490 lines
21 KiB
TeX
490 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-77-what-goes-around}{%
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\section{Chapter 77: What Goes
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Around}\label{chapter-77-what-goes-around}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``In trying to beat a fool at her own game, I have only made
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another.''}
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-- Theodosius the Unconquered, after the Maddened Fields (apocryphal)
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\end{quote}
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``Not to nitpick,'' I said. ``But being carried this way is doing great
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injury to the inherent dignity of a woman of my station.''
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Mighty Rumena had, after sundry misadventures, hoisted me over its
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shoulder and was now lugging me around like a sack of cabbage. I got the
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distinct impression the old bastard was having a lot of fun with this.
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``If I allow you to lean against me instead,'' Rumena said. ``Will you
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cease attempting to strangle me?''
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The drow was a tyrant, truly. It was my Gods-given right as a Callowan
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to rebel against foreign powers regardless of context or feasibility.
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``Yes,'' I lied.
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Mighty Rumena fluidly leapt over a canal, landing on the other side with
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barely a sound. It jostled my body enough I had to bite down on a
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scream.
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``So,'' I got out. ``We doing this or what?''
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``No,'' the Mighty said. ``I merely wanted to see if you would lie.''
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That prick. I'd gotten my hopes up, thinking of looking for something
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sharp to stab it with instead of having another fruitless go at
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strangulation -- my fingers were too shaky to have the requisite
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strength, and to be honest I wasn't sure it actually needed to breathe.
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``Fine,'' I said. ``Obviously you're a man -- drow, I mean -- of deep
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cunning and perception. I'll level with you, Rumena. I was going to try
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to murder you again.''
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``I am aghast at this unexpected turn,'' Mighty Rumena said.
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Oh, so Crepuscular \emph{could} do sarcasm. This was a day for
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revelations.
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``Since murder doesn't seem to be working out for me, I'll try
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bribery,'' I continued. ``Betray\ldots{} who is it you're working for at
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the moment?''
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I probably should have inquired as much before beginning the process, I
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mentally conceded. Hindsight was a harsh mistress, as the effective
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evisceration of my soul and mantle had made clear.
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``Arguably my kind,'' Rumena said. ``Practically speaking, the youngest
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sister.''
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``That the murderous one, or the one that's basically suffered a few
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millennia of torture by Night?'' I squinted.
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``The former,'' the Mighty replied.
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``That's fine then,'' I mused. ``So, betray her drow ass and I'll give
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you half of Procer.''
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``I know of no such place,'' Rumena said.
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``Right, it's pretty recent as far as nations go,'' I muttered. ``Think
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the central chunk of western Calernia.''
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``And you currently rule these lands?'' the drow asked.
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``Sure,'' I said. ``I mean, in a manner of speaking.''
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Lies were, technically, one of those.
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``Fertile fields?'' the Mighty asked. ``Peaceful neighbours?''
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Well, half of that was true. There was that unfortunate thing about the
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Kingdom of the Dead and the Chain of Hunger bordering it, but nowhere
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was perfect.
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``Absolutely,'' I answered without missing a beat.
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``You are a surprisingly terrible liar,'' Mighty Rumena said, sounding
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impressed in the worst way. ``How have you managed to survive this
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long?''
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``Good officers, luck and the ability to walk off lost limbs,'' I
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replied, more honestly than I'd meant to.
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Of course, in a sense I hadn't. Survived, that was. I'd died at First
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Liesse and then kind of again at the Doom. The whole
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Winter-eats-your-soul thing had felt in the general wheelhouse of dying,
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anyway.
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``Luck always runs out,'' Rumena said.
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``What a deep philosopher you are,'' I sighed. ``Any more profound
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truths you'd like to share?''
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``You warred against an entity older than the civilization that birthed
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you,'' the Mighty said. ``Wielding weapons in which it holds superior
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mastery, following a plan laughably straightforward and fielding armies
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which owed you no true loyalty. All this, and somehow you believed you
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would win.''
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``Ouch,'' I said, not particularly offended.
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I'd already lost, what was there left to be offended about?
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``We going somewhere with this?'' I asked after a heartbeat of silence.
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``Nowhere, evidently,'' Mighty Rumena said.
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The Secret of Scathing Retorts was unfathomably deadly, I mused. The
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half-blind pieces of meat that were now my eyes took in our surroundings
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as well as they could as the drow carried me through the ruins of Great
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Strycht -- and there could be no word for it but ruins. Winter had blown
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through mercilessly, upending temples and halls like children's toys. We
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must have still been in the central district when it found me, because
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our surroundings were vaguely familiar. They lay of the canals, at
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least, since the city looked like it'd been smashed to pieces by an
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irritated god. In a sense, it \emph{had} been. It wasn't hard to find
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the dead, though it certainly was to tell which side they'd belonged to.
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Frozen silhouettes of drow, many seized halfway through a motion, were
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scattered all over the district. Some had tried to run, I saw. It hadn't
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done them any good.
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``Is everyone in the city dead save the two of us?'' I asked.
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``You were not so powerful as that,'' Mighty Rumena said. ``Many of
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those who fought under your banner remained, before they were made to
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kneel. And Sve Noc preserved her own when the heart of you was ripped
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out.''
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``Soul,'' I corrected mildly. ``The soul of me, Rumena. Come on, it's
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not that complicated a concept.''
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I was mildly surprised having that ripped open hadn't killed me, but
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then maybe I shouldn't be. Akua had walked around without hers for years
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before our little heart-to-hand. She'd also been soulless in another way
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entirely long before that, but that was a different story.
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``Not complicated,'' the Mighty slowly repeated. ``Are you chiding me
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for considering the process of apotheosis a complex matter, Losara?''
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``I mean, Praesi know about it,'' I said. ``How complex can it really
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be?''
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``I will cherish the memory of our little talks, after your throat is
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slit,'' Rumena said. ``I believe you might be the single most
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aggressively ignorant creature I've ever encountered.''
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I spat out a ball of phlegm and bile, aiming for its leg and missing
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narrowly. So, interesting information there. I was being carried to a
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sacrificial altar, which I'd already kind of suspected but hadn't known
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for sure. Added to the bit about my former forces being `made to keel',
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I now considered it a safe bet that Ol' Sve herself had come down for a
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bit of ceremonial knifework. Strange she hadn't killed them outright,
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though. Was it because she couldn't, or because she had a better use for
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them? It'd be a splendid little bit of irony if she ended up using the
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framework of oaths I'd built as the model for the army she'd be taking
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to the surface.
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``I'm flattered, really, but I'm not in the market for a nemesis,'' I
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replied. ``There's probably a line and it'd be unfair to all those angry
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heroes for you to just skip ahead.''
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``It is admirable that you refuse to compromise your principles even
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moments away from your unmaking,'' the Mighty said.
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``I can't tell if you're being sarcastic right now,'' I said. ``And I
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think my hearing might be going, because there's this weird screaming
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sound that-''
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I paused, then swallowed. Oh, so my hearing \emph{wasn't} going. Nice to
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know. Slightly less nice was the patchwork of rippling Winter I was
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looking at. Ribbons of shimmering blue storming about uncontrolled,
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eating away at an obsidian tower like the King of Winter had suddenly
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said `fuck this building in particular'. My vision dimmed and I looked
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away blinking. It stayed dim, like a shadow had been cast over
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everything I saw.
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``You could have told me I'd go blind looking at it,'' I screamed
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through the ruckus.
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Rumena made me wait until we'd left the immediate area before answering.
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``Did you?'' the drow curiously asked. ``Interesting. It should have
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driven you mad as well, then, and you sound no less coherent than
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usual.''
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``I think we hit the bottom of that barrel a few years back, buddy,'' I
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said.
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That had been a knot of pure Winter, I thought, and it had been running
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wild. The power had never done that while I held the mantle. The -- I
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avoided thinking of the word, knowing it would send me into another
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episode -- nothing above our heads was the same as my domain's, so I'd
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assumed that Sve had devoured the whole thing. Or at least bound it
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somehow. But this was an interesting twist, wasn't it? Even if was in
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her belly, it looked like she was having some issued with digestion.
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``So, how strong is your boss' stomach?'' I casually asked.
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``As strong as it takes,'' Mighty Rumena soberly replied.
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``Gods, is that what I sound like when I talk that way?'' I asked.
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``Someone could have told me it made me sound like an asshole. I'd have
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stopped.''
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``I assure you, there is no need to rely on specific sentences for that
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effect to be achieved,'' the drow smoothly replied.
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``So much sass, Rumena,'' I grinned. ``But was that uncertainty I
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detected? Someone's worried Sve bit off more than she can chew.''
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``A passing thing,'' the Mighty said. ``In a sense, much like you.''
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Ah, and there it was. The reason it hadn't just nonchalantly torn off my
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head back when it'd first found me choking on my death in the middle of
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a broken wreck. I was still of use somehow. A sacrifice to cement Sve
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Noc's hold on my domain? I'd earned the mantle through murder, back in
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the old days of about two years ago. It might be that proper succession
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required the same deed by her hand.
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``So, are we there yet?'' I asked.
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Rumena sighed, and I took perverse pride in the way I was managing to
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get under the skin of a creature a few millennia my senior.
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Unfortunately it then shook me on its shoulder, letting me slip back a
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little, and the fresh pull on my abdomen had me howling. The throbbing
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pain brought unwilling tears to my eyes, and to add insult to injury my
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throat began heaving. The droplet that tipped the cup was that even as I
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began spewing out clear water and bile the Mantle of Woe fell down over
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my face, smothering it all over my face. The Mighty left me like that
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for quite a while, until my stomach felt empty once more, and only drew
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me back up when left the district. The vomit-strewn cloak remained
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draped all over my face.
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``That was genuinely cruel,'' I rasped out.
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``Possibly why I enjoyed it so much,'' Mighty Rumena noted.
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It was not far before our magic journey together came to an end, though
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of course I had no idea. The Mantle of Woe was still covering my face. I
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was carefully set down on solid ground, propped up against something
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that felt like stone. My legs didn't pain me at all, which I took as the
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opposite of a good sign. I was metaphysically bleeding out. Rumena's
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fingers closed around the hem of my cloak and pulled it back, finally
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revealing my surroundings to me. It was a hill of barren stone, one that
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must have once been an island. My Mighty friend was at my side, but we
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had other company: over a hundred drow were scattered around us, weapons
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in hand. The rest of the Longstrides? Without my otherworldly senses, I
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had no way to tell them apart from any other drow. Ahead of me lay a
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broke stele of obsidian, the symbols on it faded and the better part of
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it laid down as a makeshift altar. All of that paled, though, in
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comparison to the silhouette standing over it. A perfectly androgynous
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face larger than my entire body stared down at me, descending into a
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neck that melded with the robes of pure Night beneath it. Eyes of
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unbroken silver shone bright, but it was the hair that drew my
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attention. Long strands of darkness that went up into the nothing above
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like puppet strings.
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``Sve Noc,'' I said. ``Good of you to finally show up.''
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I cleared my throat, spat another bit of bile to the side.
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``You may kneel,'' I allowed.
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There was a heartbeat of silence, and then I was drowning. Thick,
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cloying terror buried me -- the kind I had not known in ages, that
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screamed so loud it drowned out every thought. It was a primal thing,
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old as the nights where mankind had first huddled around fires for fear
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of what prowled outside. It was, I thought, almost religious. I began
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laughing in delight.
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``That's the stuff,'' I grinned, body shivering uncontrollably.
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``\emph{Gods}, you wouldn't believe how long it's been since I felt this
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much like a person.''
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Did she think this would break me? She had \emph{ripped open my soul}.
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There was not a godsdamned thing left to break. The sea around be ebbed,
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and still the tinkling pleasure of real emotion stayed in my every
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extremity.
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``Alone and lost,'' the Priestess of Night said. ``As promised,
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Catherine Foundling.''
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``Please,'' I said, waving a shaking hand. ``Call me `Your Majesty'.''
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My half-blind eyes drifted around her\ldots{} well body, was the closest
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word to it. And the revelations of the day continued, for there were
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threads in her robes that seemed more solid than others. Whatever she
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was doing, it wasn't finished. Considering the altar in front of me, the
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shape of the conclusion was rather obvious.
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``Queen of Nothing,'' Sve Noc said. ``And so no queen at all.''
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``Am I?'' I mused. ``Then why bring me here at all?''
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``Tools wear no crowns,'' Sve Noc said.
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``Clearly you've never met Cordelia,'' I said. ``From the fact that my
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throat has yet to be slit, I take it we've a little while still before
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we get to the good stuff?''
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``Your doom is writ,'' the creature said.
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``Yes yes, very ominous,'' I snorted. ``Rumena, be a dear and find my
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pipe will you? No point it making this uncivilized.''
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The Mighty had moved a few steps away from me while I traded barbs with
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its goddess, but not entirely left. It glanced at Sve and found no
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answer there -- she seemed a little miffed by my refusal to take this
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seriously -- so in the end it strode forward to rifle through my cloak
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pockets. I took the opportunity to clasp its ringlet tunic and wipe my
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face somewhat clear of vomit. You know, for appearances' sake. Rumena
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stuffed my pipe half-heartedly and offered it. I clasped it between my
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teeth and leaned forward.
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``A light?'' I asked.
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The drow's fingers lit up with black flame and within moments the
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wakeleaf was burning. Black flame, really? Did every single application
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of Night have to colour appropriate? There was such a thing as taking an
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aesthetic too far. I breathed in the smoke with a shiver of pleasure,
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letting it stream out of my nostrils.
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``\emph{Oh},'' I murmured around the shaft. ``So that's what it used to
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taste like. I'd almost forgotten.''
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To my utter delight, the little moan I let out after made Rumena visibly
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uncomfortable. I leaned back against my stone.
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``I don't suppose any of you folks have a decent bottle of wine?'' I
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called out at the Longstrides. ``It's been ages since I could properly
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enjoy one of those.''
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There was some confused shuffling, but no answer.
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``And they call Callow a backwater,'' I sighed. ``You all make for
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terrible hosts.''
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``No guest are you,'' Sve Noc said. ``A bird of misfortune, headed to
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grim ending.''
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``Bold words, coming from a woman visibly fucking up her apotheosis,'' I
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replied. ``How's Winter taste, Sve? A bit too much to swallow?''
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It was a true shame Indrani wasn't there to make a ribald joke out of
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that, I thought.
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``All will be Night,'' the Priestess thundered.
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``You're just a pile of disappointments, aren't you?'' I said. ``At
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least Rumena knows its way around a phrase. You're just yelling threats
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and platitudes. It's pretty common with old monsters, you know? You
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haven't talked like a person for too long, so you don't know how
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anymore. Even Neshamah has touches of that.''
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``You think to threaten me with the King of Death?'' Sve Noc laughed.
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``You know nothing.''
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I pulled at my pipe, eyes almost rolling into the back of my head at the
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pleasant sensation. I'd become so much less, but what I had left was so
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much more \emph{alive}. Something as simple as the burn of smoke in my
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throat felt like the finest of wines.
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``I know some things,'' I retorted mildly, spewing out the smoke.
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``Like, for example, that Winter is a hard stallion to break in. It's
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not really meant to \emph{give}, you get me? It's not flexible the way a
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Name is. Now, if I had to guess, you're too far gone into whatever the
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fuck you actually are to worry about something as paltry as alienation.
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So the issue would be that you're just as\ldots{} static as the power
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you're trying to eat. You can't change to match it, like I did, so you
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can't align either. You have to bludgeon it into obedience, and that's
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proving a little trickier than you'd like.''
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``Crawling, wretched thing,'' Sve Noc said. ``Still trying to escape
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your fate even now. Stripped of every ounce of stolen power, tumbling
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through death's door.''
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``Oh, Sve,'' I said gently, a grin tugging at my lips. ``You poor thing.
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It's already too late. You see, this was all part of my plan.''
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In the absence of an actual scheme, it seemed like I was going to have
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to bluff a living goddess. Odds were I was going to bite it regardless,
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but if I was going to die I was at least going to shit talk the
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opposition on my way out.
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``Your deception is feeble,'' the Priestess said. ``Your plans are known
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to me.''
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``Convenient, isn't it?'' I mused. ``That you knew them all. That you
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crushed me so easily. Almost like I let you.''
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``Mad and desperate,'' Sve Noc said. ``You resort to flimsy lies.''
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I inhaled the smoke, closing my eyes, and let it out. The acrid tang
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stung my nose, beautifully so.
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``Why so many warriors, Sve?'' I asked, opening my eyes. ``Witnesses,
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honour guard? Nah, this is best left quiet. Not the kind of knowledge
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you want floating out there. I think it's a statement of power. A
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reminder of hopelessness, to break me down. But if that's the case, why
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\emph{these} warriors?''
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I croaked out a laugh.
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``If you really wanted to stick it to me,'' I said, ``you wouldn't have
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used people you already owned body and soul. You would have had my own
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army standing in submissive silence. But you don't.''
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I met eyes of blinding silver and smiled.
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``I wonder why that is?''
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``They have knelt,'' Sve Noc said.
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``I think you broke them,'' I said. ``I think you hurt them. But that
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you don't own them, not yet. Because this is still my soul, even
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splattered over the countryside, and you need a little something to take
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you over the top. Queen's blood, queen's death. A passing of the
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torch.''
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I cackled.
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``How does it feel, to fall short even after millennia of scheming?'' I
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asked. ``It \emph{stings}, I bet.''
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Gods forgive me, but I had missed this. Teetering at the brink of
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annihilation, knowing if I was struck down I would not rise again.
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Dancing with death bereft of anything but wits and lies, knowing the
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first mistake would also be the last. It was terrible and treacherous,
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the kind of recklessness that had left a trail of ruins in my wake, but
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Merciless Gods \emph{I had missed this}. I'd grown dull, under the sway
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of my mantle, and now I felt sharp again. Maybe I was drunk on the
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feeling of my own mortality, on the truth that there was nothing left to
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lose, but I felt like myself again. Finally, just as life left my body.
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``And all you fine Mighty,'' I called out. ``Will you just stand there
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like silent statues as your fates are thrown like dice? Do you not have
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a \emph{stake} in this?''
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``Be silent, Losara,'' Mighty Rumena hissed.
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``Come on, be someone,'' I grinned. ``Act. Sure, I would have made you
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servants. For the span of a cosmic breath and no more, but I'll own to
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that. I never thought much of it, since that thing in front of me has
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already made slaves of you.''
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|
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``We are Mighty,'' one of the Longstrides replied. ``Your words are
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|
empty.''
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|
``That might be true right now,'' I said. ``But will you still be, when
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she's done eating Winter? Hells, I would have required service for a
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|
decade or two but \emph{her}? She'll own you wholesale until the Last
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|
Dusk.''
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|
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|
Rumena struck me across the face, and the only thing I could think was
|
|
that it'd just made a mistake. If it'd let me keep talking unworried
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|
that would have been one thing, but trying to silence me? That gave my
|
|
words weight. And theirs was a path of betrayal, wasn't it? They watched
|
|
for the knife in everyone's hand. Even their own goddess. I couldn't
|
|
make out what happened, but a moment later Rumena was thrown back and
|
|
two silhouettes stood between it and me.
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|
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|
``Speak your piece, Losara,'' one of them ordered.
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|
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|
``\textbf{Enough}.''
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|
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|
They screamed, the two drow, and fell as Night ripped its way out of
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|
their bodies like smoke. The same happened all around me, every
|
|
Longstride messily collapsing. The tall shape of Sve Noc drifted
|
|
forward, tendrils of darkness wrapping around my body and dragging me to
|
|
the altar. She was looming over me in a way that was not physical,
|
|
her\ldots{} presence enveloping me whole. As if I was being devoured.
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|
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|
``\textbf{Trickery is no match for real power},'' Sve Noc said.
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|
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|
``Then fear me, drow,'' Akua Sahelian announced, ``for I wield the power
|
|
of friendship.''
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|
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|
I turned right in time for the shade, grinning gloriously with half her
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|
body emerging from my cloak, to bury her arm into my torso up to the
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|
elbow.
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