354 lines
19 KiB
TeX
354 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-44-small-slights}{%
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\chapter{Small Slights}\label{chapter-44-small-slights}}
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\epigraph{``Forgiveness is a scale balanced, nothing more and nothing
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less.''}{King Edward Fairfax the Fifth, the Hardhand}
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Aspects were telling, I'd always thought, especially those with harmful
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intent.
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In practice they tended to have similar applications, true, but you
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could tell a lot about Named from what imperative it was that'd
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resonated with them. William had found his principle in \textbf{Swing},
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which had been a branch sprung from what he saw as the most important
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part of who he was: the Lone Swordsman, the one who settled wrongs with
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a swing of his sword. Now take Masego, though, whose \textbf{Ruin} had
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crystallized facing the very Revenant before me. The first glance at
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that might lead one to think Hierophant was darkly inclined, and to be
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honest the thought had crossed my mind at the time. I'd led my friend
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into quite a few messes, and few of them pretty. The truth if it,
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though, was that Masego had been raised by the Calamities long before he
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became part of that other family the Woe had turned into. He'd learned
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their lessons young, even if they'd taken different shape in him than
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perhaps expected. To ruin something, for Masego, was to pare it down it
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until it'd reached the very edge of breaking. Until, in a sense, it was
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no longer a threat. That he'd draw the line there instead of going
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further into annihilation I liked to think was as much due to the
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empathy he'd been encouraged to embrace over the last few years as the
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cold practicalities taught him from the cradle. The lessons of the
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villains who'd crafted the Reforms, the Conquest: \emph{it is easier to
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subdue than eradicate}. Less costly, and war like all things was a
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matter of costs and benefits.
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Some were not so clear-cut: as in most things, Black was frightfully
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subtle under the veneer of overt simplicity. His \textbf{Destroy},
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seemingly a straightforward cudgel to bludgeon the Tower's enemies with,
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was a glimpse at what lay at the heart of the man. Someone who, when
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moved to act, would not tolerate any result but the annihilation of what
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had stirred him to violence. There was no nuance to the word, or to its
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effect, because in the end to him the world was split in half by the
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line he'd famously drawn for the Legions of Terror: victory and defeat,
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with nothing of worth in between. And so it was with that knowing in
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mind that I watched the Tyrant of Helike laugh his will into existence,
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the word he'd spoke ringing out in a way that had nothing to do with his
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voice. \textbf{Rend}, Kairos Theodosian had said. The splash of that
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decree was swift and brutal, the Skein's skull half caving-in as a tall
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antler broke and its right arm was so harshly snapped it came to be
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hanging by half a bone at the shoulder. Bones broke across the Horned
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Lord's body, though in a manner that was haphazard. It was tempting to
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ascribe that the Tyrant's whimsical nature, but I was not fooled. To
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rend something was not to destroy it, to break it or anything so\ldots{}
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thorough. It was to tear something into more than one piece, to wound
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it. To hurt it. But never, I grasped might be the essence if it, to
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kill. Wound and hurt and sow enmity, but never to finish the fight.
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Because that was the Tyrant's way, wasn't it? Always an enemy, a scheme,
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a betrayal afoot. Like a spinning top, if he slowed might just tip over.
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The deeper gold had vanished from the Skein's eyes before the Tyrant had
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even finished speaking, the Dead King leaving behind the corpse he'd
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inhabited without hesitation at the first indication of danger. It was
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the great rat itself that screamed in rage at returning to great wounds,
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all the while a swarm of gargoyle gathered in a chittering flock around
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the villain. I claimed a last inhalation from my pipe, and reluctantly
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poured over the last of the wakeleaf over the edge and quite likely onto
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some devil's head. Wasteful as this was, given how rare and expensive
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the herbs was out here, I'd need to intervene soon enough. Not quite yet
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though.
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``My I assume, Black Queen, that you have a stratagem?'' the Tyrant of
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Helike idly asked.
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Shaking the dragonbone pipe one last time to make sure it was all gone,
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I put it away in one of the many pockets of my cloak.
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``I do,'' I said. ``The way I see it, my Lord Tyrant, our trouble at the
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moment is that the opposition's got an army and we do not.''
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Below us, wading through the sea of devils still filling the courtyard,
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the Saint of Swords reminding why even at height of my brute power over
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Winter she'd put me to flight on our every encounter. The sight of that
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old woman wearing no armour save a tunic and pale tabard flickering
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through the tide of creatures was spellbinding, because Laurence de
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Montfort had sallied out to fight an army on her own and she was not
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losing. I watched her cut through the knee of some devil of smoke and
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stone twice the height of a man and broad as city gate, pass under its
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toppling form as it fell and take with three quick strokes the head, the
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arm and the eye of jackal-headed devils leaping out at her. The last,
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still living though half-blinded, saw its face used as a steppingstone
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for the perfect somersault she executed to evade the furious swiping of
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the devil she'd hobbled. It made paste of the jackalhead, the Saint of
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Swords landed precisely in front of the still-bellowing devil's
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overextended shoulder and with a cold sneer she severed its head from
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its body. She'd never once broken stride in all of that, nor had she
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overly hurried or strained herself. She was not using any of those
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wicked cuts I knew she was capable of, pacing herself in a display of
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utter scorn at the calibre of her opposition. Gods, if it was just her
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and the devils contained inside a ward she might not even lose.
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It wasn't just that, unfortunately. Which meant that the Skein's snarled
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order to kill us all had been followed eagerly by the devils, and while
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a great many of them were rabidly going after the Saint there were
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others who'd decided on different prey. Flocks of \emph{walin-falme} had
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come for me, at first, but after beating impotently at the ward the
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Rogue Sorcerer had put up in their way for some time they'd decided to
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take their displeasure to the source of the inconvenience.
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Leathery-winged and furious the devils converged on the broken balcony
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the hero had claimed as his perch, bearing armaments scavenged from the
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dead of the Legions and Akua's most loyal. It did them little good, for
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while he'd wielded wards when it came to ensuring my protection now the
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dark-haired man was going on the offensive. It was like watching a
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talented but self-taught musician at work, I thought, for while the
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sorceries he used were rough and raw the cleverness of the use and the
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breadth of his range were astounding. A swirling vortex of air that drew
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in a dozen devils was fed a cloud of bright yellow acid, earning screams
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as the creatures began to burn and melt. A large globe of translucent
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sorcery, much like the shields Masego was fond of using, formed around
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another pack and after opening a single hole through it the Sorcerer
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repeatedly shot sloppy but powerful fireballs within until all that was
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left was ash and slag.
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Of the hundred or so that'd first gone after him, at first simply
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\emph{walin-falme} but soon most everything winged and borne of the
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Hells, only half reached his balcony. Where they found the Rogue
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Sorcerer to have nailed small spike of silvery metal in broad circle
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around his position. Innocuous, at a glance, but their purpose became
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clear when he began pouring lighting in a stream above him and the
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spikes each drew a sliver of that flow in a sudden arc. By this sudden
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caging of himself in lightning, the hero caught the first wave and fried
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them in a heartbeat. Lesser devils fled in fright, but the
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\emph{walin-falme} had been soldiers for the Tower once upon a time:
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they were made of sterner stuff. They caught and skewered some of their
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allies, using them as shields to pass under the lightning untouched.
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There they found only a ball of radiant light that blinded and burned
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them, scattering them as the Rogue Sorcerer reappeared atop another
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balcony after dismissing a glamour almost fae-like in nature. The
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silvery spikes were still there, and in their wounded surprise the
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devils were in no state to adjust the new angle: then the lightning
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began pouring again, none were left alive.
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``Well,'' the Tyrant of Helike said, ``one must concede they have
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slightly less of an army now than they had an hour past.''
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We both knew that was a temporary state of affairs, though. Already I
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could see the Rogue Sorcerer's face was flushed and dripping with sweat,
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his breathing hard. Mages like Masego and Akua, who used the exact
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amount of power needed to make a spell function to the intended purpose,
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would be able to continue throwing around sorcery for longer even if it
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was of higher calibre. Roland, clever as he was, was bleeding power well
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in excess of Keter's Due and I suspected his natural gifts weren't
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particularly impressive besides: if he continued at this pace for much
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longer, he was going to fall unconscious. If he didn't continue at his
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pace, he was going to get eaten alive. Something of an issue, that.
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Meanwhile, the Saint had been forced to give ground by the sheer mass of
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bodies being thrown at her -- you could not, after all, manoeuvre around
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tidal wave of flesh and claws. After that her cuts began tearing at the
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fabric of this realm, leaving those sharp arcs behind and changing
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retreat into brutal stalemate, but that was effectively flipping the
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hourglass on how long remained until her aging body caught up to her.
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Still, it was almost absurd how well they'd done. Oh they had a story at
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their back, enough to earn a nudge or two -- buying time for an ally
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against hopeless odds -- but most of that was still simply that there
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were \emph{very} good at killing things. Devils in particular, I
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suspected. Above did not send its champions out into the world without
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first doling out a few tricks aimed at Below's favourite instruments.
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``It's not a battle where there's only one host,'' I chided. ``Proper
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form, Kairos.''
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``My apologies, Catherine,'' the boy grinned. ``Quite right, quite
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right. And where do you intend to acquire such an army?''
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``One was helpfully provided,'' I murmured, looking down at below. ``Yet
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I need someone to be nuisance, if you will. Just horribly inconvenient
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in every way.''
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``At last, my day has come,'' Kairos Theodosian gravely said.
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I could almost feel the eagerness boiling in his veins.
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``How long do you think you can grab everyone's attention?'' I asked.
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``Do you have a monologue in you?''
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``\emph{Catherine},'' the Tyrant said, sounding deeply offended.
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``You're right, I apologize for even asking that,'' I replied. ``I'll
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leave this in your trustworthy hands.''
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``You are a dear friend and honoured ally, so I'll let it pass this
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once,'' Kairos said, waving nonchalantly. ``You may proceed, Black
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Queen.''
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I squinted at him for a moment. He was definitely going to be betray me
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at least once more before this was over, but it shouldn't be before we'd
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reached the end of this. And definitely not by selling me out to the
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Dead King, which should make this possible -- I was a lot warier of
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being disrupted halfway through by the Tyrant than one of Neshamah's
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brood of the dead and the damned. Now, to make my way through this mess
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on foot would take too long, even if I killed the pain in my leg and
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borrowed some hurt without looking at the interest. I could probably
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call on the Saint to carve me a quicker path, but that'd make my
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intentions obvious: which, given that the Dead King could be looking
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through anyone's eyes and could intervene through any of them, was the
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same as dooming my scheme. I had another way, of course, though it
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wasn't impossible he'd prepared for that. Couldn't call on the Sisters
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for it, though, since the more I asked them to intervene the higher the
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chances Neshamah would get his hands on slivers of Sve Noc with all the
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disastrous consequences that entailed. Sloppy and imprecise it was then.
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``Kind of you, my Lord Tyrant,'' I said, and stepped off the ledge.
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The Mantle of Woe and my unbound hair both flapped as I fell, but my
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attention was on the Night coursing through my veins. \emph{Like
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threading a needle}, I thought. The cloth was thinner than I was used to
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and the window to get it right would be slight, but I still had faint of
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memories of what it felt like to have that inborn knack Winter had leant
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me. Darkness spread out like an inky pool beneath me, a handful of the
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Tyrant's gargoyles curiously following me with eager cries and also much
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less endearing knives. I dropped into the dark, and for a moment it felt
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like plunging into cool, deep water. From the moment I touched the edge
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of the gate, I had less than a heartbeat to align it properly with the
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gate out. It was hard to describe, the act if putting it together. Like
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catching a faint spot of light in a dark cave that told you where the
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way out was, though that realization had to be paired with the instant
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act of will to move there lest the way out be botched. Or worst, lost.
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But I had it, near perfect, and-
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``\textbf{Wind},'' the Skein susurrated, great golden eyes like lanterns
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in the gloom.
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I tumbled out cursing in Kharsum, well to the side of where I'd been
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aiming for. That godsdamned rat, if I didn't have a stripe of its fur as
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my cloak's collar by the end of this I'd eat my boots. It took me a
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heartbeat to get my bearings, which didn't improve my mood any: I'd
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meant to come out near Black and the Good King, but instead I was
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hip-deep in \emph{akalibsa} on the east side of courtyard. Devils who
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had most definitely heard me swearing, form the way their houndlike
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faces turned to me. Armed and armoured in stone as they were I did not
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count them as a great threat, but given enough anything they could be
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trouble. Either I was going to have drawing on Night again, which was
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playing with fire when I had two large workings ahead of me, or-
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``Ladies, gentlemen, other assorted beings,'' Kairos Theodosian said.
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``If I may have your attention?''
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I suspect they might have ignored him, if the grounds beneath the Skein
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had not exploded in the moment that followed. I spared a glance at the
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mess of broken stone and dust that had appeared without warning, eyes
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narrowing when I glimpsed dirtied snow in there. Hells, had he just
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weakened the barrier between this place and Creation to the extent
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there'd been an impact? Had he done that precisely enough to use it as a
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weapon? How had he -- no, no time for that right now. The
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\emph{akalibsa} had turned towards the noise, and when they returned
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their attention to me they found I'd disappeared. Under glamour covering
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sight and scent I began limping to the nest where the Skein had laired,
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and the two men waiting there: one a corpse, one a soul. King Edward had
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remained unmoving throughout the entire skirmish, eyes calmly gazing at
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his surroundings as he openly kept watch on both my teacher and the sack
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filled with crowns. Which had yet to be destroyed, interestingly enough.
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That implied either that Neshamah wasn't entirely opposed to my getting
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my getting my hands on this realm, or that there would be something
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dangerous in him or one of his agents breaking them. Leaning on my staff
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I made my way through the rubble, avoiding paths that would have taken
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me through knots of devils. It made the journey longer, but the Tyrant
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seemed to have things well in hand.
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``- worry not, my blessed brethren,'' the Tyrant of Helike thundered,
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``I will be a merciful king, should any of you survive --''
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Another chunk of the courtyard went up in noise and smoke. Though it
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didn't seem to be killing many of the devils and had only angered the
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Skein even further, it certainly seemed to be commanding their
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attention. Near everything dead or spawned of Hell was now trying to put
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down a cackling Kairos, who was weaving erratically in the air without
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having ever left his throne. Slipping across the strewn stones, I snuck
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up on Black and the Revenant from the side. With the horde going after
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the Tyrant I'd been able to put some spring to my limp, and climbing
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over some large block of granite I finally reached the broken stairs
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where they'd been waiting this whole time. The Good King twitched like
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he was trying to speak, but words never came out. A heartbeat later
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seven wooden pillars began forming around me, glamoured or not, and
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\emph{shit} that was bad. I'd seen this hold the Princess of High Noon,
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and these days I was just a mortal with too much mouth and prayer. The
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moment the runes came up I'd be stuck. I managed to sneak my hand into
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my cloak just as four eldritch runes began to glow around me, linked by
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a faint circle of light. Frozen in place, I let out a sigh as my glamour
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shattered like glass.
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``Hierophant's own magic,'' I said. ``Ironic, I'll grant.''
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``The Abomination was awaiting one of you making for the crowns,'' King
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Edward Fairfax calmly told me. ``And hindered my own attempt to warn
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you, Queen Catherine. Still, I give you greeting. It has been some time
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since we last spoke, yet I see you have not been idle.''
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My teacher was watching us, missing nothing, and if he was surprised by
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what had just been said his face showed no sign of it.
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``Same to you, Your Majesty,'' I said. ``Didn't think he'd let you of
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Keter, to be honest.''
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``It was something of a surprise to me as well,'' the Revenant said,
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``though I do not pretend to grasp the thoughts of that monstrous
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creature.''
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He might not, I thought, but through him I might be able to grasp a
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thing or two. Through what Neshamah did and did not prevent him from
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doing, watching as he no doubt was through the dead Fairfax. Best to
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flush out all I could before striking.
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``- kneel in abject submission, and you will be granted the mercy for
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which I am well-known-''
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Another deafening burst, though sooner or later that trick would run
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out.
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``I don't suppose you know what he actually wants from this place, do
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you?'' I asked. ``It can't be the original notion of crashing it into
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Iserre, that'd be pitting him against a band of five. He might win that,
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of course, but there's no real \emph{winning} that if you understand
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what I mean.''
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And, more than anyone else on Calernia, the King of Death had to be wary
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of trading early victories for later disasters. There was no one else
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with as expansive a meaning for later, after all. And, as the way the
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knowledge of the Bard had become widespread in our age proved, it'd
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become a lot harder to bury knowledge after it'd been spread nowadays.
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``If I could aid you I would,'' the Revenant said, tone regretful.
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The gold of his eyes had not deepened, but then I was hardly a novice at
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the sleight of hand. He was in there, and it might just have been him
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speaking the right words to suggest I shouldn't pursue this line of
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conversation, that there was nothing to gain from it. Too neatly done.
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Which meant I had my opening, and even digging for more wasn't worth
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letting the opportunity slip. My fingers couldn't move, frozen as they
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were by the binding, and my power was bound as well. But the small
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carved wishbone was held in my hands and that was enough. Its power,
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after all, was not mine. Not bound.
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``Abscond,'' I said, my voice lacking power.
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But the wishbone broke, and it was enough: a trail of stars guiding me,
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I slid out of the binding and my steps took me right behind the Good
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King. I laid a hand on him a grinned, all teeth and malice.
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``O Sve Noc,'' I said. ``Judge me worthy on this night, that I may take
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the dead from death.''
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Night poured into the man who had once been King Edward Fairfax, and
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with wicked laughter Sve Noc began to wrestle away rule over the
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Revenant.
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