476 lines
21 KiB
TeX
476 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-repurpose}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Repurpose}\label{interlude-repurpose}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-repurpose}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Repurpose}
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\epigraph{``Mastery is meekness, for it is the observation of what we are
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intended to hold. It is the art of the supplicant. Only through
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usurpation can understanding be reached, for anything less is
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servitude.''}{Translation of the Kabbalis Book of Darkness, widely attributed to
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the young Dead King}
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Firyal had died screaming, boiling heat washing over her. This she still
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remembered, sometimes, and in those rare moments of lucidity she knew
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terror. For while she had once been a mage some skill, the shackles
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around her soul were like nothing she had ever seen. A trained mind had
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allowed her to drift out of the dreams, once every few days, long enough
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to dread the return to that strange slumber where she only saw the life
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she had lived. Again, and again and again, for some obscure purpose.
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Perhaps, she had thought, this was one of the Hells. Perhaps she had not
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looked closely enough at all the bargains she had made, and some devil
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had gotten the best of her. So Firyal wondered, until she was startled
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awake by her shackles being ripped away. Freedom tasted sweet, for a
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moment, before she saw \emph{them}. Eyes above her, burning and
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unblinking. As if the sun had been imprisoned in orbs of glass.
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Unkindly, the eyes peered through the span of her life like a bored
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scribe skimming a scroll.
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``Useless,'' a calm voice noted. ``Pass in peace.''
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The sun in the eyes died and then there was only oblivion.
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---
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``This is an abomination,'' Laurence said. ``You know it, Foundling, and
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would still offer salvation to its architect?''
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They'd torn through the last defences surrounding the sanctum like they
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were parchment, between the Black Queen's knowledge of their lay and
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Roland's knack for taking down wards, but what had awaited them beyond
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the luxurious quarters and feast halls was an Evil manifest. At
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Laurence's feet, like lake water softly lapping at a shore, the
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translucent and almost shimmering broth of hundreds of thousands of
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souls was spread out. Above them there was only darkness for a ceiling,
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whatever foul sorcery was at work here having warped the nature of
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within into this\ldots{} sickness. It was silent in here, almost
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peaceful, and that made the sight of it twice as ghoulish.
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``Yes,'' the Black Queen said.
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She had hesitated, the Saint thought, for barely the fraction of a
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moment. The loyalty of that was laudable but made a sin against Creation
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by who it'd been offered to. To safeguard a poisoner against consequence
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was to share in the guilt of the poisonings that would follow.
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``Ah, well they were just Praesi,'' the Tyrant of Helike drawled. ``It's
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not like the Grand Alliance hasn't been having rousing discussions of
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their wholesale slaughter anyway.''
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The Saint hadn't known that, not for sure, but then she was not
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particularly surprised. Tariq's chomping at the bit for them to head to
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Salia as soon as this was settled now made a great deal more sense. The
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boy-villain could be lying, of course, but that didn't matter nearly as
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much as whether or not Foundling would believe him. Laurence's hand
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casually went down to her sword. There was a pause.
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``You're not even lying, are you?'' the Black Queen mused, her tone wry.
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She often used amusement to cloak her true thoughts, the Saint had
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noticed.
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``An issue to settle when this is done with,'' Foundling sighed. ``Pity
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for Cordelia Hasenbach is not something I particularly enjoy feeling,
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Kairos.''
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Did anyone? Klaus' niece or not, no one claimed the highest office of
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the Principate without climbing a mound of corpses. Some justly made,
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but others? Procer had grown into the kind of beast that would devour
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the best of intentions and taint them simply by being what it was.
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``I cannot assure our safety if we wade into that,'' Roland piped up.
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His eyes had never left the lake of souls, fascination and revulsion
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warring within them. Wizards, Laurence unkindly thought. Even the finest
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of them were only ever one swell of curiosity away from tumbling down a
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foul slope.
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``I'll be handling that,'' Foundling said. ``Where there is darkness
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there is night, and so it stands within my dominion.''
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\emph{No, not night}, Laurence thought. It was `Night' she had said,
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with a subtle ring of power to the word. Some blasphemous dark mirror to
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the Light? The Saint had believed the Black Queen's strange powers to
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come from a bargain made with lesser gods in the service of Below, but
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the sacrilege might run deeper than that.
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``And where will we be headed?'' Saint flatly asked.
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``Why, dearest Laurence, that ought to be obvious,'' the Tyrant of
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Helike laughed. ``To the throne room, of course.''
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No one humoured the madman with further reply. The Black Queen's staff
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struck the ground and before it the souls parted. \emph{And so},
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Laurence thought, \emph{it begins.}
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---
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Tariq carried light into the dark, as he had sought to do for most his
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life.
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The sliver of it was enough to push back the silvery sea of souls around
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the two of them, that tragedy happened and happening. The right to
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Behold the truth of things, that was the gift that had been bestowed
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upon him many years ago when he found his own base discernment too
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feeble a thing to rely on, but there were occasions where it was curse
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as much as boon. This was one, he thought, for not until the Heavens
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called him to his rest would the Grey Pilgrim forget this sight: an
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expanse of shivering souls, wounded and crying out from the sudden
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brutality of their demise. Shackled to Creation and kept in that torment
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of a half-existence, sorcerous bindings keeping imprisoned in restless
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slumber. And where someone else might see only the waters, Tariq\ldots{}
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Oh, he could see them all. Every weeping child, every terrified innocent
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lost to a death they had not even been able to understand. For all that,
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the Grey Pilgrim did not look away. Someone had to see them, to refuse
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to avert their eyes. And to free them, when the time came, for this
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\emph{would not be tolerated}.
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``Huh,'' Archer said. ``So that's what it looks like when your blood is
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up.''
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``This place is a blight onto Creation, child,'' Tariq quietly said.
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``You are no priestess, but your senses are keen. You must know it as
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well.''
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``He wouldn't have let it come to this, if he were in his right mind,''
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she replied. ``But that's what you get, when you push monstrously
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talented practitioner over the edge. They fall, and either they die or
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they make wings of whatever's at hand at the time.''
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``The attack on Thalassina is no excuse for this,'' the Pilgrim sharply
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said. ``It does not exempt the Hierophant from responsibility for this
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abomination.''
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``You don't get to make that call,'' Archer calmly said. ``He's not for
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you to judge, crusader. You take a swing at a nest of vicious
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diabolists, well, you get shit like this. If he crossed a line in
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defending his home and family then it's not the enemy that'll discipline
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him -- it's Catherine.''
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``And if she simply pardons him?'' the Peregrine asked.
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Hazelnut eyes met his own.
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``If you believe that, then your eyesight's worse than I'd thought.''
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The heartbeat of tension that followed was broken by the flapping of
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great wings. It startled Tariq into looking up, though he could barely
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glimpse the shape of the large crow in the gloom until it landed on
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Archer's extended arm. The pulsing thoughts and feelings of the young
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woman that'd he'd been able to behold until that moment were suddenly
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obscured, as if a shadow was being cast over them. The loss was
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discomforting, he'd admit, though that was a paltry thing compared to
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the black-winged horror perched on young Indrani's arm. Even a casual
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glance into those night-woven feathers was enough for him to hear
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distant screams. To smell fresh blood being spilled, as if he was
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standing by an altar where a throat was being opened. The Ophanim
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breathed into him and the haunting faded, though like a prowling beast
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it was not gone -- merely held at bay.
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``You sure?'' Archer said, cocking her head to the side.
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She winced before she was even finished speaking, and Tariq noted she
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never looked directly at the crow.
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``I always get stuck with the snippy one,'' the young woman angrily
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growled. ``Fine, we'll do it. Away with you, bird.''
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The murder made flesh flew above, and Tariq breathed in sharply when he
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saw its talons had left bloody marks on Archer's arm. He raised his
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hand, silently offering healing, but his companion shook her head.
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``The Sisters don't really do nice, but they don't bleed people without
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a reason,'' she said. ``The blood was taken for a reason. Also because I
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piss them off but Hells at this point it'd a shame to stop.''
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She did not lack courage, though the Peregrine found it regrettable she
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chose not to exercise it on worthier pursuits than recklessly provoking
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lesser deities born of ritual slaughter.
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``And what did the Sisters request?'' Tariq asked.
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``Masego's nearing the end of whatever the Dead King using him for,''
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Archer said. ``We can't afford this slow a pace anymore.''
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``We will hurry, then,'' Tariq agreed.
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Tired as he was, better exhaustion than inaction.
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``Ah, you're not getting my drift,'' the young woman said. ``Walking the
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road won't cut it.''
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``Your meaning?'' the Grey Pilgrim asked.
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``Snuff the light,'' the Archer said, ``and stay close to me. We follow
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the crow.''
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---
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Iblin had been so proud to be called to stand among the ritual even
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though he was young and not entirely schooled in the proper ways. Yet he
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had power to spare, and that had been needed most of all, and so among
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the circles that supported the Lord Warlock he had stood. But then it
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had\ldots{} where was he? There'd been a light, a terrible Light, and a
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voice had Spoken. This was not Thalassina, Iblin realized, this was not
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Thalassina and -- blinding eyes were staring down, releasing a pressure
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that had been keeping him constrained, and the relief lived only until
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his soul began suffering examination. Like an insect pinned and open so
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that the entrails could be looked upon, the last moments of Iblin's life
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were studied by that burning glare. He screamed, for it was an intrusion
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unlike any he had felt before. The presence had been calm, at the start,
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patient. But twice it looked upon the same moment, when the voice had
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uttered a word and the circle had lost control of the gathered power,
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and tried to look at the Warlock from where Iblin had stood but found
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the angle too stilted. The examination grew rougher, forceful, until the
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grip suddenly loosed.
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``Useless,'' a voice impatiently said. ``Leave.''
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Oblivion fell over Iblin like a blanket.
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---
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Like children wandering into the woods at night they moved in a line,
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everyone close enough to the one in front of them to see their back even
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in the gloom -- save for the Black Queen herself, who gazed into the
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darkness with seeing eyes even where there should be nothing to see.
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Under their boots the translucent liquid souls turned into solid ground,
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though only as long as they touched and not an instant more. The Saint
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had claimed the rearguard, for she would not trust the Tyrant to stand
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at her back -- even if he were truly standing instead of letting himself
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be carried by his ugly creations. She'd kept an eye on him in case he
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warmed to the notion of striking at the Rogue Sorcerer's back, whose
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earlier spoken sympathies had apparently convinced the Black Queen to
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place behind her. If this was a ploy, Laurence thought, it appeared to
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be working.
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``Catherine,'' the Tyrant of Helike said, ``I've a query, if you
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would.''
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``Do you?'' the Black Queen replied. ``Imagine that.''
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Laurence noted that their pace quickened at that, limp or not.
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``We are being guided by one of your crows, are we not?'' Kairos
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Theodosian mused. ``I can almost hear the beat of the wings.''
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The Saint could not, though she'd felt there was an air of carrion to
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this abominable place from the start. She'd presumed it to be either the
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souls of the dead or Foundling's own powers, though, not the presence of
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some old monster.
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``I don't have crows,'' the Black Queen mildly replied.
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She'd not outright denied having a guide, and the Tyrant hacked out a
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wet laugh.
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``And are you not worried, my dear friend, that so wantonly parading
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pieces of a godhead around the Hidden Horror will have\ldots{}
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intriguing outcome?''
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``If he wants to catch Sve Noc in the dark,'' Foundling said, ``I can
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only wish him good luck.''
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``I thought you might say that,'' Kairos Theodosian said. ``Which is
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why-''
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In a single continuous movement, gathering the power of her Choosing to
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refine her strength and swiftness, the Saint of Swords unsheathed her
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blade and thrust it through the back of the Tyrant's throne at the
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height where his heart would be. Always tempting to go for the neck,
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with villains, but while clever Damned often had artefacts meant to
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protect such a weakness they rarely bothered with more than a single
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layer of enchanted armour over their chest. The blow went straight
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through the stone and metal, but it was no flesh that was torn through
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afterwards. Lips thinning with displeasure, Laurence withdrew her blade
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and let whatever illusion had been laid over the gargoyle shatter.
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``Betrayal,'' the Tyrant called out through the mouth of another
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gargoyle. ``Betrayal most foul!''
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The Black Queen turned to gaze upon the mess and Saint took a careful
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step back. If the confrontation began here, then-
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``I really wish you hadn't done that,'' Catherine Foundling said.
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``He was about to turn on us,'' Laurence flatly replied.
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``Yes,'' she agreed without missing a beat. ``But now we turned on him
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first, and that means-''
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Light bloomed in the sky above them, chasing the shadows, and wreathed
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in a halo the Tyrant appeared -- carried by a swarm of chittering
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gargoyles, seated on what appeared to a measurably gaudier specimen of
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the throne he'd previously sat on.
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``- so viciously scorned, I am left no repose but to meet you all in
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open and honourable battle,'' Kairos Theodosian cheerfully announced.
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``Komena,'' the Black Queen murmured in that foreign tongue of hers,
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``sate.''
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This time Laurence did feel the devil, or rather her absence -- a weight
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there had been in the air vanished, even as light spread further around
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the Tyrant of Helike and he revealed what appeared to be a\ldots{}
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sword? Saint opened her mouth, but Foundling suddenly extended her staff
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out in front of her with a glare.
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``Do not,'' she hissed, ``accept that beginning.''
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``What say you, blackguards -- if you'll forgive my language -- and
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reprobates?'' the Tyrant shouted, openly gleeful. ``Will you meet my
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challenge?''
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The Black Queen rolled her shoulder, as if to limber it, and glanced at
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the rest of them.
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``Head for the throne room,'' Catherine Foundling said. ``I'm the only
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one who can handle what he's about to use, which I suppose is rather the
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point.''
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``How will we know the way?'' Roland asked.
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Foundling pointed at the Tyrant, or rather the light wreathing him.
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``You'll be able to see it soon enough,'' she said. ``Get moving. You
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don't want to be caught in the middle of that.''
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Laurence's lips thinned.
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``The sword,'' she said. ``What is it?''
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``In a word?'' Catherine Foundling grimaced. ``Hierarchy.''
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---
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``Well,'' Archer said, ``that's not good.''
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Tariq gaze upon the light rising in the distance, chasing away the
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shadows, and knew that once upon a time the stuff of it had been Light.
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It had been\ldots{} twisted, after, but the nature of it was not hidden
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form his eye. The Ophanim murmured in his ear, angry at the perversion
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but also \emph{worried}. This was a weapon, and a dire one.
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``The Tyrant of Helike has betrayed them,'' Tariq grimly said.
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``Cat said he'd planned to steal this entire place,'' the young woman
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said. ``I guess he's settled for making a grab at the souls instead.''
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``And this does not worry you?'' the Pilgrim asked.
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``We're nearly there,'' the Archer shrugged. ``Although we're going to
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lose our guide soon, I suppose. Out in the open in Hierophant's seat of
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power she'd be meat on the plate.''
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``That Kairos Theodosian could claim such a great bounty of souls,''
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Tariq clarified.
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``Cat's there,'' his companion replied, eyebrow rising.
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As if that settled the matter, as if the Black Queen was a talisman of
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victory. If it had been blind loyalty or even love, the Grey Pilgrim
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would not have found it half as unsettling. But it was trust, simple and
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deep. The kind he had never once seen one of Below's champions so easily
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extend to another. The Woe defied easy description, in both what had
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brought them together and what had since bound them.
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``Then let us proceed,'' the Pilgrim said, tucking away his thoughts.
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They moved swiftly, pace racing against the distant blooming of the
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Tyrant's light. And the found their mark, moments before the first rays
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chased away the lesser god that had been their guide and helper both.
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The Pilgrim and the Archer stood before a flight of tall stairs, roughly
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hewn and leading to gates of bronze slightly cracked open. Sorcery
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pulsed like a living thing, hear, a great heartbeat, and the wisps of it
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were visible in the air. Upwards they hurried and slipped through the
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opening and into the Hierophant's last sanctum.
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---
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Precision.
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It had always been about precision, Hierophant dimly remembered, even
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before this had begun. It was the fundamental failure of humankind, the
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inexactitude of what it could perceive in a world that was the most
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finely tuned construct in existence. And so they all puttered about,
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sometimes blindly feeling out a segment of the greater whole and daring
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to call it a theory of magic. And Hierophant had been blind as well, was
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blind still, but in his restlessness he had found what he craved the
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most: sometimes, just sometimes, he could see it all. Witness it in
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full. And so the impossible simply became improbable, and now he must
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fit all the pieces together. Perfectly, or it would be worse than doing
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nothing at all. There had been a need for tools, and so tools he had
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gathered.
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The souls of Thalassina, the fuel of his work.
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Broken Liesse, the foundry from which he would cast salvation.
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The Observatory, eyes for where his eyes could not reach.
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The secrets of Trismegistus had been of great use in leashing the souls
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and keeping them at hand, in shattering what he needed of Arcadia and
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making of it what was required. Souls alone were not enough, no, they
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were not. And so he had ruined the realm, and from ruin gained mastery
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-- aspect pulsing, breathing, pulsing. It was\ldots{} unpleasant. His
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body ached, and so he had withdrawn from it. There were simply too many
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distractions and the work could not brook those. It needed to be
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perfect. But it was not, even through the Observatory. He filled the sky
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to see, to find the shards and reflections of deepest Arcadia, but it
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was not enough. Muddled, the shards were\emph{, inexact}. Papa could not
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be made anew from that. And then it came to him, the understanding. He
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had the souls, those who had been there in the last moments of it all.
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He could see through their eyes, and where their own were imprecise bits
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of flesh his eyes would not fail. Only there were so many, many souls.
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And who else could he trust with this? No one.
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His mind drifted sometimes, moments were lost, but that was as close as
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Hierophant would suffer to sleep.
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The souls did not get him what he needed. Glimpses, yes, but incomplete.
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Not even his aspect could bridge so broad a gap. But ah, he was not
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done. Like jigsaw puzzles, those toys someone he could not recall had
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loved, he took the glimpses and put them together. Fit them until it
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could all be seen, and then \emph{again}. All eyes that could be found,
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for anything less would mean imperfection. Yet distractions came
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knocking at his door. Vermin wandering through the ruin, armies and
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travellers. Named, even, that resisted the storms he redirected towards
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them. Entities, sometimes, and those he spared thought to catching --
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there was always a need for fuel, for the foundry was ever hungry -- but
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they were slippery things and skilled at hiding in the shadows.
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Distractions, distractions he could not afford. The essence he extracted
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from the Hells had bleed and using old arrays he bound devils with it to
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put in the way of the vermin. No further thought was given than that,
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for Liesse was high up and defended. But now, now, there was assault.
|
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Things crawling in the dark, Named everywhere and even
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\emph{contamination}.
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|
|
|
Someone was trying to take souls, to rule them through law and faith,
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|
and when Hierophant had tried to swat them out of existence he had found
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the laws resisted him. They disallowed his interference and sunk further
|
|
into the sea of souls, poison in the well. One of the entities was
|
|
trying to contain this -- and was this not a familiar presence?
|
|
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|
\emph{No.~We cannot afford distractions.}
|
|
|
|
Hierophant had to hurry, yes. Containment would fail, contamination
|
|
would spread, and it would all be made inexact. The pieces were
|
|
together, though there would be more. If he kept looking, it would be
|
|
perfect. As he needed it to be.
|
|
|
|
\emph{It is already perfect. We must hurry, they are trying to break
|
|
it.}
|
|
|
|
Vermin, vermin everywhere. Yes, it needed to be now. Before it was
|
|
soiled. It all fell together, dozens and dozens of glimpses he had
|
|
painstakingly gathered, and when they were all fitted Hierophant
|
|
breathed out.
|
|
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|
``\textbf{Witness},'' he whispered.
|
|
|
|
It rang out, went out, and then it was \emph{caught}.
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' the Dead King whispered fondly into his ear, ``now show me what
|
|
it is that she's planning. Show me what the Intercessor seeks,
|
|
Hierophant.''
|