422 lines
21 KiB
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422 lines
21 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-and-pay-your-toll}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: And Pay Your
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Toll}\label{interlude-and-pay-your-toll}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-and-pay-your-toll}} \chaptermark{Interlude: And Pay Your Toll}
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\epigraph{``Oh no, please stop wrecking everything! Like that urn in the
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corner, with the djinn bound inside. No, the other one, with golden --
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oh, woeful day, this wanton destruction of priceless artefacts is so
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inconvenient to me personally and absolutely no one else.''}{Dread Emperor Irritant I, `defending' the palace of the High Lord of
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Aksum from heroes}
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Tariq did not reply. He knew hesitation was herald of defeat, in
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contests such as this, yet he could not hasten to answer. Not with the
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stakes at play here -- he, this army, this entire continent, none of
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them could afford a misstep here and now. A surrender had been offered,
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but could still be either accepted or refused.
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The Pilgrim's first and deeper instinct was to accept. If it was a lie
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she'd offered, a trick being played, then accepting would allow him to
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turn this spin of the yarn on her. A false surrender, when he still had
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the forces in motion that he'd sent out? The backlash of such a ploy
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would be bloody for the villain who'd played it. But that was the wrong
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way to think about this, he decided, because it assumed that Catherine
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Foundling was a fool. And she wasn't, unfortunately. She was reckless
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often and at times arrogant, but also frightfully prone to learning from
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her mistakes -- those, at least, that were not born from the flaws at
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the very heart of her. It was possible, he considered, that she'd pit
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providence against the weight of his broken oath. Wagered that events
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would not tumble forward in a way that allowed him to uncover the
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conspiracy, should there be one. Yet it was not a good wager, for her,
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since taking it at all meant she'd fallen into the role of the Grand
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Alliance's villainous adversary. No it was nearly certain that the offer
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of surrender was genuine, which only made it all the more dangerous.
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It would break the pattern of three, if he accepted. A victory for her,
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in claiming back her teacher's body through ploy, and then a much
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greater victory for him this night, in scaring her into surrender --
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that would be the end of it. It was a draw that would take Tariq where
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he needed to go, arm him with the only blade left that might still be
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capable of killing Catherine Foundling should it prove necessary. If
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she'd opposed him more directly in this battle, even made act of
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presence, the Pilgrim would have come forward as well and leaned on the
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weight of their pattern to nudge events towards the certainty of a draw.
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But she'd remained veiled, hidden and plotting. \emph{And she saw right
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through me}, Tariq thought, abashed. For all that he had told himself he
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had the measure of the Black Queen, evidently he'd been wrong. If he was
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to avoid compounding his mistakes, he must discard that belief and
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approach the situation with fresh eyes. Catherine Foundling had caught
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sight of the pattern of three he'd spent so long arranging, and most
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likely suspected the importance of it to him. Should this, then, be seen
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as an olive branch?
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She would not allow a foe the power over her Tariq had sought to obtain,
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yet she understood why he found the need for it. And so a concession was
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made, surrender unconditional on the field, offering to his old hands
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the thread that might just untangle the thorny knot that was the
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confluence in Iserre. A knife bared, his purpose denied but then a
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lesser prize offered. It fit, as it would not be the first time that the
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Black Queen dealt with others using that blunt but potent approach.
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Like an old mule he'd been approached, and this was the apple dangled:
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an end to Iserre that would be to the benefit of the Grand Alliance, in
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matters earthly. With refusal, then, would come the stick that would be
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used to thrash him. A more provisional offer might have allowed the
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Pilgrim grounds with which to refuse, but \emph{unconditional surrender}
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meant that the burden of consequence had been passed entirely to him.
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There could, to be put it bluntly, be no better offer. If it were a
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trick that would not matter, for to be Good was not to be the kind of
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fool that fell into every trap: even devils could cite the Book for
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their purposes. But if it was not a trick, as he believed, then by
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refusing Tariq would be tossing to the side every sacrifice made
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tonight. Every death that had pressed down on his shoulders so he could
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bring morning's light to the sky. Would the miracle wane and die? The
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Ophanim murmured uncertainly in his ear, even they unknowing. He
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suspected not, but it would at least be made fragile. Judged hollow by
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Creation, and so become exactly that. The Black Queen's answer, the
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coiling darkness that lay at the heart of her camp and had been
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carefully woven into a theurgic ritual, would rip through it. Perhaps
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reverse the situation entire, unleashing her drow anew in the fullness
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of the might.
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The Grey Pilgrim was no leader of warbands but he had known wars and
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felt the power of the Everdark's children fill the night. If they struck
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out again with their strength restored, the battle would resume with her
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forces at a distinct advantage. A second victory for Catherine Foundling
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would end the pattern of three just as surely, which meant his choice
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was now effectively between two different unmakings of a plan that had
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taken more than a year to carry out. Exasperation welled up at the
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thought. All that toil, broken within months of her return to the
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surface as if on a whim. Tariq leaned into the emotion, let it course
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through his veins and then pass out of him. There was no use to growing
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angry at being outplayed: on the contrary, that kind of fragility tended
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to lead Bestowed into a spiral of decline. He'd seen too many times to
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count. Mind clear again, the Grey Pilgrim considered what the Black
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Queen wanted him to believe was his choice. Victory for him, on her
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terms. Likely victory for her, still on her terms. The old man's brow
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creased as he considered it. There was something about this\ldots{}
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theatricality that rubbed him wrong. For a villain, he thought,
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Catherine Foundling had always been admirably reluctant to sacrifice
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soldiers on false pretences.
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What she considered those to be was where the villainy began, but that
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was another story. \emph{Ah}, Tariq hummed. \emph{So there it is.} The
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Black Queen had spent lives in her service, those of the drow, by
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sending them into the fight suspecting a miracle would snatch away their
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powers and leave them exposed. Unusual for her, and she would not do it
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without a reason. So why \emph{had} the drow been sent, he mused? To
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force his hand with the bringing of dawn, certainly, but there'd been no
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need for such a brutal display as what had taken place. Thousands dead,
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so quickly, was not war: it was a point being made. They had been sent
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to make an impression. To swat down multitudes like flies and add weight
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to the choice the Pilgrim must now make. To create, in a word, urgency.
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Such a thing would only be necessary, he decided, if there was a
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deception afoot.
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``Where is your liege, Hunstman?'' the Grey Pilgrim asked.
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``Another question was not the answer sought, Peregrine,'' the fae
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languidly replied. ``Your verdict?''
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She wasn't in Creation, Tariq grasped then. Admittedly the surrender
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offered had only been for those under her command and not the Queen of
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Callow herself so her presence was not strictly required. But if she
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wasn't here, how did she expect to bring down dawn should he refuse her
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surrender? There might be other drow with power enough, but none with
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the requisite \emph{weight} to carry it out. If the Hierophant had still
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been at her side then Tariq would not have considered the matter
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further, but the boy currently was in the depths of Arcadia making a
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ruinous altar of his grief. The Wild Hunt could not wield miracles of
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darkness, and who did that leave? No one but Bestowed or the most
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powerful of warlocks should be able to weave a working rival to his,
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leaving the confines of story, and the only place where the Black Queen
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would have been able to encounter such a helper since her disappearance
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should be the Everdark. It was, he reflected, deeply unlikely anyone but
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Catherine Foundling on her side could bring an end to his dawn -- her
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patron murderesses notwithstanding, for should they intervene directly
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so would the Choir of Mercy. Old mule that he was, he'd been offered the
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apple and the stick. But it appeared that the stick might be little more
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than glamour, a shadow on the wall. If he refused, and dawn held,
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then\ldots{}
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That would be contingent on her failing to return, but her absence was
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telling: whatever her scheme, it required her to see to something else.
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Instead of an olive branch extended, he thought, this might instead be
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the affected nonchalance of a villain raising the stakes on a bad hand.
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Trying to scare the opposition into retreating by displaying unflinching
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certainty. The pieces were there, Tariq thought, for this to be the
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answer. Yet it was not \emph{certain}, and in assuming that the Black
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Queen was gambling he would be doing the very same thing. If the only
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consideration was whether it was possible to obtain a promised victory
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on Catherine Foundling, then this was the choice to be made. Refusal,
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and pushing through. That was not, however, the only consideration. He
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could it be, when Keter was on the march? Could he truly justify, the
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Grey Pilgrim asked himself countenance refusing such an offer of peace?
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Refuse it when it delivered all he asked save for a knife at the throat
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of the very woman offering it -- a knife, it must be said, that he now
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stood little chance of obtaining no matter his decision. The scope of
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the scales, Tariq thought, were close to beyond his ability to grasp.
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The Black Queen that could be would be the end of Calernia. Between the
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Kingdom of the Dead and the Kingdom of the East, the continent would be
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made a ruin of endless war. Yet in combating the Black Queen that could
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be, was he blinding himself to the truth of the Black Queen that was?
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Could there be any justification for the tossing away of the only
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pattern of three he would ever have with Catherine Foundling? There
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might not be another way to kill her if she further grew beyond Tariq's
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means. By staying his hand he might be letting slip an entity he could
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no longer put down.
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In refusing an offer of peace from Callow when the Dead King was on the
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march, was he not aiding the Hidden Horror regardless of all other
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concerns?
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Innocents were going to die.
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Innocents \emph{had} died, some by his own design.
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The Ophanim were at his side, helping his tired old bones stand
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straight, and though in their whispers there was sorrow there was also
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something other. Trust. They trusted him, the murmurs said, to make the
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choice. They had seen as he saw, tread in his wake for the seemingly
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endless days and night he had been the Peregrine. They'd been at his
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shoulder for his every mistake, his every bitter triumph, and still they
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trusted. Sometimes that was the only reason he woke with dawn, the
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knowledge that hand in hand they could still do more. Sometimes that was
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the weight that pressed down on his chest and choked his lungs, the
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strain of that unearthly trust. Tariq had tread with angels in his wake
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for so long he'd forgot how it had felt before.
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``Should you not have answers?'' he asked, voice choked. ``Are you not
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the Watchers Kindly, the burning wisdom of many eyes?''
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\emph{Old friends}, he thought, \emph{help me. Help me see, for once
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more I am lost.} But they had no answers for him, would not take the
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burden from his shoulders. But they stood at his side, holding up his
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tired from, for in the end they were the Choir of Mercy and though they
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could not save him they would at least share in his suffering. Tariq
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thought of the city of his birth, suddenly, of that summer so long ago
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when the plague had choked it with death. In those days where it had all
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been so simple, when healing could be the sum of him. When he'd not been
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charged with clawing Creation back out of the darkness' hands, just to
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bring a little light into it. Tariq, who had last felt true warmth
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before the final breath of the woman who'd used to smile as she called
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him of no import, looked up at the sky and watched the star that shone
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there. Somewhere along the way, he thought, he had gone from bringing
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small lights into this world to bringing great ones.
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Sometimes he wondered if Creation was truly better for it.
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``Do you really,'' he murmured, ``trust me to make that choice?''
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The Ophanim thrummed. Agreement, absolute in that way only angels could
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be. The Grey Pilgrim turned to the Black Queen's messenger.
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``Tell the Queen of Callow I accept her surrender,'' he said.
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---
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``This,'' the Kairos Theodosian mused, ``appears to be a goat.''
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Hakram kept a calm look on his face, remaining as dignified as an orc
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could be while hanging upside down tied by the feet. The Tyrant's
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outriders had clapped him in chains and dragged him back to the League's
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army in them regardless of his claim to be an envoy from the Queen of
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Callow, though it wasn't until the Tyrant himself arrived that Adjutant
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was forced to watch a procession of gargoyles drag in a tall tripod and
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trip over each other assembling it for what had to be at least half an
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hour. He'd then been hung upside down from the centrepiece, and only now
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had his gag been removed.
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``Greetings, Lord Tyrant,'' he serenely said. ``I am the Adjutant, here
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as envoy from your ally the Queen of Callow.''
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``She wrote some very unkind things about me, Hakram,'' the Tyrant
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accusingly said.
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He tapped at the parchment his soldiers had taken from the orc's affairs
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along with the goat, the same missive he'd both penned in Catherine's
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name and been charged with bringing to the League when given the signal.
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The process had been more tedious than difficult: the barren plain this
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corner of Arcadia had been turned into meant he'd been able to see their
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columns arriving from miles off, though that hadn't quickened his
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journey in the slightest.
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``I am sure,'' Hakram lied, ``that they were meant in a spirit of
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friendship.''
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The goat he'd had confiscated looked at him and bleated, which the orc
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had to admit was fair. It'd been a hard sell. No one seemed to have
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thought to leash the creature, so it was ambling around this formal war
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council of the League of Free Cities at will and tracking cheap white
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paint over the furniture.
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``What kind of things?'' a tanned woman in dark robes asked, leaning
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forward with interest.
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``Magister Zoe,'' the Tyrant gasped. ``That is most inappropriate to
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ask. That man is a known spy, he could be peddling all sorts of
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calumnies.''
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The formal war council of the League of Free Cities, Hakram thought, was
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about as much as flaming wreck as he'd expected given the fractious
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nature of that alliance and the general reputation of the Tyrant heading
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it. The orcs jaw tightened when his suspicion was confirmed and the
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woman who'd spoken was revealed as a magister of Stygia -- what a
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dignified word for a \emph{slaver} -- thought at least it made placing
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the others easier. The gangly old man at the very right of the long
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table who was putting the proceedings to ink was likely to be the
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representative from Delos, a member of its Secretariat. The young ruler
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of Nicae, Basileus Leo Trakas, was recognizable as much from the formal
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apparel as the drawings the Jacks had obtained. The two richly-dressed
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men glaring daggers at each other should be the rival Exarchs of
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Penthes, the last two survivors of the shambles the Carrion Lord had
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made of that city's ruling class. A middle-aged man in ill-fitting
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armour was looking rather confused and kept looking over his shoulder
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like he expected someone to be standing there. The representative from
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Bellerophon, Hakram suspected. That left only one city without a seat at
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the table, though someone had nailed what looked like a tome of the Book
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of All Things to the back of a chair just to the left of the Delosi
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scribe. Interestingly, the Hierarch himself did not seem to be in
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attendance.
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``Lord Deadhand, it is most uncouth of you to be staring so at the
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honourable delegate from Atalante,'' the Tyrant suddenly chided him.
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He was, Hakram realized with horrified fascination, talking about the
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book.
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``I apologize,'' Adjutant said. ``I have never seen anyone from Atalante
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before.''
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Kairos Theodosian grinned, like he was mischievous boy, and leaned
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forward before lowering his voice to a conspiratorial pitch.
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``It's actually the Book of All Things nailed to a chair,'' the Tyrant
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of Helike confessed. ``I just have a gargoyle read a verse once in a
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while, I don't think anyone's noticed the difference.''
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Before a heartbeat had passed, Hakram had decided how to tailor his
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approach. Like dealing with a drunk Catherine, if the jokes about
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hanging people who irritated her were actually deadly serious.
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``Have you considered having a puppet made?'' Adjutant replied in the
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same tone.
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The Tyrant snorted out a giggle, his bad arm trembling under his robes.
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Hakram kept his distaste off his face: the villain smelled like sickness
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and crazy, both of the dangerous kind.
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``I like you,'' Kairos Theodosian smilingly said, but then the smile
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vanished like mist in morning sun. ``Is what I imagine she thought I'd
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say, anyway.''
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Hakram remained calm. The boy was unstable, but not without cunning, and
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Catherine had already taken the measure of him. She would not have sent
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him here, at the Tyrant's mercy, if she thought it would get him killed.
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``She does seem to enjoy taking up broken toys, your mistress,'' the
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Tyrant of Helike mused. ``A filthy habit that, if you'll forgive my
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language.''
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The villain cocked his head to the side, his sanguine red eye
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unblinking.
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``But by the looks of you, Hakram, you were debris long before she got
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her hands on you,'' he idly continued. ``Magister Zoe, what do you call
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it again when they just \emph{look} like a person but lack every other
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meaningful characteristic of one?''
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``Foreigners,'' the Stygian drily replied.
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The Tyrant of Helike shot Adjutant a friendly, complicit look with a
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grin that good as whispered \emph{see what I have to deal with}, like
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moments earlier the villain hadn't been feeling for a weakness with his
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words like water poured on glass in search of fault. This was, Hakram
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thought, a man as dangerous as he was mad. He smiled back, keeping his
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fangs hidden by his lips.
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``You really are a piece of work,'' the Tyrant of Helike admiringly
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said.
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``Pieces, by now,'' Hakram replied without missing a beat.
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The madman cackled loudly, and even a few of the others smiled.
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``So tell me about this goat,'' Kairos Theodosian said, ``and why it
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looks like it was half-heartedly painted just before it was brought
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here.''
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``And in wickedness does Evil sow the seeds of its own defeat,'' a
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gargoyle mewled, staring up at a page of the Book of All Things.
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Everyone ignored it.
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``Your ignorance is understandable, my lord Tyrant, given the recent
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isolation of Callow,'' Hakram said. ``This is not a goat: he is, in
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fact, a purebred Liessen charger.''
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Stares moved to the goat, which bleated fearfully at the sudden spurt of
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attention and ran under the table -- she smeared white paint all over
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the robes of the Stygian magister before being chased away with a kick,
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which Adjutant silently approved of.
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``\emph{She} has udders,'' Basileus Leo patiently said. ``Goat udders.
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Because she is a goat.''
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``Leo, you'll cause a diplomatic incident at this rate,'' the Tyrant
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replied, sounding appalled. ``Besides, my dear ally the Queen of Callow
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has personally sent me a mount. How could it not be a splendid destrier
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of Callowan stock?''
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Interesting, Hakram thought once more. It had been one thing for him to
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call the Tyrant of Helike an ally, another for the king to admit it. The
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orc had been under the impression that while there was an elected
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Hierarch, foreign diplomacy was their strict prerogative and to go
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against that would be treason. Yet none of the others seemed bothered by
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the implicit admission in the slightest -- which meant either the
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Tyrant's plot were known and permitted, or the Hierarch's authority was
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a sham and Kairos Theodosian was the true ruler of the League. Something
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many had suspected, including Hakram himself, but did not align with
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Catherine's own impression of their relationship.
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``I wash my hands of this,'' the Basileus sighed. ``Do as you will,
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Tyrant.''
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``So, Catherine wants us to take a crack at the Grand Alliance,'' Lord
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Kairos said, completely ignoring the other ruler in favour of Hakram.
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``Interesting offer.''
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There was a pause.
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``I refuse,'' he added nonchalantly. ``So, now that that's done with,
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tell me true: if you had to be drowned, would you prefer it was in wine
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or in oil?''
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``We were afraid you would hesitate to act, given the circumstances,''
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Hakram amicably said. ``No grudge will be held, I assure you.''
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``Circumstances,'' Lord Kairos mildly repeated. ``Such as?''
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``The battle ought to be over by now,'' Adjutant said. ``The Grey
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Pilgrim will have woven a miraculous star and broken the strength of the
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Firstborn, forcing my queen's unconditional surrender.''
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A pregnant pause.
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``She doesn't have that much give in her,'' the Tyrant said, red eye
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narrowing.
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``My lord,'' Hakram grinned, baring his teeth, ``I penned the letter for
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her.''
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The villain peered at him closely, as if looking into his soul, and the
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orc had to refrain from flinching. There was something\ldots{}
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discomforting about the intensity of that mismatched gaze.
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``It appears someone will have to saddle my goat,'' Kairos Theodosian
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mused, ``for we now must ride out in glorious battle.''
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