375 lines
19 KiB
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375 lines
19 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-repudiation}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Repudiation}\label{interlude-repudiation}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-repudiation}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Repudiation}
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\epigraph{``It is written that the Hidden Horror sent envoy to the Iron King
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Tancred, threatening that should he not strike the banners over Hannoven
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and open the gates the city would be stormed and burned to ash. So did
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Tancred Papenheim then send back a single torch, with on the side
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engraved three words: `if you can'.''}{Extract from `Crowned In Iron', a compendium of Lycaonese histories
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assembled by Prince Alexandre of Lyonis}
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It was like watching two enemy Hells trying to devour each other.
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The Revenant -- stolen from the Dead King, she'd thought, by the grim
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patrons of the Black Queen -- that had once been a king of Callow spoke
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in a voice like a clarion call and the dead of this accursed place
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answered. Laurence watched, jaw clenched, as a coursing tide of wraiths
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made of silver and shade rose from the scarred ground. Mere dozens,
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first, but that swelled into hundreds and then thousands before more
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than a handful of heartbeats had passed. Those were not soldiers, the
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Saint saw. There were children and elderly among them, men and women
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whose hazy silhouettes bore no arms save angry hands. And oh, how angry
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they were. The rage of them was a clamour and a song, the weight of it
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making the air feel taut. Thousands of voices, of silhouettes, moving
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like a seething river of souls to tear at devils and dead alike.
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Laurence splattered the blood of another devil on the ground with a
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flick of the wrist, catching its clumsy strike and sending its head
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tumbling down with the riposte, and without hesitation began to move.
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Not towards the Black Queen, whose lone silhouette was surrounded by an
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island of stillness, or the other Revenant. No, roughly forcing aside
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any spirit that in their advance got in her way Laurence de Montfort
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headed for the imprisoned soul of the Carrion Lord.
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She'd seen it when they first broke through the maze of the Skein, still
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pilloried in that clever silver artefact the Sorcerer had crafted for
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them, and she could not allow it to be claimed by anyone else's hands.
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Allowing the Tyrant to keep it was pointless -- even when Theodosian had
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stolen it earlier he'd not proved to be a least a modicum useful by
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destroying the soul himself -- and it was out of the question for
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Foundling to be allowed to reclaim the Black Knight. Tariq had allowed
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himself to savour the taste of hope for the first time in too long, and
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grow drunk off it, but Laurence would not lower her guard so easily. It
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was difficult to advance, to the Saint's displeasure, for though the
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wraiths were but lesser dead and ignored her even when jostled they
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streamed forward heedlessly. It was like swimming in death, and more
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than once Laurence found her sight obscured by the flows. The devils
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who'd been in the courtyard were ripped apart within moments, she'd
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seen, harsh hands clawing at them and wailing mouths biting down on
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flesh. The Skein was not destroyed, but from what she could glimpse it
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was being drowned in sheer numbers. Foundling, at least, had not moved
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from her perch.
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Stumbling over broken stones and just one more push away from beginning
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to hack at the bloody wraiths no matter the consequences, Laurence
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finally broke into what had been the Horned Lord's nest of ruins and
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found Amadeus of the Green Stretch still imprisoned. And gagged, thank
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the Gods for that -- if she had to hear a single other sly barb from
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that viperous tongue she'd cut it out of his mouth. Another company of
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wraiths flowed before her, cutting her path, and she felt like screaming
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but she was too close to draw attention to herself now. Only, through
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two passing spirits she saw a tall shadow standing by the villain. In
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the flickering lights she could not be sure, but Laurence could have
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sworn its face had been painted purple. Feeling her stomach drop, the
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Saint dropped all pretences of subtlety and harshly forced her way
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through the wraiths. Several swiped at her with angry hands, though when
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she continued pushing forward they lost interest and returned to their
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war instead of pursuing. She'd been too later, the Saint saw. The drow
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that'd been standing by the prisoner snapped closed the silvery artefact
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that'd been unfolded into a pillory, now no larger than forearm, and
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with an amused silver glance at her it took a single step forward into
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nothingness. \emph{Bordel}, Laurence silently cursed. That was
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Foundling's little attendant, wasn't it? The one she'd called Ivon, or
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maybe Iva. The Saint, fingers tight around the grip of her sword, turned
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her gaze to the Black Queen.
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She was still standing alone on the rise, that many-coloured cloak
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flapping around her from the wind of the wraiths flowing around her.
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Hair long and unbound, her limp grown more pronounced and nowadays
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leaning on some sort of walking stick, she seemed nothing like the angry
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mutilated child Laurence had tried to put down at the Battle of the
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Camps. Catherine Foundling had yet to strike a single blow with a blade
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since she'd returned to Iserre from her journeys, the rumours went. And
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she had grown more dangerous for it. All night they'd danced to her
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tune, the Saint thought, glancing at where the Black Knight had been
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spirited away before she could take him back, down to this very last
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note\emph{. You don't know what you're bargaining with here, Tariq}, she
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appraised. \emph{Setting a wolf on a tiger only has two beasts prowling
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the wilds, wounded and twice as vicious.} Yet the time had not come
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where Laurence would bare her blade to redress yet another mistake made
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by kinder or weaker souls, so her longsword returned to the sheath.
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Climbing up the mound of ruins, the Saint came to stand by the side of
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the rising villain of their age. The woman remained silent, eyes on her
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dead countrymen now taking the battle to the devils pouring out of the
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open hellgates. Among the horde, the crowned Revenant led the charge
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with a shining blade.
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``How did you know it would work?'' Laurence asked.
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The look on Foundling's face was strange, almost subdued on a face that
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seemed to have been carved from hard edges with the razor-sharp
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cheekbones and too-strong nose. Even grief looked harsh on a face like
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that, much better suited for the sharp grins and cold stares the Black
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Queen was infamously known for.
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``It always does,'' Catherine Foundling said, ``when you make it hurt a
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little.''
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Laurence's lips pulled back in disdain.
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``Does it sting that much, to have had to borrow another's hand?'' the
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Saint said. ``You've not been shy in doing so tonight.''
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Though perhaps it struck closer to home, that even being crowned in
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Laure had not been enough to give the warlord a fraction of the pull the
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long-dead Fairfaxes had on her people. It was no great endorsement of
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her reign, that she'd had to use the name and Name of another for that
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working.
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``This city is a mass grave dug by my failures,'' the Black Queen
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replied, tone remote. ``And yet here I am, walking its grounds once
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more. How many more, I wonder, will it take before I have been made to
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look that failing in the eye enough?''
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Laurence hesitated, for though it was a monster she spoke to in that
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moment she sympathized with the woman more than she'd thought would ever
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be possible. Because this was not a smirking, victorious puppeteer
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tugging at all their strings. That distant bleakness she knew well. It
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came from the same place that had the Saint of Swords wondering what
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might have changed, if she'd arrived a sennight early instead of late.
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If she might have slain the beast when it'd taken a handful instead of a
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village, if she'd found Isodorios when the dragonblood first began to
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decay instead of after the red had taken him. \emph{What if}, that old
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and tireless flagellant's whip.
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``It'll never leave you,'' the Saint said, not unkindly.
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It was honest, which was the highest courtesy she had to offer the likes
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of Catherine Foundling.
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``I don't suppose it will, no,'' the Black Queen quietly admitted.
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There were a few heartbeats of silence, left unfilled by either of them,
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before the old woman grew impatient.
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``And now what?'' Laurence asked.
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``We're a distraction, Saint,'' Foundling reminded her. ``And I would
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say that the enemy is suitably distracted, at the moment.''
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``The Skein's not finished,'' Laurence replied. ``It'll take more than
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wraiths to put it down.''
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``See to it, if you'd like,'' the younger woman shrugged. ``Take the
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Tyrant and the Sorcerer if you please.''
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``You're not going to lend a hand,'' the Saint grunted. ``What a helpful
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hand you make.''
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Theodosian was probably enough on his own to entirely bury the Horned
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Lord's oracular insights instead of simply muddy them the way Laurence's
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own domain would, but it'd go quicker with a priestess or ruin keeping
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the Revenant contained while those of them better-versed in killing the
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dead put an end to the abomination.
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``I'll be headed inside, should King Edward succeed at breaching the
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wards on the inner palace,'' Foundling casually said.
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``Should?'' Laurence asked.
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``Depends whose wards they are,'' the Black Queen grunted. ``Let's hope
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they're still using the Diabolist's work as the base, otherwise it'll be
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like trying to topple a rampart by throwing eggs at it.''
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Further hellgates opened above them, devils pouring in. The victorious
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battle for the courtyard finished with the Tyrant of Helike, laughing
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maniacally as he shot streaks of a fire from a jeweled sceptre at a
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hissing and fleeing Skein swatting away the dead pursuing it -- they
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had, Laurence saw, ripped away great swaths of fur and eaten the flesh
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like hungry ghosts -- until the Horned Lord leapt over the cliff's edge
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of that was the end of the ducal palace. In the distance the dead king
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of Callow raised his sword at the sky filling with fire and brimstone,
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and grimly declared war upon it.
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The dead obeyed.
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Laurence waited. There was ending coming, she could feel it. And when
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the moment came, she would be ready to meet it as it should be met.
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---
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Tariq had faced many a villain in his time, and not always with Light
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and strife. Often words could bring greater good in the world than a
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harsher touch, if they were the right ones, and so it might just be the
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truth that there was no living on Calernia who had spoken with more
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villains than he. The quiet ones, he'd found, tended to be the most
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dangerous. Those who did not feel the need to boast or fill a silence
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oft had greater designs occupying their thoughts, and so proved more
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perilous adversaries. This was no cast iron rule, however. For example,
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it would have been a lie to say that Kairos Theodosian was not one of
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the deadliest Bestowed he'd encountered over the years and the boy
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simply could not stomach holding his tongue. Still, the tendency was
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pronounced and though the Woe were as peculiar a band of villains as
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their infamous predecessors when Tariq had first assessed the Archer her
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constant chatter had encourage him to dismiss her as an ancillary threat
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when she was without the guiding hand of the Black Queen at her back. A
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skilled and seasoned killer, mind you, with a way bow in hand that might
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as well be sorcery. But not a true danger, like the brilliant mind
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behind the brutish face of the Adjutant or the eerily innocent
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atrocities the Hierophant had it in him to commit.
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He had been wrong in this.
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While it was true that the Archer -- Indrani, as she'd casually
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confirmed she was named -- was loquacious, the Pilgrim had beheld what
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went on behind the smiles and the swagger and it had him
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\emph{unsettled}. The Archer's thoughts and feelings shifted constantly,
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mercurial as the tides, yet there was a bedrock beneath them that was as
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subtle as it was watchful. It had had taken him the better part of an
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hour, for one, to put the finger on what a particular association
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between a part of that bedrock and amusement directed at him meant.
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Namely, that the smiling young woman was considering she might have to
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kill him in the future. Without feeling so much as a speck of guilt over
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it. It would have been easier to swallow, Tariq would admit to himself,
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if the Archer were a coldblooded devil like some of the monsters wearing
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human skin he'd had to face. Incapable of joy or fondness in more than
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shallow ways, though it had to be said that no all such constrained the
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Pilgrim had met were monstrous or even particularly nefarious. Yet the
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young woman was not. Deep affection and something like an intricate
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manner of loyalty had bloomed in her, when she'd spoken with the Black
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Queen, as well as something he had uncomfortably placed as lust.
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Something more romantic in nature emerged when mention was made of the
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Hierophant, though it was paired with a manner of wonder that implied to
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him the admission there was still fresh.
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Indrani the Archer was, he knew by virtue of his aspect, a pleasant if
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hedonistic young woman would not even slightly hesitate to slit his
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throat if she judged him a threat or was asked to by someone she
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trusted. The knowledge was made even more unsettling by the way that
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wheedling information out of her was ludicrously easy, though the
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bedrock beneath that ease missed nothing of the nature of the questions
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being asked. Perceptive, this one, even though she was already on her
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second flask of Levante \emph{monteron} since they'd left the rest of
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the band. That she remained mostly sober after drinking that much hard
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liquor was notable even in one Bestowed, though given the appearance he
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suspected she had murdered outriders from Lord Marave's army for them.
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Possibly she had killed them entirely for the flasks, for her fieldcraft
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was not the kind anyone with mundane eyes would easily see through no
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matter how skilled those eyes.
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``- so we signed it as `the King of Winter', since none of us knew the
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name, but the real important part here is that she called me a sullen
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wench,'' Archer said. ``\emph{Sullen}, really, can you believe that? The
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nerve of her sometimes.''
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Tariq set aside a concern, namely that he had been repeatedly
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outmanoeuvered by a young woman whose notion of a ruse fit to enter the
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seat of the Winter Court was a lie so blatant the fae would hesitate to
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call her out on it, and addressed a more pressing one. Such as the fact
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that, while Indrani was gesticulating, she was not keeping both hands on
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the sheer cliff they were climbing. Something of an issue, as she was
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the lead climber but if she fell the same rope she used to help him up
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would help drag him down to his death.
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``Should you truly be this cavalier with the handholds?'' he asked in a
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strangled tone.
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``Don't worry about it,'' Archer dismissed. ``We're almost there
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anyway.''
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``And that will be solid ground, yes?'' the Grey Pilgrim faintly asked.
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``Bit of a slope, but pretty much yeah,'' the young woman cheerfully
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said. ``Used to be a secret escape tunnel, when this was still Liesse
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the city instead of Diabolist's flying magic tantrum. Nobles, right?
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They're like moles, always digging tunnels to get out when the going
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gets rough.''
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``And you're certain it was not found by either the Diabolist or the
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Hierophant?'' Tariq pressed.
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``Like, at least half certain,'' she badly winked. ``Seriously though,
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it used to lead into Hengest Lake. Had to take a swim in there to flee
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through, and no villain could possibly take a dip in there. Cat says
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there was some spare angel corpse lying around inside.''
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``The Hashmallim that was tricked into perdition by Dread Emperor
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Traitorous,'' the Pilgrim agreed. ``It is well-known, in some circles.
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He was one of the only two Praesi rulers to successfully harm a Choir.''
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``No shit?'' Archer said, sending him a serious glance. ``Had no idea
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what kind of an angel bone it was, don't think the others did either.
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Anyways, Diabolist slapped a massive cliff in front of this entire part
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of the city when she landed it to make it easier to defend it so it was
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buried until Zeze stole it again. We're the only two people who know
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about the passage, as far as I know, which is pretty far `cause I got
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good eyes.''
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``No shit,'' the Grey Pilgrim solemnly confirmed.
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Though he was missing much of the context that would be needed to
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decipher the nuances of the information she had so easily volunteered,
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he was appreciative of the way she was dragging him up the cliff even as
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she spoke. Tariq was rather less spry than he used to be, and had never
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been much of a climber besides. He'd more than once fallen while
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climbing Sintra's balcony, though he'd never used the stepladder she'd
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once ordered set against the wall in what was very much open mockery.
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The Pilgrim glanced down the sheer cliff, not in the slightest enjoying
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the fresh reminder that was he was currently dangling down a rope above
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the height of storm clouds. If he fell down that, it would be more than
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pride and a planting of bluebells that would sting of it.
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``So who was the other?'' Archer asked, wedging her boot into a crevice
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and nimbly hoisting herself up.
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``The other?'' Tariq asked.
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``Praesi ruler,'' the young woman clarified.
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``Ah, that would be Triumphant if the old histories are to be
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believed,'' he answered.
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His tone was a little hurried, as the rope had grown taut with her
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rising and he'd done his best to follow her path.
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``Ah, Triumphant,'' Archer hummed. ``Now there was a real horror. She's
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always fun to read about, isn't she?''
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If one enjoyed pages depicting a procession of brutal massacres and
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subjugation, culminating in hubris so flagrant it moved not one but
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\emph{two} empires on the other side of the Tyrian Sea to wage war on
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her. Which Tariq did not, for all that the learning of history was
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important. Praesi histories tended to be sickening, as a rule, a parade
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of savageries always trying to exceed the last. Dread Empress Triumphant
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had been the worst of that lot by a fair margin, and one did not need to
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read of her attempted annihilations in the Chain of Hunger and the
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Titanomachy to be disgusted. Even the atrocities she'd resorted to in
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the cowing of the powerful Alamans tribes that'd dwelled on the shores
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of Lake Artoise were worthy of revulsion, and they'd been but a pale
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shadow of what she'd inflicted on Callow.
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``If you say so,'' the Pilgrim replied.
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Indrani did not pay his answer any heed, for she was making vaguely
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pleased noises and wedging herself against outcroppings -- only to move
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swiftly from side to side, rising up as far as the rope allowed and
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swinging a leg over what appeared to be the ground floor of a tunnel.
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She rolled back and helped up Tariq, putting those muscled arms to work
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hoisting up his wizened frame. They unhooked the rope, after that, and
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the Pilgrim wove the slightest sliver of Light into a globe.
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``You don't know the trick for seeing in the dark?'' Archer asked him,
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looking surprised.
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``The Light reveals many enchantments as well,'' Tariq told her, ``and
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subtleties that leaning on one's Bestowal does not. Best we advance
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cautiously, yes?''
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``I suppose,'' she said. ``Might be the Callowans put up some-``
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She paused, or perhaps it might be more accurate to say she was
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interrupted. Her senses were sharp, but Tariq had more to rely on that
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what his frail mortal shell could provide: the Ophanim whispered into
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his ear, urgent but not disapproving. Above them, Liesse shook and a
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rampant clamour was distantly heard.
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``Well,'' Indrani said. ``It looks like slow and careful just took a
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leap down that cliff.''
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``So it did,'' the Grey Pilgrim murmured.
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``Look at the bright side, Peregrine,'' Archer cheerfully said.
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``\emph{Nobody} does distraction like Catherine.''
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