372 lines
19 KiB
TeX
372 lines
19 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-49-cracked}{%
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\chapter{Cracked}\label{chapter-49-cracked}}
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\epigraph{``They who first look at the sun will never see aught else.''}{Helikean saying}
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It was just steel. There must have been thousands of longswords just
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like it in Iserre alone, decently crafted but nothing extraordinary. It
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was the work of some smith somewhere, not an enchanter or legendary
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artisan, so there was nothing to that sword that should allow it to cut
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into the likes of Twilight's Crown. Except, of course, that it was Saint
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of Swords of wielded it. Tabard trailing behind her, the old heroine
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crossed the room in three smooth strides and her sword arced down
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beautifully: the strike was like flowing water. And hit something that
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shouldn't have been there, a subtle glamour broken when Laurence de
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Montfort's blow scythed straight through the gargoyle that'd thrown
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itself in the way. The Tyrant of Helike cackled, high-pitched and
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delighted, but the Saint's blow carved through the stone construct and
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continued through and into the crown. I thought, as I watched the edge
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of the steel bite through chalcedony and mother-of-pearl, that if not
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for the for the gargoyle it would have gone straight through. Yet the
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Tyrant's stage trick had tainted what would have otherwise been a clear
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blow, and so instead the Saint's sword cut halfway through the Twilight
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Crown before it stopped.
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Not even a heartbeat of stillness reigned over the room before a torrent
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of power tore out.
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Everyone here had been in a scrap or two, so the raging tendrils of
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sorcery that went out did not score a kill the way they might have with
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less experienced Named. Reflex had me half-stepping to the side, still a
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swordswoman picking her distance for all my lack of sword, and dusk-like
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power howled through a bare few feet to my side. More importantly,
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having been close to the initial burst the Saint had been forced to
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retreat or see herself run through by a tendril. More than one, even,
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for a handful of howling streaks chased her even as she retreated, never
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slowing nor missing a step. Had her attack awoken something in the
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crown, some shard of sapience? A flicker of a look to the side instead
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showed me a hard-faced Rogue Sorcerer with his hands outstretched and
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his long coat fluttering in unnatural breeze, guiding the sorcery with
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sharp gestures.
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``Treachery,'' the Tyrant of Helike gleefully hooted. ``Treachery most
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foul!''
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With great flourish he presented his left palm, allowing one of the
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chittering gargoyles in attendance to place down a wand of what looked
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like pure gold on it.
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``Cat?'' Indrani calmly asked, eyes on the Saint of Swords.
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She was ducking and weaving, for now, driven back by the Sorcerer's
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trick. But it'd be temporary. I wouldn't trust means that feeble to hold
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back Archer for long, and Laurence de Montfort was her superior in
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several ways.
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``Don't kill her,'' I said. ``Unless it puts you at risk not to.''
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``Gotcha,'' Indrani nonchalantly said.
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In a whisper of boots on stone she slipped into the fray, the maelstrom
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of unleashed energies that had yet to ebb in the slightest. I'd expected
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the crown to either keep bleeding like a stuck pig or translate the
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wound into a single punishing torrent of power, but it wasn't indulging
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any of my expectations. It seemed almost like the lashing sorcery
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\emph{was} the wound itself, thrashing about the room in some kind of
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eldritch pain. A nudge from Andronike had my gaze lingering on the side
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of the cut Laurence's sword had made, a sliver of Night sharpening my
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sight. Ah. So it \emph{was} eating into the rest of the crow, shaving
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through a sliver at a time. It was simply slow and little at a time,
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though if we didn't settle this mess for too long we'd still be in
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trouble. The Tyrant's wand proved to be an artefact of some power, a
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heartbeat later, as he aimed it towards the Saint and spoke an idle
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word: streak of brilliant lightning went out, forking around an
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approaching Archer and striking at the Saint from both sides. Undaunted,
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Laurence de Montfort \emph{parried} one streak and smoothly ducked
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beneath the other. Just in time for Indrani's boot to catch her in the
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chin, sending her sprawling back. Three streaks of twilight-stuff,
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guided by the Sorcerer, snapped out at the falling heroine. One would
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have punctured her throat, by my reckoning, but Roland redirected it
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towards her shoulder instead at the last moment and that was room enough
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for the Saint to manoeuvre: she twisted on herself, allowing one of the
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streaks to hit her flank and using the pressure to adjust her fall out
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of the way of the other two.
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She landed in a crouch, slapped aside Indrani's follow-through strike
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with the flat of her blade and brutally backhanded Archer. I sucked in a
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breath, but Indrani had scrapped with Laurence before. She slid back,
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parried a probing blow by the Saint and adjusted her angle of attack to
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make the most of the support the Sorcerer was still providing. She'd
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make it through this, I told myself. I couldn't even hold it against
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Roland not to have put an end to this fight right out of the gate, not
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truly. The Saint had been a respected elder and ally until not so long
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ago, and even though she'd done so treacherously she was only going
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through with the fate he'd himself advocated for the Twilight Crown. A
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glance told me Kairos already had another artefact in hand, some sort of
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jeweled silver arrow, and was preparing to throw it like he was playing
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darts in a tavern. Yet it was the last of us whose reaction I was most
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dreading to look upon, and my eyes finally turned to the Grey Pilgrim. I
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hid a grimaced. The Peregrine looked as if he'd aged twenty years in the
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last twenty heartbeats, and given his age that led him at least one foot
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into the grave. His face had gone ashen, his footing unsure, and if he'd
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still had his staff I was certain he'd be leaning on it for support. He
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had, I thought, genuinely not seen this coming. Neither had I, though
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that'd been more because I'd expected the Pilgrim to seem more worried
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if it was a possibility and he hadn't been. I could almost hear my
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father chiding me for relying on second-hand knowledge without having
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contingencies in place accounting for it being false.
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``Pilgrim,'' I said.
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He did not reply, eyes clouded as he watched the Saint of Swords
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cleverly snap out of Indrani's longknives out of her grasp, catch it
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with her free hand and smash the pommel into Archer's cheek. A moment
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later the Tyrant's strange arrow struck at her with a keening sound, and
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though she flicked her blade back in time to cut through it barely
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helped: at the moment of impact, the arrow broke and a dozen sharp darts
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of wind exploded out. Maybe half hit the Saint's flank, scoring blood if
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no deep wound, though that didn't hurt her half as much as Indrani's
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other blade cutting halfway through her thumb and snatching back the
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stolen longknife.
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``\emph{Pilgrim},'' I said more loudly. ``This is not the time to sink
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into yourself, Tariq. Whatever grief you might hold, how many lives is
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it worth?''
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That shook him out, enough his blue eyes turned to me.
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``The crown is wounded,'' he said.
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``So I'd gathered,'' I flatly said.
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``You do not understand,'' Tariq said. ``The wound is permanent. It is
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part of the crown, now. And it will kill whoever bears it.''
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\emph{Shit}, I thought.
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``This from your Choir?'' I pressed.
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``Yes,'' he tightly said.
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\emph{Shit}, I thought once more, with feeling. I wasn't going to return
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for a sermon at the House of Light anytime soon, but in current
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situation I was willing to take the Ophanim to their word. We'd be
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killing whoever ended up putting it on, which disqualified Indrani from
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his discussion of succession as far as I was concerned. I'd already had
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enough close calls with death that I suspected I'd run out of ways to
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cheat it, and if I croaked it here too many things fell apart. That left
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who, the Sorcerer or the Pilgrim? It'd have to be Roland, I grimly
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thought. Much as he'd been growing on me, if the Grey Pilgrim died here
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the storm that'd follow would be massive. It was an ugly thought,
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turning on someone who'd been becoming a true ally, but what other
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choice was there? \emph{Indrani}, the thought came. I felt a sharp well
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of disgust at myself, both for her name having come to me at all and
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then my refusal to entertain it. Was it not rank hypocrisy, to demand
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this sacrifice from strangers while denying even thought of it when it
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came to my own? There'd been more than one reason villainy came easier
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to me than the other side's works.
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``It will have to be me,'' the Grey Pilgrim said.
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Night preserve me from godsdamned \emph{heroes}. It wasn't a righteous
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sacrifice it you screwed the people you were allegedly doing it for, it
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was just vanity.
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``No,'' I bluntly said. ``Don't be a fucking fool. Now, would you help
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us contain the Saint before someone gets killed?''
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The Tyrant had, while we spoke, thrown a javelin of red coral at
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Laurence. Poorly, for his arm was trembling and it was dubious he'd ever
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trained his body, so it flew errantly and skittered against the ground
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-- where it blew up into a storm of fire, a solid ten feet to the side
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of anyone else in the room. The Saint leapt through the flames,
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apparently deciding to take advantage the opportunity to shake her
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pursuit, but Kairos already had tossed out a large opaque orb of glass
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and it caught her in the belly as she went through. It broke against her
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and smoke poured out as words boomed out in the tradertongue, the smoke
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solidifying and trying to bind her limbs.
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``Laurence,'' the Grey Pilgrim called out, but his call was drowned out
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by the booming tradertongue harangue.
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For a moment I wondered if Kairos had planned it that way, before
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dismissing the motion. Though it was possible, in truth it hardly
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mattered if it was. I reached for the Night, wove a globe of it and sent
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it spinning forward. Though it'd do no harm to anyone, it swallowed the
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words that'd come from the orb like a pit of darkness swallowing even
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the sound of falling. Unfortunately it also took the smoke bindings with
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the rest, which I'd not meant for it to do in the slightest. Kairos
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protested, though I ignored him.
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``\emph{Laurence},'' the Grey Pilgrim repeated. ``Desist now, while you
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still can.''
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``Better dead than kneeling to the dark,'' the Saint of Swords snarled.
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``Do your-``
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The cold beam of Light struck her in the chest before she even finished
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speaking, and I almost let out a whistle. I'd felt that, the
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\emph{rippling} of it in the air. The Peregrine was finally done fucking
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around, it seemed. The side of her chest a ruin of burned flesh, the old
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heroine swallowed a scream and slid across the stone floor. Already the
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Grey Pilgrim was crafting fresh strikes of Light, while Archer ran
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towards our opponent with five streaks of twilight-stuff guided by the
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Sorcerer following hidden behind her. The Tyrant had a handful of
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gargoyles before him presenting artefacts for him to wield like a pack
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of chittering wee sommeliers surrounding an Alamans prince with choice
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vintages. With the Pilgrim having been moved to act, the balance of this
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scrap was sharply on our side. But was it, I suddenly wondered,
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\emph{too} sharply on our side? The crown was still falling apart,
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sliver by sliver, so we had to end this. Yet if this began a lone
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principled heroine standing against a band of five that was mostly
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villains\ldots{}
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``Give up, Saint,'' the Tyrant of Helike drawled. ``Our victory is
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inevitable. You might even say that, in a manner of speaking, we are
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invin-''
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``\emph{Kairos},'' I screamed. ``Don't you fucking dare-''
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``-vincible,'' the Tyrant finished in a cackle. ``Submit to Below and
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you may yet be spared, do-gooder.''
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It wasn't anything as obvious as Laurence de Montfort suddenly finding
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all her wounds had been healed, or a lightshow of power being shoved
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into her tired frame. Yet, just like that, as she was dragged by Kairos'
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latest bout of treachery onto the path of a story the Saint of Swords
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stood a little straighter. Her eyes sharpened, her footing grew more
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assured.
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``Archer, retreat-'' I yelled.
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But it was too late. Indrani's first blade extended as her whole arm
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outstretched and she place the point of her longknife at the Saint's
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back with blinding quickness. Just not quite quick enough. Laurence took
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a half-step to the side, letting her pass, and cut off her arm the
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wrist. She would have flicked the blade a second time and taken Archer's
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head, if not for the Sorcerer's quick divesting of twilight-streaks
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forcing her to withdraw a step back. The Pilgrim's gleaming Light caught
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her a moment later, but with hard eyes she carved right through and
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leapt up. The Tyrant and I struck at the same time, his green jade baton
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sending out a swarm of green insects at the Saint as I wove Night into
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dense flecks and sent them out at her. But it was like, I realized,
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tossing logs into a fire. The insects -- each one made of jade, I only
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then caught -- found a cut in the air that warded their approach save
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for those that impacted it and found themselves cut through. I'd formed
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four flecks of Night and the Saint almost contemptuously cut through
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only one, though at exactly the right time for the detonation that
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ensued to catch the other three. Her right boot landed on the Rogue
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Sorcerer's face a moment later and he went down like a sack of beets
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from the hit. Hells, that'd gone south in a hurry. Unlike the heroes and
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possibly even myself, Kairos had to know that the Saint would kill him
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in a heartbeat if she could. So why would he throw the fight this way?
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I glanced at the Tyrant of Helike and found his gaze, half of it red as
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fresh blood, resting on my ebony staff. Kairos grinned when I caught
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him, utterly unrepentant. I found myself wishing I'd succeeded at
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cutting his throat instead of blackening his eye. The Pilgrim had chosen
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to prevent Indrani bleeding out instead of pursuing the offensive, to my
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relief, and as she held her severe hand to the stump with gritted teeth
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one of the greatest living healers of Calernia began to put it all back
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together. Good. Archer might make it back into the fight, I just needed
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to use Kairos and my own talents to hold until we could turn this
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around. The Saint should be coming for either of us by now. As it
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happened, Laurence de Montfort rose from the smooth crouch she'd landed
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in after tumbling past the unconscious Sorcerer. She glanced at me,
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calmly, and then her gaze swept the rest of the room. It came to rest on
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the crown, and without a word she ignored us and went straight for it.
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Oh Hells. It might be, I knew, that finishing the cut would only break
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this realm and spare us all either death or bargain.
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Or it might mean the death of hundreds of thousands.
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``Slow her,'' I ordered the Tyrant.
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My tone was harsh enough he did not argue. The unpleasant truth was that
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I did not have the means to contain someone like Laurence de Montfort.
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Every trick left in my arsenal derived from the patronage of Sve Noc,
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whose blood-drenched path to apotheosis made the exact kind of power
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that someone like the Saint of Swords had been meant to put down. Maybe
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if I'd been quick enough to think of it earlier all of us save Archer
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could have let ourselves be `beaten' and she could have duelled the
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Saint with something close to even footing. But at this point trying to
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use numbers to bring her down was effectively using the same tactics
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that'd led a horde of devils to swarm this very heroine barely an hour
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ago. The result back then had been providing the Saint of Swords with a
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lot of bodies to cut, and I had no reason to believe this would go any
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differently. I couldn't contain her or defeat her, and maybe if I had
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longer I might be able to figure out another way to get this done but I
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didn't have the time. So either I bent, and let her toss the dice with
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the lives of three great armies and most of Iserre besides.
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That, or I killed her.
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Breathing out, I began to limp forward even as Kairos tossed priceless
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old artefacts in the Saint's way like they were apple cores. My staff I
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raised, and abandoned the delusion that it had ever been one. Night
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roiled and the ebony fell to ash, leaving behind only a sword in a
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scabbard. The latter was an ornate thing, unlike most I'd borne in my
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time. Carved obsidian, depicting the tale of the fool girl who'd made
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accord with the Night. The blade had not once unsheathed waited within
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as my fingers tightened around the scabbard. Its long handle was onyx
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and amethyst, stones chosen for one's facility in holding power and the
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other's aptitude for bridging the mortal and the divine through
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communion. Kairos had, against all odds, succeeding at expending enough
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of his inherited trove of treasures to force the Saint to step back. She
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still stood by the throne's side, some sort of shining panels of sorcery
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standing between her and the crown, but my advance drew her eyes went to
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me. My hobbling had taken me ahead of all the others, and at my approach
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she smiled a hard smile.
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``A duel, is it?'' Laurence de Montfort said.
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I lowered the scabbard to my side, right hand gripping the grip.
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``Stand down,'' I said, offering once last chance. ``Stand down, and we
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can still end this with words instead of blood.''
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``Some bargains compromise the very heart of what you are,'' the Saint
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replied. ``You'll lose, Foundling. Call your minions back and let me end
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it the way it should have been done since the start.''
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I breathed out, steadied my stance.
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``You're mortal,'' Laurence de Montfort sharply said.
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``So are you,'' I replied, and for the first time since I'd left the
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Everdark I drew a sword.
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I'd gathered Night for months in preparation of this moment, not a
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single mote of it anybody's but my own. This was a prayer, after all,
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not a ritual. I was making an appeal to Sve Noc, and sacrificing power
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so that a miracle might be granted. And so, when my sword cleared the
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scabbard, it was revealed to have no blade. Night pulsed all around us,
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a living and breathing thing.
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\emph{One.}
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``What have you done?'' the Saint asked.
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\emph{Two.}
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``Nothing,'' I honestly replied.
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\emph{Three.}
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``Do you think I'll not strike you for being unarmed?'' the Saint
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snarled.
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\emph{Four, five, six,} I counted as she spoke, and she stiffened with
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the last. It was close, then. I'd wondered how long she would last. I
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touched me too, but Gods forgive me the touch was lighter than I'd
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believed it would be. The Dead King, it seemed, might have been
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terrifyingly correct. The Saint took a step forward, and I almost spoke
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but instead I close my mouth. It would not do to monologue, would it?
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Not when the end was close. I watched her skin tighten, grow sallow, I
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watched her limbs weaken and finally she fell down. A moment later and
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she was dead. Struck down without a trace. It had, from the beginning to
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the end, taken eleven heartbeats.
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And so in the heart of the prayer I had made, eleven years had passed.
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I'd always known that I couldn't beat the Saint of Swords in a fight.
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What kind of a fool would fight a heroine forged of war through that
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which had forged her? No, I'd heeded the lessons of my years under the
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Black Knight and slain her through one of the few things the Heavens did
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not protect their chosen from: the passage of time. I let another
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heartbeat pass, simply to be sure, and only then did the Night's touch
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upon this broken realm withdraw.
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