491 lines
22 KiB
TeX
491 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-70-the-calm-before}{%
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\section{Chapter 70: The Calm Before}\label{chapter-70-the-calm-before}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Own what you are, no matter how ugly the face of it. No lies are
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ever more dangerous to a villain than those they tell themselves.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Benevolent
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\end{quote}
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``So this is going to be the big one, I hear,'' Indrani said.
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It would have been inaccurate to call\ldots{} this a habit. It didn't
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happen regularly enough for that, given the demands on our time. But
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once in a while, when the silent clamour of a thousand duties and foes
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became too much, I found there was a fire in a nook tucked away from my
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army and that Archer was waiting there, feet propped up and bottle in
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hand. Ironic in a way, that a woman who'd been raised in a place called
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Refuge had become so apt at providing the same. Like all of Indrani's
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kindnesses, the seemingly careless granting of them belied the keen
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perception behind their nature. I tended to think of Akua as the most
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skilled manipulator among us, capable of spinning exquisite lies at the
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merest prompt, but some days I wondered. Diabolist was known to get her
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way, by hook or crook, but I'd had different lessons from her. \emph{The
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most useful talent is that which no one knows you have}, Black had once
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told me. Archer drank like a fish, was largely led by her whims and
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professed indifference as to much of what went on around her. The very
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last person, in a way, that you'd expect to nudge events the way she
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wanted them.
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I forced the thought away. Suspicion, once entertained, was like a drop
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of ink in water. No matter how thinned, it would always cloud the brew.
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I did not have so many friends left that I could afford to start
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ascribing them hidden motives. The colder part of me noted that willing
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blindness led to dark surprises and that the duties of queenship
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demanded vigilance regardless of costs to myself, but for once I turned
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deaf ear to it. Trust had seen me through the storms so far, and though
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it had brought me some disappointments it had brought me wonders as
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well\emph{. In this, at least, I will indulge sentiment}, I thought.
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``The Battle of Great Strycht,'' I agreed. ``It will decide the
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campaign, if not the outcome of our entire stroll through the
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Everdark.''
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``Sve Noc, huh,'' Indrani mused. ``She's allowed us our fun so far, but
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that won't last. It's one thing to throw a rabid hound scraps when
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there's a bear coming, another when the hound takes a hand.''
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``We've observed the rules of her game,'' I said. ``What we wield, we
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took.''
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``And that'll matter why? This entire place reeks of Below, Cat,'' she
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said, and raised a hand when I began to object. ``I'm not talking about
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dusty shrines or red-slick altars. Not even about prayer, really. It's
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the way this place was made. Kill and rise, kill and fall: every single
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drow spends their time either clawing for power or slowly dying.''
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I studied her in the flickering light of the flames, the shadow cast by
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the twisted rock around us dancing across her face. \emph{Halfway
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between tattoos and feathers}, I thought.
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``You're saying it doesn't matter if they pray,'' I frowned. ``They pay
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the dues regardless.''
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``I'm saying this entire place is a prayer,'' Indrani quietly said.
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``And we both know whose it is.''
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The Priestess of Night. Sve Noc. We'd not crossed paths since that last
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probing look at each other, but I knew she was everywhere down here. In
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every custom, every ritual. Maybe even every drow.
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``That sounds,'' I murmured, ``like a recipe for apotheosis.''
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It wasn't the first time I'd considered that, truth be told. After
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crossing the Gloom and realizing the Everdark was a kingdom turned
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towards itself, ever only sending dregs to the surface, I'd wondered as
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to the purpose of that. An entire civilization whose foundations had
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been ripped away and replaced with codified murder and infighting --
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what sane person would want that? It might have made sense if the entire
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purpose was to cultivate demigods and send them out. I'd not forgotten
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my fight with Mighty Urulan, how what could only be considered a
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second-stringer by drow standards had batted me around and come close to
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killing me more than once. \emph{Me}. I could, without too much
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arrogance, claim that among the Named of Calernia's surface I ranked in
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the ten most dangerous. If the likes of Urulan had been sent to rampage
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across Procer or Callow, it would have been bloody mayhem. If a cohort
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of Mighty that powerful had gone? Half the heroes on the continent would
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have needed to mobilize to end them, and there'd be casualties. I could
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not deny that Sve Noc's orchard of killers had grown some particularly
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murderous peaches. But they'd never been \emph{used}, had they?
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Night could be grown from harvesting other peoples, but when had real
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raiding parties last troubled Calernia? Long enough ago the Everdark was
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just a footnote in the histories of nations, either a pointed lesson in
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the dangers of following Below or the subject of casual contempt from
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more `successful' villains. Which was madness, because if I'd led the
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army I currently commanded against Diabolist at Second Liesse we would
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have ripped her to shreds. Hells, unless the Lone Swordsman had a very
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good story at his back Urulan would have torn through the poor fucker in
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an hour's work and gone for a drink afterwards. But Sve Noc had never
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sent her apostles out of her realm, and there had to be a reason for
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that. At first I'd wondered if it was as simple as where the Everdark
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was. Surrounded on three sides by the Golden Bloom, the Chain of Hunger
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and the Kingdom of the Dead. The ratlings were arguably the weakest of
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those powers, but even Triumphant at her peak hadn't managed to
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exterminate them wholesale\emph{. And if there's one thing out there I'd
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bet on against Mighty, it would be Horned Lords}, I thought. Had the
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Gloom and the Night been raised as a moat and garrison?
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The issue with that was the dwarves. It didn't take a genius to guess
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that effectively surrendering the entire underground to a rival and
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highly expansionist power before wrecking your own capacity to wage war
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except through Name-imitations would have long term \emph{consequences}.
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Sve Noc, assuming she really was behind all of this, had to have known
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the moment she put out the Gloom and Night the hourglass was flipped.
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The Kingdom Under would keep growing, keep expanding, and eventually
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they'd find a way through. At that point, well, it was only a matter of
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time until the drow were done. Even if they were beaten back the first
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time, the dwarves would keep coming with better methods and larger
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armies every time. Even just putting all the nisi they encountered to
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the sword would allow the dwarves to send their enemies into a downwards
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spiral while they swallowed their own losses with a shrug. Evidently Sve
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Noc's game had worked for a few centuries, but she'd had to know it was
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a delaying measure and not a solution.
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But it'd make sense, wouldn't it? If the Gloom had been exactly that, a
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delay, and the Night was the actual solution. Centuries of willing
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sacrifice, swelling the invisible altar as the Priestess of Night
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remained cloistered in her temple and shaped her own ascension. It was
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one thing to fight a Named, but a god? Neshamah had called himself that,
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and he had broken enough crusades the claim couldn't be summarily
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dismissed. If I was right, if Archer was right, then there was only one
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question left to ask. Was she \emph{ready}? Had the dwarves come too
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early, while she was still gathering her might? Or was this entire
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invasion a trap, the prelude to her ascension? There was no way to know,
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and I was not too proud to admit that scared me.
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``We have no stories, down here,'' I finally sighed. ``I am not used to
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missing that.''
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``I'm not so sure,'' Indrani said. ``We've had our share of
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coincidences, haven't we?''
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I cocked an eyebrow at her in silent invitation. Archer glanced at my
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now-empty cup and I willing offered it for filling. Drow liquor, this,
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called \emph{senna}. Made from some sort of giant mushrooms and used to
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induce lucid dreaming when drunk in small quantities before sleep. It
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kicked like a mule and taste kind of like mud, but we were running out
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of surface booze so this was no time to get picky. The good stuff we'd
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want for celebration, assuming we live through this. I grimaced after
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knocking back half my cup. This was going to take some getting used to.
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``Right, so coincidences,'' she said. ``We ran into Ivah pretty early.
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Good guide, former bigwig from an inner ring sigil, full of information.
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That's one.''
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I almost objected that we'd come fairly close to killing it during our
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introductory skirmish, but held my tongue. Almost was the domain of
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coincidence, I wouldn't deny that.
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``Then we snuck through between the dwarven vanguard and the main
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army,'' Indrani continued. ``If we'd been ahead of the vanguard, we
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would have run into entrenched drow before we had their measure. If we'd
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trailed behind the army, there would have been no one to take. That's
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two.''
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In the first instance we also wouldn't have had the spectre of dwarven
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invasion to hold up as a banner when bringing in Mighty, which would
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have massively complicated the process. Much as I disliked what I was
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hearing, she had a point.
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``And then when we run into the vanguard,'' she said. ``Which happens to
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be run by Named dwarf who can strike a deal with you in his people's
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name. Three.''
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``For all we know that's common practice in dwarven armies,'' I pointed
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out.
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She clucked her tongue.
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``Fine, I'll withdraw that one,'' she conceded. ``And replace it by `we
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came into the Everdark specifically when the Kingdom Under was
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invading'.''
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I winced. Yeah, that was a little harder to argue about.
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``We can get lucky too,'' I said.
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``Sure we can,'' Indrani said. ``Once. Twice gets suspicious. Three
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times is a nudge.''
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``We wouldn't even be down here if we'd had alternatives,'' I said.
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``Hasenbach wasn't willing to deal, Keter got turned on us and the fae
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would have been\ldots{} costly. More than we can afford.''
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``Good timing, isn't it?'' Archer mildly said. ``Stripped from all
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palatable options save for the Everdark, then thrown here when shit
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comes to a head.''
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``No, I get what you're implying,'' I said. ``We got nudged into this. I
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disagree because there were just too many moving parts, but even
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assuming you're right I don't see is what Below gains from this. If Sve
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Noc's getting her god on, we're the fly in the ointment. They lose a
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discount Dead King to what, improve my military situation? And you know
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where I want to settle the drow long-term, Indrani, it'd fuck up a good
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thing for them.''
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``You're still thinking with your crown, sweetcheeks,'' Indrani said.
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``Lady Ranger used to limit how many her pupils could follow her on a
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hunt, did you know? Not because more of us would have been a problem,
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most of the time we were pretty decorative.''
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``She made it a prize,'' I frowned.
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``And so we fought for it,'' she agreed. ``Kept us sharp, because there
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was a lot to gain from trailing her on those and nobody wanted to be
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left behind. Hells, Cat, you got your start in pit fights didn't you?
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You should be able to feel when the audience is placing bets.''
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I would deny her, but I still remembered the days before I'd become the
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Squire in full. When, even with Black's accolade, I'd still been a
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claimant. We'd fought for a Name bound to Below, and Below had only
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wanted one person left standing when the dust settled. The similarities
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were there.
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``They still lose out,'' I said. ``She could get her apotheosis and I
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could get desperate upstairs without allies. That'd be a win in their
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books.''
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``Would it?'' Indrani mused. ``How long has she been at this play, Cat?
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Long enough even the dwarves ran out of other shit to conquer. That
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doesn't sound like victory on the horizon to me, it sounds like
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somewhere somehow she fucked up. And you, well, when's the last time you
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had a good kneel in front of the altar?''
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``Black didn't pray,'' I said.
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``Black toppled a hero-led kingdom and spent decades smothering heroic
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cribs,'' Indrani said. ``You, on the other hand? You meddle with the
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methods, but you're also making deals with heroes and trying alliances
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with crusaders. You're not exactly flag-bearer for the Hellgods.''
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``And \emph{this} gets me under the banner?'' I replied, skeptical.
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She shrugged.
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``Look, I'm not going to weep for the Everdark,'' she said. ``It's a
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fucking mess of murder and slavery and if you'd decided to drown the
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damned place instead I would have clapped your back and called it a good
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day's work.''
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Archer paused.
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``But we're crossing some lines, here,'' she said. ``This shit with the
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oaths? It's the kind of thing the old madmen would have tried if they
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had the right tools. It's a little to the north of slavery, I'll give
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you that, but it's in the same kingdom and we're not exactly intending
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to make exceptions. They're all going upstairs, aren't they? Kids'n all.
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There's going to be a lot of dead people for you to get an army, and a
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lot more when you actually \emph{use} it.''
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``The alternative is the dwarves slaughtering them wholesale,'' I flatly
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replied.
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``Sure,'' Indrani said. ``But that's not why we're doing it, is it? We
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came for an army and we're doing what it takes to get one. I've got no
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issue with that, Cat, don't get me wrong.''
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She leaned forward, eyes alight with the reflection of fire.
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``But let's not pretend we're not sending dues downstairs, by doing our
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do,'' she softly said. ``That's the kind of lie that ends up costly down
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the line when someone calls you out on it.''
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I winced and polished off the rest of my glass before extending my hand
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for a refill. She obliged without a word.
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``I tried to make it fair,'' I said. ``But there had to be a punishment
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to breaking the terms, or they would never have followed them. I
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tried\ldots{}''
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The smile that split my lips was rather bitter.
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``To make it a good thing,'' I finished. ``To set down rules that would
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make them better until they were on their own. But I'm using old
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arguments, aren't I? The same every Proceran and Praesi who stole a
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chunk of Callow used. I'm \emph{civilizing the savages}.''
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Indrani gently nudged me with her elbow.
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``They're pretty fucking savage, no two ways around it,'' she said.
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``But let's keep this in mind, before we start using that trick
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elsewhere. I'd get over it, but I'm guessing you're going to be chewing
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over this for a while.''
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``What does it matter if I mourn it, when I do it anyway?'' I muttered.
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I might not be bosom friends with Cordelia Hasenbach, but she was right
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about that much. It meant nothing to weep at what I did if I kept on
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doing it. \emph{You can stop, or you can own it}, I thought.
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\emph{Anything else is hypocrisy.} But the thought of the drow loose on
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the surface, without rules to bind them? No, there was no brooking that.
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\emph{And so monster it is}, I grimaced. I drank again, the foul brew
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spectacularly failing to grow on me. I extended my arm across Indrani's
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lap for a top-off.
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``So it's a pit fight,'' I sighed.
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``Where there is coincidence, there is story,'' Archer said. ``Now, we
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know what happens if you come out on top.
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Veins of Winter spreading into darkness, an entire kingdom oathbound.
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``What happens if the ol' girl does, though?'' she mused. ``That's the
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part worth worrying about.''
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``Dog eat dog,'' I murmured. ``That's how Below works. If my belly's
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full, I can shake the world. But if she's the one who devours?''
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I'd threaded Winter in Night and forced rules through it. It had come
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easy as breathing to me, even if the oaths themselves had required
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thought. Because I was the last of a court unmade, the Sovereign of
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Moonless Nights. I \emph{was} that court, practically speaking. It's
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wasn't impossible to throw around the kind of workings I'd seen fae
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royalty employ, it just wasn't possible without going fucking crazy. For
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now, anyway. How long before my Peerage grew enough the alienation no
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longer mattered? But there was a sea of power, somewhere in me, and if
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Sve Noc got her hands on that? No, apotheosis would not be an issue.
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``She'll make a play in Strycht,'' I finally said. ``If it's my pivot,
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it's also hers.''
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Archer toasted to that, grinning.
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``Lies and violence,'' she offered.
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``I'm not knocking to that,'' I sneered.
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``If you do, I have a gift,'' Indrani tempted.
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``Is it booze?'' I asked. ``Is booze the gift?''
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``No,'' she proudly announced.
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``Then it's you,'' I said. ``I'm not falling for that.''
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``Please,'' she snorted. ``I'd ruin you for all others. Besides, I
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actually went and picked out something for you.''
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``Stole,'' I corrected. ``You stole something you are now pawning off on
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me before you're caught.''
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``Well, Vivi's not around,'' Indrani mused. ``So someone's got to pick
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up the slack.''
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I narrowed my eyes at her, reluctantly curious.
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``To absent friends,'' I said, meeting her toast.
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She pouted but we drank on it. She went ruffling through her cloak
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afterwards, setting down her cup. It was a cozy little nook she'd found,
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barely large enough for two people, and so she'd set down a thick
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blanket in an incline and we'd both settled there close to the fire. It
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was comfortable, and the combined warmth of a friend and a camp fire was
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oddly soothing. I eyed her curiously as she kept going through her
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cloak, leathers pulling close on her frame. They were tight, though
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sadly not all that revealing. Good armour tended to be that way.
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``There,'' she exclaimed, and produced a bit of stone before pressing it
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into my palm.
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No, not just stone I realized. It was a sculpture, though not a very
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elaborate one. I was admittedly not great connoisseur of the arts, but
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even to me the work seemed rather bare. Skilfully done, though, I
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conceded. The androgynous face of a long-haired drow occupied one side
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of it, the hair growing into the locks of the identical face on the
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other side. The eyes seemed little more than notches at first glance,
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but I could barely make out the contours of a character in Crepuscular
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in them. For one side it was `all', for the other `night'. The bottom of
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the little sculpture had clearly been pried off by blade, I noted with
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mild amusement.
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``\ldots{} thank you?'' I tried.
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``Dunno if you noticed, but the deeper into the Everdark we go the more
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often it comes up,'' Indrani said. ``I asked Soln and apparently it
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represents Sve Noc.''
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My brow rose. A two-faced goddess, huh? The term was considered an
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insult in both Praes and Callow. In my homeland for the implied
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accusation of hypocrisy, in the Wasteland for the implied single layer
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of deception. Probably not down here, though.
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``What are you up to, I wonder?'' I murmured, looking at the stone face.
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``And I was going to say we've come so far,'' Indrani said. ``But there
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you are, talking at stone.''
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``We were already hunting demigods when you joined up,'' I replied.
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``Sure, but back then we were dealing with everybody's messes,'' she
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said. ``Now \emph{we're} everybody's mess.''
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``Truly, you are the great philosopher of our age,'' I drily said.
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She flipped me the finger.
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``I do wonder what the rest are up to,'' she admitted.
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``We're not doing that,'' I said.
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She eyed me with surprise.
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``Night before the battle starts, going all reminiscing about the old
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days and what they might be doing?'' I elaborated. ``For shame, `Drani.
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You should know better.''
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Archer went very quiet, all of a sudden, and her face was unreadable.
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``I sometimes forget,'' she said, ``that you don't realize it.''
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By brow creased.
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``Realize what?''
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``That no one thinks like that, Catherine,'' she said. ``At least not
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all the time, like you do.''
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``Black does,'' I said.
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``And he is an irredeemable madman,'' Indrani murmured. ``To think like
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you do, it takes\ldots{} something. Stepping out of yourself, of who you
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are, and making a story of it. Like all the world is a stage. How
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strange it must be, to always act like there is an audience. I can
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hardly imagine the weight of it.''
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My fingers clenched in my lap.
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``You were something else long before the fae made a title of it,
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weren't you?'' she said. ``Mad to the bone.''
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|
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``I don't-'' I tried, but what could I say to that?
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|
What could anyone?
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|
``It's all right, Cat,'' Indrani said, and patted my hand. ``We've
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|
always known. Sometimes I just forget.''
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Slowly, my fingers unclenched. She scuttled back and rested her head on
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my shoulder. It would have been easier for me, given I was the one a
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|
foot and a beard short of being a dwarf, but I didn't protest. I leaned
|
|
back against her, chin atop her head.
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|
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|
``It's how we survive,'' I finally said. ``By watching out for it.''
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|
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|
``I know,'' Indrani said. ``But it's all right, you know? To leave it at
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the door once in a while. Just for a few hours.''
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|
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|
``I'm not sure,'' I quietly admitted, ``that I remember how to do that
|
|
anymore.''
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|
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|
There was a long pause and she raised her head, eyes meeting mine. It
|
|
was slow. I could have leaned away and it would have been the end of it.
|
|
We'd go back to drinking, and not speak of it again.
|
|
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|
I did not lean away.
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|
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|
Her lips moved against mine and it was nothing like the kiss in Lotow.
|
|
No awkward clicking of teeth, no surprise. Only the taste of liquor and
|
|
smoke and hands so warm, claiming the nape of my neck as she slipped
|
|
into my lap and dipped me back. My fingers slid under the edge of her
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|
leathers, cupping her arse, and if this was all an illusion it was one I
|
|
was willing to believe. I came to myself flushed and hard of breathing,
|
|
my hands pinned above my head as she pressed a kiss against the crook of
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|
my neck. Smirking, I could feel it against my skin. It was an effort of
|
|
will to speak.
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|
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|
```Drani,'' I said, lips bruised. ``Masego. I don't-''
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|
|
|
\emph{Want to ruin something good}, I thought, \emph{just because I want
|
|
this.}
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|
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|
She leaned back, hazelnut eyes considering.
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|
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|
``That is that,'' she said. ``This is this.''
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|
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|
Deft fingers unmade my belt and I guilty leaned into her touch.
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|
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|
``Just for tonight,'' she assured me.
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|
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|
``Just for tonight,'' I murmured, and gave in.
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