554 lines
24 KiB
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554 lines
24 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-80-so-below}{%
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\section{Chapter 80: So Below}\label{chapter-80-so-below}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``I speak today not for humble man-eating tapirs but instead for
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the most ambitious specimens their kind has ever known. Is it not the
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sacred duty of all Creation to seek to claim the Tower? How, then, could
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it have been a crime for these tapirs to follow this same dictate by
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devouring our late Emperor?''}
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-- From official transcript from the Trial of Unexpected Teeth, opening
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speech of the defence
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\end{quote}
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``What a silver tongue you have,'' Andronike said. ``But not quite
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silver enough. Your ignorance shows once more, Catherine Foundling.''
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I tried to respond `when does it not?', but I was currently being choked
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so it came out as more of a plaintive gurgle. So, this was how it ended:
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literally choking on my own words. Had to give her points for the irony,
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if nothing else.
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``Allow me to educate you,'' Sve Noc said, and threw me like a bloody
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rag doll.
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\emph{Well,} I thought, \emph{there's a bright side to this. I'm
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currently not dead. Or at least not more than I was when this delightful
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interlude began.} The slightly less bright side was that I was flying
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through flickering scenes, memories I could only glimpse the barest
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pieces of, and soon enough I would\ldots{} \emph{Ah, there it is}, I
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mused, managing to keep a semblance of mental calm as my leg snapped and
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my throat busied itself screaming. That utter asshole, I bet she'd aimed
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just so my bad leg would be the one getting the worst of the landing. I
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tumbled listlessly against the floor, my magical journey ending in the
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close acquaintance of my forehead and a stone wall. Still not dead,
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admittedly. I wouldn't be in such an excruciating amount of pain if I
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was. My forehead was going to bruise, if I still had a body by the end
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of it. I moaned and flopped around until I was looking upwards, feeling
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out my knee and finding it only mostly broken. Could I still move on
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that? Maybe. There'd be a lot of howling involved, but it shouldn't be
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impossible. I still stayed down for a while, lying uncomfortably on the
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floor.
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In the distance people were dying.
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``Educate me about that, would you?'' I sighed. ``Like I haven't
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strolled through a dozen butcher's yards.''
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Might as well find out what had her tossing me around, I eventually
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decided. At this point I'd taken my swing and missed, I might as well
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die slightly less ignorant than usual. My good leg supported me as I
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forced myself up using the wall, taking a proper look around at my
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surroundings. Yet another drow city I'd never seen before, though I had
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a decent guess as to where we were: I was standing among a city-sized
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temple carved out of massive stalactites. The streets here were not
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interrupted by `canals' that were effectively sheer drops, and hobbling
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to the edge of one told me there was an \emph{actual} city below. If
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this wasn't Holy Tvarigu, I'd eat my fingers\ldots{} again? No, first
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time. I'd made other people -- insofar as fae were people, anyway, -- do
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it, but that hardly counted. I flinched at the vivid memory of it. Gods,
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I'd made people \emph{eat their hands}. It'd seemed reasonable at the
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time, and damn me but I could still see the sense in it, but I couldn't
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remember even hesitating for a moment. Not that hesitation would have
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made it better, I silently conceded. Cordelia Hasenbach's passing
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comment had cut deeper than she knew.
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What did regret matter, if it changed nothing?
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The temple-city was strewn with corpses as far as I could see. Whatever
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battle had taken place here had ended, or at least near to it, and now
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this place was little more than a freshly-bloodied mausoleum. By
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Andronike's passing mercy or a stroke of luck, I'd landed near the heart
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of the temple. I could only be thankful for that, I thought, as I eyed
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the mind-bogglingly complex web of stairways and bridges connecting
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everything. Some ways in front of me a wide staircase progressively
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narrowed in rising to meet a passage lightly sloped. On both sides it
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was flanked by a very short wall of painted stone topped by striking
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sculptures. It was a chain, I thought, as I began the painful climb. At
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the head of the stairs two androgynous drow of marble painted red and
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yellow roared out with curved blades in hand. From their back sprouted
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more drow in different colours, wielding whips and daggers, and facing
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those drow in hooded robes offered a supplicant's kneel. The whirlwind
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of colours and faces and poses continued all the way to the end of the
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passage, where the heart of the temple-city awaited.
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It took me far too long and far too many bouts of yelling to make it up
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the stairway, but the view when I did was almost worth it. Wouldn't keep
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me alive, but that was probably asking too much. The riot of vivid
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pigments should have turned it ugly, but there was something almost
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hypnotic about the sight before me. More ziggurat than pyramid, though
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that failed to truly catch the essence of it: it was almost a stairway
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of giant steps, but a triangular mouth going all the way to the summit
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struck out from the rest of the structure -- which was roofed, at that
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narrowest point, by some sort of cylindrical tiled pavilion. At the four
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cardinal directions pale or red stone made up the life and death of
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celestial orbs: sun on the rise and fall, moon ascendant and passing. It
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was like looking at a hundred rainbows made into stone and woven into a
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single tapestry. There was hardly a trace of such wonder left in what
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I'd seen of the Everdark. The thought shook me out of the trance and I
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resumed my advance. Halfway through the passage I finally noticed I'd
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not been alone for some time: hidden among the statues were drow, armed
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and armoured. They'd been so utterly still I'd never noticed. I
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continued limping until I entered the heart-temple, and there I found
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what Andronike had meant for me to find.
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Inside were burned made of what must have been all precious materials in
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existence, from ivory to a massive hollowed out emerald, and every
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single one of them was wafting thick trails of scented smoke. At the
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centre of the shivering columns the two sisters were kneeling in front
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of simple carved piece of obsidian. A star map, by the looks of it.
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Andronike finished unfurling a large scroll filled with equations and
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incantations I'd already seen before, then passed her fingers over to
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smooth it out.
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``Ready?'' Komena asked.
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``How could anyone be?'' her sister replied. ``Yet here we are.''
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She breathed in loudly.
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``We request audience,'' Andronike said.
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``We request bargain,'' her sister said.
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I hobbled forward with an expectant gaze, strangely eager to see the
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moment where they'd sold out their race with the best of intentions, but
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nothing happened at all. Stillness held the room.
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``Damn me,'' Andronike said with quiet horror. ``I have killed us all.''
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Her sister opened her mouth to answer, but was interrupted by an unholy
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ruckus. A dozen burners had been tipped over, by the sounds of it, and
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for a moment I thought it'd been me. But no -- I turned, and there was
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someone in the middle of a set of spilled burners who'd quite evidently
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tripped on them. A drow, I saw. It rose hastily, pretending nothing had
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happened, and retched a little before slapping away the thick smoke.
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``Gods,'' the drow retched again. ``That stuff is \emph{foul}.''
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Both sisters went still.
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``O Shrouded God,'' Komena said hesitantly, but the newcomer's hand
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rose.
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``Give me a moment, girls,'' it rasped out.
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It patted at its dirty robes and produced a flash of polished copper. My
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heart skipped a beat. The Wandering Bard uncorked her flask and took a
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deep drink, before gargling it and spitting out the liquor. The sisters
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traded an appalled look. A little less godly than they'd been aiming
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for, I supposed. The Bard took another swallow of liquor, wiped her
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mouth and went looking through the tipped burner before triumphantly
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snatching out a broken lute. Apparently she'd mistakenly spat some
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liquor on it, because with a shoddy attempt at discretion she began
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wiping at the wood with her sleeve.
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``Good enough,'' the Bard announced. ``Right, so onto business.''
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``You are no deity,'' Komena flatly said.
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``Well spotted,'' Bard cheerfully replied. ``And to think they told me
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you were the stupid one. For the purposes of this conversation, you
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might consider me an envoy of sorts.''
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``You claim to speak for the Gods,'' Andronike frowned.
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``Oh, I wouldn't go as far as that,'' she said. ``I've never been quite
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that much of a fool. But you called and here I am.''
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``Are you a devil?'' Komena pressed.
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``Would it matter if I were?'' the Bard shrugged. ``Regardless, I hear
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the two of you are looking for a loan.''
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The sisters stirred, Andronike picking up the scroll she'd unfurled.
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``A miracle is what we would bargain for,'' she said. ``The specifics-''
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``Are known to me,'' Bard replied, waving the words away and
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accidentally sloshing some booze onto the floor.
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One of the burners caught fire, and everyone delicately pretended it was
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not actually happening.
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``Even the parts you got ambitious with,'' she continued, lifting a
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finger off her flask to wag it chidingly. ``Making it reusable? Now now,
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that's trying to inflate the value. Just because you shove old skills
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and power into new heads doesn't mean the following deaths are worth as
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much as the first.''
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``We sought only to offer the finest possible tribute,'' Komena baldly
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lied.
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``I can't believe I'm rooting for you right now,'' I muttered.
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Still, if the opposition was the Wandering Bard then `All is Night' was
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most definitely the banner of the moment.
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``More need than brains, huh,'' Bard drawled. ``No wonder you're in good
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odour with the old crowd. Still, you two are a little late. They've been
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a lot more careful about where they put their money since Nessie ate the
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hand that fed him.''
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``We offered all we have,'' Andronike gravely said.
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``Yeah, but you don't have \emph{enough},'' the old thing said. ``I'll
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level with you two, since you seem slightly less awful than your average
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drow. This? This whole thing? It's not anybody's plan. No one thought
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you'd actually fuck up so badly you'd obliterate yourselves. The folks
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upstairs are watching like hawks, and the other side's wondering if it's
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worth it to intervene given the\ldots{} costs of such direct action.''
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``We offer fair bargain,'' Komena insisted.
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``Fair is for children,'' the Bard said. ``They're not interested in
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it.''
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``Yet here you are,'' Andronike said, amber eyes narrowing.
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``Killing the Sages and calling Below in the middle of their seat of
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power was a nice touch,'' she replied. ``Got you the audience and a
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consideration. But the terms are going to need to change a bit.''
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``This is an exceedingly delicate arrangement,'' Komena said. ``We can't
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simply-''
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``You will,'' the Wandering Bard gently said. ``Or you'll die, every
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last one of you.''
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``Speak your terms,'' Andronike replied.
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It sounded like a surrender, because it was.
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```Nike-'' her younger sister began.
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``We are in no position to negotiate,'' the older drow tiredly said.
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``Debt isn't wiped,'' the Bard spoke softly into the silence that
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followed. ``The Night will keep you all alive, but you two will need to
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keep \emph{it} going. And if you stop\ldots{}''
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The ancient entity grimaced.
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``Well, they're not above cutting their losses,'' Bard said. ``Let's
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leave it at that.''
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``Should we even bother to accept?'' Komena harshly replied. ``Or is
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even that \emph{formality} unnecessary?''
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``I wish you wouldn't,'' the Wandering Bard murmured. ``There are some
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things worse than death, and what this will make of you is one.''
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She drank once more, then offered a sharp grin.
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``But we all know better, don't we?'' she said.
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I'd known how it would end from the start. I'd seen what had become of
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the Everdark and the two sisters, after all. And still, watching the
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light dim in the eyes of the two true drow in the room, I felt my
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stomach drop. Was there a single horror in this continent's history the
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Wandering Bard did not have a hand in? The thing was, I understood why
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they'd made this choice. It was uncomfortable to even think it, but if
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offered the same terms with my own people on the line I would very
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likely make the same choice. Passing a hand through my hair, I gingerly
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lowered myself down to the floor while leaning against a pillar. So
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which part of this had it been that Andronike wanted me to see? Even
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odds it was either the Bard's very presence or that threatening little
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bit at the end. \emph{They're not above cutting their losses}, the
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Intercessor had said. Was a gentle way to speak of genocide. Was that
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what Andronike was afraid of? That the moment she and I made common
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cause, a snap of the fingers Below would destroy her entire race?
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\emph{But it shouldn't work out like that}, I thought with a frown. The
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Gods were, well, exactly that. All-powerful. They could probably end the
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Night and likely Winter itself. But there was a story unfolding, and if
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they did anything of the sort they'd be directly meddling.
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They couldn't do that without opening the door for Above to do the same,
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and the Heavens should be taking a brutal beating right about now. The
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Dead King was on the march, the last thing Below would want was Above
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getting a free swing at him.
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``So it's the Bard you wanted me to see,'' I said, raising my voice.
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``The Bard,'' Sve Noc repeated, walking out from behind the pillar.
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``What a quaint name. We knew her as the Envoy.''
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``Neshamah called her the Intercessor,'' I said. ``And I suppose if
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anyone's got her number it's him.''
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``The King in Keter wears a crown of lies,'' the silver-eyed drow
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replied. ``No creature born of this land has ever been half as skilled
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at the art.''
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She moved to lean against the pillar I was sitting back against,
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standing above in both the physical and metaphysical sense. Well, at
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least \emph{one} of those was new.
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``He's her enemy,'' I said. ``Trusting him would be foolish, but he
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wants her to bleed. That much can be believed in.''
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``Trust is always foolish,'' Sve Noc smiled. ``It is faith writ small,
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and almost as dangerous.''
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``So did you throw me here for a game of riddles?'' I drily replied.
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``Because I can roll with it. The more you make, the more you leave
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behind. What-''
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``Footsteps,'' the goddess said.
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``I might not win this,'' I reluctantly conceded. ``I only know, like,
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five riddles and that one was the best.''
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If we made this about bawdy jokes instead my years at the Rat's Nest
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would finally pay off, though. Worth a try.
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``A riddle of my own, then,'' Sve Noc said. ``Why share what can be
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taken in full?''
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I frowned, twisting to look up at her.
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``You're not Andronike,'' I said.
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``I never said I was,'' Komena calmly replied.
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``I've been over this with your sister,'' I said. ``But what the Hells,
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maybe the second time's the charm. Just give me a moment to think of an
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insult to get you angry before this gets going.''
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``Your \emph{offer} has been made known to me,'' Sve Noc contemptuously
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said. ``There is no need to reiterate. I was partial to the notion of
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immediately crushing you underfoot, but request has been made that you
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be allowed to speak your piece first.''
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Well, wasn't that promising. I gazed ahead, honestly at a loss as to
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where to begin, and only now noticed the memory had stopped. Frozen.
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Maybe it really was only Komena's memories, I thought. She certainly
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seemed to have greater control of our surroundings than her sister had.
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My eyes lingered on the Wandering Bard, the flask halfway to her mouth
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as she opened her mouth.
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``She can be beaten, you know,'' I said.
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``You have not,'' Sve Noc said. ``And yet would demand that we throw in
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our lot with you.''
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``I haven't, it's true, but there's a villain down south called the
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Tyrant,'' I said. ``I have it from two rather reliable sources that he
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screwed with her plans in a major way last year. It \emph{can} be
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done.''
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``I lacked fear, once,'' Komena said. ``As you so foolishly do. I have
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since been taught better.''
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``I just heard a woman try to lie to what she knew to be envoy from the
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Gods,'' I said. ``\emph{Brazenly} so. She had a chance at getting her
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people out of this mess, I think.''
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I smiled thinly.
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``Now though?'' I said. ``You won't even try. My opinion might be dross
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in your eyes, but I wonder what she'd think of you now.''
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``Petty sentimentality,'' she mused. ``Is that truly the sum of what she
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brings, Andronike? \emph{This} is what shook you?''
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The other sister walked out from behind another pillar, this one in
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front of me. For terrifyingly ancient creatures, they did enjoy their
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petty theatrics.
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``When have we last been called to account for our many sins, sister?''
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Andronike said. ``There is worth in such a thing, even coming from
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her.''
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``That last part was unnecessary,'' I noted. ``I mean, not wrong, but
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definitely unnecessary.''
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``If you felt the need for a pet there are better choices,'' Komena
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said, eyeing me darkly. ``This one has been beaten too harshly to still
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be amusing.''
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``I'm not even going to grace that with a response,'' I indignantly
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said.
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``A goddess has no interlocutors,'' her sister said. ``Only
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supplicants.''
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``Judgement only has meaning coming from one worthy of casting it,''
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Komena said. ``This one hardly qualifies.''
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``I'm not going to claim I'm a saint,'' I said. ``And I've definitely
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crossed some lines, but-''
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``Is this where you claim influence by your mantle once more?'' the
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younger sister asked. ``You could, at least, attempt a believable lie.
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`Nike, she's not even held her half of the Garden for a decade. The
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drift would be negligible. It was still \emph{her}. The only difference
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was that she had power enough to cow her foes.''
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My fingers clenched. I didn't want to believe that, and I wasn't sure I
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did. But this was the Pilgrim all over again, wasn't it? If there was
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anyone learned on the subject of mantles in Calernia, it would be the
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two of them. On the other hand, she'd already confessed she intended to
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kill me. Believable lies from enemies were a deadly thing.
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``Humans are notoriously weak-minded,'' Andronike replied. ``Arguably
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the ease of their swaying is their defining characteristic as a
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species.''
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I grit my teeth. Insulting as this was, I wasn't exactly in a position
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to contradict her. I only had the one crossbow to wield and it was
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currently pointed straight at my foot.
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``This didn't \emph{have} to get racist,'' I still protested.
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``Then let us see,'' Komena said, ignoring my perfectly valid complaint,
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``the stuff Catherine Foundling is made of. Grant me the power, sister.
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I will not destroy her yet.''
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Andronike considered me for a long moment, then inclined her head. My
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mind was racing at the implications. Angry Sve couldn't kill me without
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Calm Sve's say-so, then. Andronike owned the floodgate even in here.
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``Done,'' she said.
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Komena pushed herself up and came to stand over me. Well, it wasn't like
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I was capable of stopping her. Might as well do what I did best: mouth
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off to entities beyond my comprehension.
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``Please be gentle,'' I shyly said. ``It's my first-''
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``No,'' Sve Noc cut in.
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What followed lived up to the word. Before the Battle of the Camps, I
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remembered, I had gone looking through a Deoraithe soldier's mind for
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bits of useful information. If it had felt anything like this I owed the
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man apology and restitution. The sensation of cold fingers prying
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through my memories had me regretting the jest I'd just made. It was an
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intrusion, on some fundamental level, and there was no hiding anything
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from Sve Noc's piercing gaze.
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``There,'' she said. ``We begin with blood.''
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\emph{For what he said and what he'd done, I'd decided he deserved to
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die -- my hand had done the rest without any need for prompting. Edge
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parallel to the ground, slicing across the major arteries just like the
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butcher did it to pigs in the marketplace.}
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I gasped out weakly. She'd brought that to the fore, but her grasp had
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not slackened. I could still smell the blood in the air, the taste of
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the first life I'd ever taken. I could almost feel Black looking on,
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face unreadable.
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``Humans killing humans,'' Andronike commented. ``Nothing of import.''
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``A child arrogating powers beyond her due,'' Komena contradicted her.
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``The birth of a recurring pattern. And see how quickly it comes
|
|
again-''
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|
\emph{I let what I'd just done sink in, closing my eyes. With a life
|
|
spared, I'd just killed thousands. I'd just promised cities to fire and
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|
ruin, sown the seeds of a rebellion that would rip the land of my birth
|
|
-- the very same land I wanted to save -- apart. But I'd also bought the
|
|
war I needed. Damn me, but I'd bought the war I needed.}
|
|
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|
The Lone Swordsman, granted his life so that I may rise through the
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|
deaths it would bring. My throat clogged with old disgust. I'd never
|
|
gotten over that quite as well as I liked to pretend. I'd just had
|
|
darker things to my name, usurping the place of that early sin when it
|
|
came to the litany of my regrets.
|
|
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|
``Her own kind, thrown into the flames,'' Komena said. ``There are no
|
|
similarities, Andronike, only lies she made herself swallow.''
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|
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|
``Not done without purpose,'' I croaked. ``Not for the sport of it.
|
|
Because I thought it had to be done.''
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|
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|
``You were wrong,'' the silver-eyed drow said.
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|
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|
``I was,'' I got out. ``And I will be again. But it still matters. If I
|
|
stand judgement then judge me for all of it. Not just the parts that
|
|
suit you.''
|
|
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|
``Not desperation, sister,'' Komena said, turning to address our
|
|
audience. ``It was ambition that held the knife. Best not forget that.''
|
|
|
|
``Not always,'' Andronike said.
|
|
|
|
\emph{I couldn't beat the monsters by being better than them. I'd never
|
|
had that in me. Too much impatience, too much recklessness. That was all
|
|
right, though. There was another way: be the bigger monster.}
|
|
|
|
Akua on the Blessed Isle, a false victory. The two of us under
|
|
moonlight, the beginnings of a dance that would see us both spinning for
|
|
years. The moment I'd first admitted to myself I could live with being a
|
|
monster if I still won.
|
|
|
|
``Pride,'' Komena objected, shaking her head. ``Refusal to lose even at
|
|
the cost of principle. Must I bring out every example of this?''
|
|
|
|
The duel against the Duke of Violent Squalls, the Arcadian Campaign,
|
|
Second Liesse. More recent, after that. The Battle of the Camps, Keter.
|
|
The moment I bestowed a title on Ivah and bound it by oaths.
|
|
|
|
``Always another sliver shaven off,'' Komena said. ``Another compromise.
|
|
How long would it take before \emph{we} became the sacrifice?''
|
|
|
|
Andronike did not answer. She was, I thought, being convinced.
|
|
|
|
``This is most irregular.''
|
|
|
|
Both halves of Sve Noc jolted in surprise, and the younger sister's
|
|
grasp slackened for a moment before tightening twice as hard. I craned
|
|
my neck to look at the source of the sound and winced.
|
|
|
|
``Finally you crawl out of your hole, shade,'' Komena smiled. ``I will
|
|
enjoy this a great deal.''
|
|
|
|
Akua Sahelian stood among us, her scarlet dress flowing down to her
|
|
feet, and managed to convey utter disdain without ever significantly
|
|
moving her face.
|
|
|
|
``There are proper forms to observe, you grasping savages,'' Diabolist
|
|
scoffed. ``This is not at all how a rigged trial is held. I see an
|
|
accuser yet no defence -- you can, and indeed should, bribe the
|
|
defender, but you cannot dispense with the office entirely. It is simply
|
|
not done.''
|
|
|
|
``Sister,'' Komena began, but the other raised her hand.
|
|
|
|
``She is less dangerous here than out there, stirring trouble,''
|
|
Andronike said.
|
|
|
|
``I find the shallowness of your understanding deeply offensive,'' the
|
|
shade retorted, wrinkling her nose. ``\emph{This} is the finest your
|
|
misbegotten race has to offer? Even the least of Tyrants would have made
|
|
matching cutlery sets of you.''
|
|
|
|
``I know you think this is helping,'' I began, then paused. ``Wait, do
|
|
you? \emph{Are} you trying to help?''
|
|
|
|
``You test my patience, shade,'' Andronike warned.
|
|
|
|
``You test mine, chattel,'' Akua replied. ``Even a devil is owed an
|
|
advocate.''
|
|
|
|
Komena laughed mockingly.
|
|
|
|
``And you would be hers?'' she said.
|
|
|
|
``Why,'' Diabolist smiled, extending her arms, ``I only want to see
|
|
justice done. Shall we begin?''
|
|
|
|
There should be a rule, I decided, about last moment rescues not being
|
|
allowed to make a situation worse.
|