wouldn't work if it was,'' she smiled mirthlessly. ``It's like you
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don't realize who it is you took in. You think Masego asks himself
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whether people should be killed because he cares about Callowan justice?
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You found a kid who couldn't talk to others without a chart and you told
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him he wasn't mad or strange, that he was \emph{right} and clever and
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worth something beyond his magic. Vivienne was so desperate to do
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something that mattered she joined a rebellion of people she didn't like
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or trust in a place where those have the life expectancy of a fly. She
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fought you, stole from you, and instead of slitting her throat you gave
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her your trust and told her what she wanted to hear the most: that she's
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a decent person and that \emph{she can make a difference}. Hakram used
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to wonder why he even got up in the morning, Catherine. He was barely
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even a person. Now he's got such searing purpose his own Name made it
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that he doesn't need to sleep.''
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``That was all them,'' I thought. ``I didn't change anything. I'm not
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owed-''
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``You try to be good,'' Indrani said. ``Or at least decent. So you've
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got this idea that all of us were, before you came along. That you dirty
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us by making us fight, that you're somehow imposing on who we'd be
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otherwise. Set that aside, because it only ever existed in your head.
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You took in wild animals, fed them and gave them a place by the fire.
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Loved them, in your own terrible way.''
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Shadowed eyes met mine, the glint in them a savage thing.
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``None of us forgot the years out in the wilds, Catherine,'' she said,
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baring her teeth. ``It was cold and dark and lonely, and if we have to
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make a graveyard of half this fucking continent to never go there again
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then \emph{that's what we'll do}.''
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I did not reply, because after that what could I possibly say? Archer
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snatched the skin back from me and rose to her feet.
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``Gods,'' she grimaced. ``I can't believe you made me do that. Where's
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Hakram when you need him?''
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``Indrani,'' I said. ``I-''
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``Don't,'' she curtly said. ``I have no idea what you're wrestling with,
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right now, but I'll say this: you've been running scared since Second
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Liesse. We've all seen how it stayed with you, but grieving is one thing
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and this is another. If you let it bury you, then you've failed those
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people twice instead of once.''
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``What are you saying?'' I asked.
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``An occasionally halfway-clever woman once told me she didn't win
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battles because she was the Squire,'' Indrani said. ``Or because she had
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tricks and fancy mantle. You're afraid of what's coming? Then do what
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you need to and stand with your back straight. Let them take a swing.
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See where it gets them.''
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She strode away without another word, already guzzling away at the skin
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as if liquor could wash away the embarrassment reddening her cheeks. I
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stayed there sitting in silence for who knows how long, never taking a
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breath. It had warmed me, what she'd told me. But it terrified me as
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well, and not only because of her own words. \emph{Your people becoming
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warped by your presence}, the Grey Pilgrim had said, \emph{old traits
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grown more vicious and acute.} I wanted to deny him, as or all his
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kindly appearance he was a man very much trying to kill me.
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And yet.
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Archer believed all the hard edges in my companions had been there long
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before they came across me. That it was circumstance making them come
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out, not some deeper sinister influence. She might be right. Was is not,
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in a way, supremely arrogant to decide I was responsible for who they
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were and what they were willing to do? Masego had been raised by a
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villain and and a devil, Archer by cold-eyed thrill killer and Hakram
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was an orc -- his people's bouts of savagery filled the pages of history
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books. Vivienne had been the Thief before ever hearing I existed, and
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had walked that narrow line between Good and Evil for most her life. Her
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stolen riches had never gone to feed orphans or the destitute: she'd
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been settling a grudge. A deeply Callowan thing to do, but if nothing
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else the last few years had brought out in sharp relief that my people's
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penchant for vengeance was not necessarily a thing of the Heavens.
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The old voice in the back of my head gave answer soon enough. It would
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be easy, wouldn't it, to eschew responsibility for all of this? To let
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the comforting words wash over me, to share the burden of all the woe
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that had come to pass. But I'd seen it with my own eyes, decent men
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arguing for Bonfire. A little word that meant that slaughter of
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thousands of innocents simply to prevent Procer from sallying out
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against me. The excuses came swift and plentiful, that withholding that
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assault had led to the Battle of the Camps and the deaths of thousand
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anyway. That it was my enemies who had sought the war, not I.
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Justifications always came aplenty. I still felt a shiver of discomfort,
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when I realized at some point I'd become the kind of woman that would
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sow \emph{justifications matter only to the just} on her own banner.
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What a vicious joke that'd turned out to be: even while espousing the
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words, had I ever really stopped telling myself what I was doing was
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necessary? I'd clutched that whisper tight and led my soldiers, my
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people, into one war after another.
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The Queen of Summer had called us a woe unto all we would behold, and I
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felt that to be the most savage kind of prophecy: the one that called
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not on unearthly sight but simple recognition of character. Who was I,
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to take such grand decisions? Not even twenty-one, taught too little and
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haunted by grave mistakes. What right did I have to make decrees that
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might resound for centuries after my death? The fear was paralyzing,
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that I might botch the matter badly enough a dozen generations might pay
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for it. I was a drunkard playing dice with the fight of nations,
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compared to my enemies. I'd be damned for the disaster, and rightly. And
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yet, I thought with a dark smile, would I not also be damned for doing
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nothing at all? Maybe Black was right and I'd never been meant for grace
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at all, for the righteous choices of a hero's story. Maybe I'd always
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been who I'd told myself I had become, a deeper truth laid bare by
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power. Because in the end, if there was only damnation I would rather be
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damned out of error than fear.
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And that left only one thing to do, didn't it?
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I found Ivah standing along, the red marks of the blood I'd spilled
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dried on its cheek. It rose when I approached, but I waved that away. We
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settled down comfortably, out of anyone's earshot.
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``It is my understanding,'' I said, ``that you seek power. To redress
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what was done to you, to rise above where you once stood.''
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``That is so, Queen,'' Ivah said, silver bright in its eyes.
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``Then I believe,'' I said, ``it might be time for us to make deal.''
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Winter whispered in my ear, promises and imprecations, the distant howl
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of blizzard parted by the deep crack of great glaciers.
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I let it.
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