496 lines
23 KiB
TeX
496 lines
23 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-78-comes-around}{%
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\section{Chapter 78: Comes Around}\label{chapter-78-comes-around}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The finest summation of Traitorous's reign I ever heard came
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from an illiterate peasant from the outskirts of Ater, who described it
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as follows: `Like watching a snake eat its own tail, only the tail was
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fake the snake was an angry badger and also you are poisoned.'\,''}
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-- Introduction to `More Art Than Act' by Hakim of Kahtan, the Haunted
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Scholar
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\end{quote}
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And so the sound of my fragile mortal shell being ripped into signaled
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it was time for everyone's favourite Wasteland game: backstab, help or
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both. Akua had grown on me, rather like the bubonic plague, so I was
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going to give her the benefit of the doubt and put my money on `both'.
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It was mildly surprising she'd stuck around at all, to be honest. I'd
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expected her to be halfway back to Praes by now, considering I'd lost my
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leash on her along with my soul. The unsettling sensation of fingers
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squeezing around my beating heart was coloured by the unspoken
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acknowledgement this was a dark mirror to Second Liesse's ending. And to
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think they said Diabolist didn't have a sense of humour. The sheer shock
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of being torn into this brutally and suddenly was tipping me right over
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the edge and straight into the grave, my vision dimming, but in the
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darkness power awaited. Not owned, no. Sve Noc's victory had been too
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deep a cut for that. But Akua bestowed upon me a chord, an invisible
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string, and through it my fading senses expanded.
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``Both it is,'' I muttered. ``Called it.''
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Winter as an independent entity was dead. I knew that instantly and
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instinctively as my mind glimpsed the web of power spread over Great
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Strycht. There would be no restoration, it was too far gone for that.
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Sve Noc had clumsily melded Night and Winter where she could, though the
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merging was far from complete and my old mantle had reacted violently to
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the attempt. Knots of raging power had erupted all over the city, like
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too-large insects caught in a web of Night: wherever they stormed they
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weakened the weave around them. The Priestess had been hammering them
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into submission, I thought, one at a time. A time-consuming process, and
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a difficult one -- like trying to smooth out wrinkles on steel. I could
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feel the gargantuan weight of her presence gripping one of the storms,
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fingers pulling out the threads one after another and releasing them
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accalmed. \emph{She had barely a sliver of her attention on me}, I
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thought. Broken thing that I was, I'd been judged harmless and only a
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cursory eye had been kept on me. Bad form, that. It would remiss of me
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not to make her pay harshly for it.
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``You forced her to act early,'' Akua said.
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Diabolist felt like she was at my side, but she couldn't be. I wasn't
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really anywhere, practically speaking. Just a ghost haunting the
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labyrinth, and her barely more than that. And yet if felt like her
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breath was whispering against my ear, like she was not even an inch
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away.
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``So, the power of friendship,'' I said. ``Feels a bit ungrateful to say
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as much after such a touching interruption, but we're not really
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friends. Acquaintances, at most, and that's being generous.''
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``You break my heart, dearest,'' Diabolist drawled. ``Again.''
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``And I didn't even need to punch through your ribcage first this
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time,'' I replied, genuinely pleased. ``I \emph{am} getting better at
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this.''
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``So is she,'' Akua said.
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She didn't point -- we were presences, not flesh -- but like a feather's
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touch her attention moved towards Sve Noc. My not-eyes followed.
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``She wanted to bleed me after smoothing out all the knots,'' I said.
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``Like a coronation.''
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``Baptism in queen's blood, yes,'' Diabolist said. ``Quite properly
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done, if a mite archaic. Queens are not as easy to acquire as they were
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in olden days.''
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``But she doesn't need it,'' I said, feeling out the web with a thought.
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``She's already winning, Akua. The Night is absorbing Winter, slowly but
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surely.''
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``This situation should feel familiar, my heart,'' she replied. ``You
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are a claimant once more. The lesser one, certainly, but a claimant
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still.''
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``For what?'' I asked.
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``That rather depends, I think, on which of you successfully presses her
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claim,'' Akua said. ``Before, I would have wagered it was sovereignty
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over night. But now\ldots{} who knows?''
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The shade laughed.
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``Interesting times, dearest Catherine,'' she said. ``Interesting times
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indeed.''
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``Interesting,'' I repeated. ``That's a word for it. Especially
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considering I don't see your hat anywhere in the ring. This was your
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chance to get back on top, Diabolist. There will not be another no
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matter the outcome.''
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And if she hadn't stepped in the game would have come to an end. I could
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still vaguely feel my body in the hands of Sve's manifestation, but
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she'd yet to kill it. There'd be no point, I thought. What she needed on
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the altar was \emph{me}, not a mangled empty corpse. If Akua had no
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chance of claiming this mess for herself I would have called this
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pragmatism, denying the Priestess her victory at the last moment, but
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she'd had other options. She could have fled, she could have fought. And
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yet here we were.
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``Am I not in your service?'' Akua said. ``Bindings are formality, not
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essence.''
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``Don't waste our time,'' I said. ``She's nearly done with the knot.''
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I felt the shade press close to me, almost like an embrace, and I saw
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Akua Sahelian whole. Not the shade with the bloody hole in her chest,
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not the semblance of fae I'd turned her into. The same woman I'd met
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under the Name of Heiress, who'd schemed her way into becoming the
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Diabolist and vaingloriously raised her banners against the entire
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villainy of the East. Golden eyes set in a sculpted face, her long
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tresses falling in a curtain behind her. Adorned in a crimson gown set
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close against long legs, belted high on her waist in rubies and gold.
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She'd always been gorgeous. Even when I'd first met her, before I'd
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learned to truly hate her, I'd thought as much. This was not Akua as she
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was, but as she still saw herself, and I could not call her anything but
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the culmination of centuries of Wasteland breeding: as beautiful as she
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was terrible.
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``I have grown tired,'' she said, ``of iron.''
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``There's no walking back the Folly,'' I told her. ``Not even for this.
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I'm one life, Akua. That's the weight I have on the scales.''
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``I consider myself something of a theologian,'' she said. ``And yet I
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still lack the answer to one question. Perhaps you can answer it for me.
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Which matters most, Catherine, when it comes to doing good -- the
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conviction or the act?''
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There was a beat of silence as the enormity of what she'd just said sunk
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in.
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``You can't be serious,'' I said.
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I was not sure whether to be amazed or appalled by what she was
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implying. Akua might be the single most amoral person I knew, which was
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saying something considering I was acquainted with the fucking King of
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Death. And she was talking of redemption? No, I realized. Not
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redemption. \emph{The conviction or the act}, she'd said. I hated to
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even think it, but it fit with how she'd always done things. I used
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stories as an arsenal, taking up and discarding what was of use to me,
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but Akua? She rode them into the storm like a warhorse. It had killed
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her, in the end, the flying fortresses and the monologues. But before it
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had she'd matched an entire empire blow for blow.
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``But I am,'' she smiled. ``I shall be, Catherine, the most terrifyingly
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heroic woman in the history of my kind. And in the end, together we will
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learn the answer to my question.''
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``It's not the Gods you have to convince,'' I hissed. ``It's me.''
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``Would you snuff me out for observing your own principles?'' Akua
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asked. ``I will do nothing but what you have demanded of me.''
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``They won't take you in,'' I said. ``You have to know that. You can't
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\emph{fake} being a good person.''
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``I have learned much from you, darling one,'' Akua Sahelian smiled. ``I
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may fail, true. In my hour of judgement I may -- most likely will -- be
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unmade and cast into the deepest burning pits. But until then? Oh, what
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a glorious ride it will be.''
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She spun away from me, presence parting in full.
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``Now, my dear Catherine,'' Diabolist said, and there was joyous
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laughter in her voice. ``Shall we \emph{save some innocents}?''
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I would have argued still. Done something, anything, to deny this. But
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the last string of Winter was untangled, made docile, and even as the
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Night spread through it Sve Noc finally turned her whole attention to
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us.
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``\textbf{Clever little rats},'' the Priestess of Night said.
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``\textbf{You have earned death at my hand}.''
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It felt like the tide pulling back before the wave. Something
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unspeakably massive gathering before release, preparing to crush
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everything in its path. I called on all that I was, too, but I was no
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longer Sovereign of Moonless Nights. There were no bottomless depths of
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Winter to stand behind me, no stolen mantle to make me anything more
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than I was. In the face of a living deity, I stood a mere mortal -- one
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with a claim, perhaps, but no less frail for it. If she crushed me here,
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I thought, would die. Unmade so thoroughly there might not be enough of
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me left for the afterlife. And so we began the dance one last time, for
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keeps. Winner got to be Queen Bitch of Night forevermore, a victory
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almost as terrible as defeat. I didn't want it, I realized. I didn't
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\emph{want} to go back to the thing I'd turned into, that pale imitation
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of myself. A creature playacting at being a person, more a pack of lies
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and ambitions than anything remotely human. I'd feared alienation as the
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consequence of drawing on my mantle, all the while too far gone to
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realize I'd already estranged myself from everything that'd made me
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Catherine Foundling. Better to die than go back to it, I thought. To be
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nothing at all rather than be \emph{that}. I closed my not-eyes.
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``Mortal,'' I whispered. ``To the end, whatever that may be.''
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A savage joy took hold of me, sweeter than wine, and I almost laughed.
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Even if it was doomed, even if all was lost -- I would not go quietly
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into the night. I would go out kicking and screaming, making an unholy
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mess of it. Not-lips splitting into a grin, I took hold of what remained
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of my mind. \emph{If you are the sea, then} \emph{I am a needle}, I
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thought. \emph{Slender and piercing and too slight to catch.} Hold and
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release, and then the impact of our wills shook the entire web. I went
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through like a needle through silk, and sunk into darkness. The pressure
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of it was crushing, a mind so much greater than my own bearing down, and
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I balked. \emph{I am stone}, I thought. \emph{The pebble beneath the
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coursing river, smooth and unmoving.} I crashed at the bottom, but there
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I remained. Unbroken. I could do this, I thought. I was so much less,
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but what I was could change. Adapt. She was too large to be able to do
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the same so easily. The sea withdrew and I let out a relieved breath.
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The web was frittering, I saw. Parts that had been calmed grew riotous
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as Sve Noc exerted herself against me. Winter was not so easily tamed.
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``\textbf{Fumbling child},'' the Priestess of Night said. ``\textbf{You
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but delay the inevitable}.''
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``Hells, Sve,'' I grinned savagely. ``That's my life in a sentence.''
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I had become unto stone, and so she became a chisel. She struck down,
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lumbering and unstoppable. She had become a chisel, and so I became
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wind: shapeless, coursing around the might of her. The chisel broke into
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a storm, taking hold of me, and so I became a bird. I rode the winds,
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and she turned into a hand. Fingers closed around me, but I was smoke
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and slipped through them. It was a game of riddles, where the first
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mistake would be the last. Smoke was inhaled by gaping maw, the maw
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escaped by a scuttling rat, the rat crushed by boot only for mud to
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stick at the bottom of the sole. Shape to shape we went, ever changing
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and never twice the same. I knew, instinctively, that repetition would
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be barred to me. Always forward, or there could be only death. I had
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become a snake, coiling around a narrow spike, when Sve Noc screamed.
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There was a flicker, and I saw her long-haired silhouette again -- with
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Diabolist stabbing away at her neck, dagger in hand. Taking your eyes
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off the Praesi, huh. Always a mistake, that. Akua was swatted away
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angrily, her shape shattered by the sheer force of the blow, but I was
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already moving.
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``I am a sword,'' I murmured. ``Sharp and merciless, I \emph{cut}.''
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My will struck out against hers and finally I drew blood. And here was
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the pit fight Archer had promised, I thought. Two beasts in a hole,
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tearing at each other. Devouring. I was to eat what I had carved out,
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grow stronger from it. Ascend through this hallowed cannibalism and
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strike again, until one of us had consumed the other whole. That was
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Below's game, its promised and certain victory.
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``Mortal, you meddling fucks,'' I snarled. ``To the end.''
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I crawled into the gushing wound, spite warming me down to my petty
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core.
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---
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``It is forbidden, `Mina. The vigil must be held alone.''
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The suddenness of the sound had me twitching. There had been the warm
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darkness of blood, until I crawled out dripping onto a floor of stone,
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and immediately the woman had spoken. I rose to my feet, eyes wary. It
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looked like a temple, that was my first thought. The ceiling was tall
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and curved, held up by arches and columns. The stone beneath me covered
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in strange scriptures similar to Crepuscular, but only in part. Older, I
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decided. What few words I understood among them seemed to be in the vein
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of astronomy, about celestial orbs and their movements. On all four
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sides arched thresholds led into nothing: I could glimpse a sea of
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lights below, and only then did I realized I was standing atop a tower.
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There were no stairs, no visible way into the room save the arches. Rich
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laughter drew my attention sharply, and my eyes moved to watch a pair of
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drow. Both young -- \emph{truly} young, not like the Mighty were -- and
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long-haired, though their appearance was starkly sexless. One sat with
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her legs folded, in the centre of the room, while the other lounged
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against a pillar. She'd been the one to laugh.
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``So many rules,'' the drow called `Mina gently mocked. ``Why apprentice
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to the Sages at all, if you intend on following all of them?''
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Neither of their eyes were silver, I realized with a start. Both a deep
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amber, identical in every way. As if sisters. My blood thrummed with
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excitement. I'd been right, then. It was Sve Noc's soul I had cut open,
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and it was her memories I'd crawled my way into. And if I got to the
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bottom, found the right path\ldots{} My way out. The victory denied.
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``We are the enemy of death,'' the sitting drow replied, almost chiding.
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``It is great honour to be chosen to stand among those who hold back
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twilight.''
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``Shrouded Gods, Andronike,'' her sister said, rolling her eyes. ``You
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could at least wait until after the ceremony to start with that. If I
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wanted to get preached at I'd prostrate at temple like a good little
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zealot.''
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``There will be no ceremony at all, Komena, if you are caught up here,''
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Andronike sharply replied. ``I will be sent home in disgrace and
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Mother-''
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``- will have to take the war oath or be forever disgraced,'' Komena
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interrupted. ``I've heard that song before, sister. You say that like
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it'd be such a disaster. I'll be taking the very same oath this year,
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and it'd be nice to have kin at my side.''
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The other drow's face softened.
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``You know I would follow you,'' she said. ``If I had not been called to
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higher purpose.''
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``All hail the mighty Twilight Sages,'' Komena said, smile too serrated
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to be genuine. ``May we forever kiss the hem of their robes.''
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``I didn't meant it like that, `Mina,'' Andronike feebly said. ``There
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is great honour in war service.''
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``Just not quite as much as in this,'' her sister said.
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The other drow's eyes tightened.
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``You have the talent, Komena,'' she said. ``Our fathers both have
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sorcerer blood. Do not blame me simply because you never had the
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discipline to sharpen your skills.''
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``Much good they will do you, these precious skills,'' Komena said.
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``Cloistered in some hidden shrine, debating magic with crazed
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half-corpses. At least my \emph{lack of discipline} will serve the
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Firstborn against our enemies.''
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``Fetching human servants for the rylleh?'' Andronike ridiculed.
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``Squabbling with the nerezim over some empty tunnel? How well you would
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serve our people.''
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``How gladly you mock the same blades that keep our mines full, that
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keep the nerezim from making goblins of us,'' her sister snarled. ``At
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least we \emph{act}, inglorious as our lot is. Provide for the Empire
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Ever Dark.''
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``You talk like a colonist,'' Andronike said, wrinkling her nose. ``The
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King Under the Mountain will slay us all, every Firstborn must take the
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oath! There will be peace, sister, as there has been for over a century.
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War is only ever waged for petty glories.''
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I coughed into my fist. Well, you couldn't get them all right. Probably
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the single worst thing she could have gotten wrong, but in her defence
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she didn't seem alone in her assumption. If the drow in charge had
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really all believed that it was no wonder the dwarves had wrecked them
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in the following wars. That did not sound like an empire ready for a
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hard fight. The two sisters continued to argue, but I let the noise wash
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over me. There was something\ldots{} There it was again. A tremor. I
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knelt, wincing as my lame leg flared, and pressed my ear against the
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stone. It came again, louder, and my fingers clenched. Not a tremor, a
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footstep. And one getting closer. Time to move on, then, I'd learned all
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I could from this anyway. There was no obvious way out, I thought, save
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the one I'd rather not take. I breathed out and got up.
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``Oh Gods, this better work,'' I muttered, and took a running leap off
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the tower.
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---
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I thought I'd failed, at first, because I stood in utter darkness. But
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then there was movement, Komena sweeping out her arm and causing globes
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off glass to light all over the room. She'd gotten older, I saw. There
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was nasty scar on her neck, but it was the sharper features and braided
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hair that drew my attention. She wore armour, too: good steel mail, with
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pauldrons of sculpted obsidian. The sword at her hip was without a
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sheath and glinted cold blue. \emph{Enchanted, for sure.} As she began
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unstrapping her armour I allowed my gaze to sweep our surroundings,
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reluctantly admitting that the woman who'd become Sve Noc had
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\emph{taste}. And coin to burn, apparently, because much of the
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furniture in here was wood instead of stone and that was a rare thing in
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the Everdark. I froze when she did, only the noticing that there was
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someone seated in the corner. Who it was I could not tell for sure --
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though I had a decent guess -- because they were masked and covered by a
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thick cloak. It was an ornate thing, the mask. Forged iron, the upper
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half of it a sun setting while the bottom was half the moon. Komena drew
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her sword without hesitation.
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``I know not your intent, Sage, but I am a jawor of the Southern Army,''
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she coldly said. ``I will not be \emph{disappeared} so easily.''
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The Twilight Sage slowly raised a hand and took off the mask, revealing
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the very pair of amber eyes I had expected. Andronike hesitated,
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worrying her lip.
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```Mina,'' she quietly said. ``I know we did not part-''
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The sword clattered against the ground, and I had to admit I was touched
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at the sight of Komena embracing her sister without the slightest hint
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of hesitation. The two drow remained like that for a long moment, and I
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saw their arms tightening against each other like they were afraid of
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letting go.
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```Nike,'' the younger sister said, after finally releasing the other.
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``Gods be kind. I have regretted many things since taking the oath, but
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none half as much as the last words we spoke.''
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``I'm sorry, Komena,'' Andronike whispered. ``I was too proud to reach
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out, after. I have sown sorrow where there needed be none.''
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The other drow touched her shoulder, almost shyly.
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``It does not matter,'' she said. ``It could have been a hundred years
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instead of twenty, and still it would not matter. Heart of my heart.''
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``Heart of my heart,'' Andronike whispered back, voice shaky.
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Komena shook herself, as if trying to wake. She smoothed out her already
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pristine armour out of nervousness.
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``I am being a frightful host,'' she said. ``I have senna, if you would
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like a drink -- or! I have this bottle of this drink they call
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\emph{wynneh}, from the Burning Lands. Very exotic, you wouldn't believe
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how many fingers I had to break to get it.''
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Andronike took her sister's hand and shook her head.
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``Sit with me,'' she asked. ``This is\ldots{} better spoken sober.''
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Komena's eyes tightened.
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``You worry me, sister,'' she said. ``Are you in danger? I now striking
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a Sage is sacrilege, but I will not-''
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``We are all in danger, I fear,'' Andronike croaked. ```Mina, what I
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want to tell you, it is a crime for me to speak it. Even if all you do
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is listen, they would-''
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``Heart of my heart,'' Komena said, voice like steel. ``Your woe is my
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woe. No soul can change this.''
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Her sister smiled, for just a moment, and it felt like dawn breaking
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over the room. Andronike tugged her down into a seat and they settled
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together while the Sage sister chose her words. \emph{The ritual}, I
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thought. \emph{This is about the ritual when they tried to become
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immortals.}
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``They're going to kill us all, `Mina,'' Andronike murmured, sounding
|
|
genuinely terrified. ``The Sages, the elders among them -- they're
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afraid of dying. The alchemies work a little less every year and their
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minds have begun to fray. So they now plan a ritual.''
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``A ritual,'' Komena repeated slowly, trying to understand her sister's
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fear.
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And failing, though I thought she was a decent hand at hiding it.
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``They will borrow from the years of every Firstborn yet to be,'' the
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drow said. ``They say they have it charted -- they've used oracles, the
|
|
old rites as well -- but they're \emph{wrong} Komena. There are too many
|
|
uncertainties.''
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``There will be revolt, if this comes out,'' Komena said face gone grim.
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|
``I can reach out to other officers-''
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``You don't understand,'' Andronike said. ``They are \emph{proud}. They
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|
through it we will all be made immortal. With the turn of the red season
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|
they will announce it themselves.''
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``But you don't believe it will work,'' the younger sister said.
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``All it takes is a single mistake, and our entire people will pay for
|
|
it,'' the other drow replied, shaking her head. ``There is always a
|
|
mistake, `Mina. \emph{Always}.''
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|
Her sister slowly nodded, and I watched her thoughts flicker through her
|
|
face. Hesitation, first, then reproach. And after that only
|
|
determination, cold and relentless.
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|
``So what,'' Komena said, ``are we going to do about it?''
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|
Pivot, I thought. They were not Named, not yet, but that sentence and
|
|
that moment were the beginning of a very dark road I already knew the
|
|
end of.
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``In that moment, I loved her more than I have ever loved anyone or
|
|
anything.''
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I froze. She'd not made a sound, until the moment she spoke. Not a
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breath, not whisper of foot on stone. I turned and there she was,
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|
standing at my side. The cloak I recognized, for she wore it in front of
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|
me as well, but there was no mask now. She had grown, I thought, beyond
|
|
such petty symbols.
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``Strange,'' she said, head cocked to the side. ``That even after all
|
|
these years, I grieve that more than all the rest.''
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``Andronike,'' I said, meeting eyes of pure silver.
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``Catherine Foundling,'' the other half of Sve Noc greeted me calmly.
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``I believe you were looking for me.''
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