487 lines
22 KiB
TeX
487 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-54-lustrate}{%
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\chapter{Lustrate}\label{chapter-54-lustrate}}
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\epigraph{``A house can be destroyed by a fortune spent and twenty years of
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exquisite scheming; or in less than an hour with a single well-thrown
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torch.''}{Dread Empress Massacre}
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I didn't even step foot into my army's camp, knowing that if I rested
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for even a moment I'd drop like a sack of flour. Truth be told, I was I
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no state to deal with the Tyrant of Helike if he decided to get clever
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with me. I was very nearly out of tricks, dawn had come and exhausted
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was the demure word for how bone-tired weary I was. But Archer and the
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Rogue were likely prisoners, and that meant sleep would have to wait a
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little longer. I had, though, absolutely no intention of getting clever
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back at Kairos. If he wanted to have a neat little rapier duel, all wits
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and triple meanings, then I was going to stroll into his fucking camp
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with a flying fortress full of sappers. I would have specified the
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sappers to be bloodthirsty but Hells, when had I ever met any that
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\emph{weren't}? Even Pickler got that unholy spring to her step when
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told her latest devices would be unleashed on enemy soldiers. So no, I'd
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not gone to camp to pick up an escort or a detachment of soldiers that'd
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look as impressive as they were useless under the dawning sun. Instead
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I'd gone to pick up my personal diabolical possibly-undead tame thing,
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and also Zombie.
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``You are smirking most fetchingly, dearest,'' Akua Sahelian noted. ``As
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you only ever do when pondering unkindness at my expense.''
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``Not a single part of it was untrue, though,'' I mused.
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``Then all hail Catherine Foundling, fae queen of our souls still,'' the
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shade prettily smiled.
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I could only resent the way the way sarcasm was actually an attractive
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look for her, instead of aggressively spiteful as it tended to for on
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myself. There was probably some dark magic at work, I told myself.
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Zombie's saddlebags had been filled with the bare necessities, such as
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wine and munitions and a set of knives. And a pouch of wakeleaf, though
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it was the redleaf variant I felt tasted a little too strongly against
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the roof of the mouth. Still, considering Iserre was half a ruin and the
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closest town was several days of travel to the north it was a miracle my
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people had even managed to get their hands on that much.
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``Which reminds me, actually,'' I said. ``Either of you catch sight of
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Larat and his posse after they made their exit?''
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``No,'' Hakram said. ``And we did look, now that scrying has been
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restored. No one has a clue of where they've disappeared to.''
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I let out a reluctantly impressed whistle.
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``Larat, you magnificent bastard,'' I murmured. ``Good on you.''
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I raised the flask of tonic-flavoured Dormer pale towards the sky in a
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toast.
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``May you forever be someone else's problem,'' I said.
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The last of the wine slunk down my throat, gone cold. The toast and
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respect that went with it I'd offered without rancour, even though his
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slipping the noose had meant trouble for my plans. As those plans had
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involved carving him open inside like a fish at market, though, I found
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that to be fairly done. That one-eyed fox had wanted to stroll into a
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strange new daw unfettered and unbound, no matter the costs, and had
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gotten exactly that. For all that the once-Prince of Nightfall was a
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monstrous old bastard, in the end he'd beaten both Fate and his own
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nature to claim his prize.
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So very few of us could say the same.
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``I think he might have been my favourite treacherous lieutenant,'' I
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mused.
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Akua, without ever moving from her textbook perfect horse-riding stance
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on one of the confiscated Helikean horses, conveyed her deep and genuine
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offence at my words.
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``You can't be my treacherous anything, \emph{dearest},'' I drily said.
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``Aren't you on the side of angels these days?''
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``I'm sure some sort of arrangement can be reached with them,'' she
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serenely replied, after gracing me with a pleased smile. ``Perhaps a
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pact of some sort.''
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Hakram choked.
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``Are you suggesting diabolism be used on Choirs?'' the orc got out.
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``Finding the `morally righteous' equivalent of blood sacrifice has been
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something of a riddle,'' Akua candidly admitted. ``Priests have
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been\ldots{} less than supportive of my inquiries, when pressed.''
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``Try helping people,'' I suggested.
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``That sounds positively horrid,'' she said, wrinkling her nose.
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I was at least two thirds certain she was joking, though. I took another
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look at her face, then amended to half. It was a work in progress,
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though maybe one of these days I'd have to sit her down along with
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Archer for a friendly talk about \emph{Why Other People, Who Are Not Us,
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Matter}. Gods, I wondered if Black had ever been forced to have that
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with the Calamities. Not Sabah, I thought, as for all that she'd carried
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a ravenous man-eating monster within her she'd always been a decent
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woman. But Warlock or Ranger? Sisters, I'd pay good coin to have
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transcripts of that conversation. If Robber's band of marauders were
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still putting on plays, we could even make an evening out of a
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theatrical reading. \emph{Mean thou, Black Knight, that Creation be more
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than the navel at which I gaze so pridefully? Prithee, these be lies.}
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Godsdamned Ranger. The rising sun had begun to cast down unpleasant
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glare before we reached the edge of the League's maze of camps, no doubt
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making for a strange sight. There were only three of us, after all, and
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Hakram was on foot. His longs limbs and the tirelessness of his Name
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allowed him to keep pace, so long as riders shied from anything faster
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than a trot. We'd certainly not gone unnoticed, at least, for now seven
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detachment of troops were hurrying out of the sea of League tents to
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greet us.
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``Is that a bedsheet?'' Hakram asked, cocking his head to the side.
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The Helikean foot carrying what was quite likely a bedsheet stolen from
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some Proceran clotheslines, and therefore also the Hierarch's personal
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banner, moved faster than the rest. It seemed like every city in the
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League had sent some people to meet us, including a thick pack of what I
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assumed to be Bellerophan infantry significantly outnumbering everyone
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else put together. Gods, but the armour they wore looked like it
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belonged in some war two centuries ago. So did the thickly-packed
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formations they advanced in, formations that would be reaped by wheat if
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they encountered a few lines of Praesi mages or even some swift-footed
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sappers.
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``We are received in honour,'' Akua said. ``Queen of my heart, shall we
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proceed?''
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I breathed out. Could be a trap. Wasn't likely, considering Kairos had
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to know that breaking truce in any way at this point would see everyone
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else turning on him like rabid wolverines, but you never knew with the
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Tyrant. Just because he'd antagonized nearly everyone he could didn't
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mean he wasn't going to keep pushing his luck. If he were a reasonable
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sort of madman, he'd be a great deal less dangerous.
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``Let's,'' I said. ``As for courtesies to offer, I have only one thing
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to say.''
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Hakram's eyes found me, and Akua's brow arched in invitation.
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``Remember the first time I attended court in the Tower?'' I said.
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``Vividly,'' the shade replied, lips quirking.
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``Feel free to make that look polite,'' I coldly instructed.
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We resumed our advance towards the Leaguers, bearing no banner and
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offering no announcements. They clustered uneasily around each other, a
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band of mercenaries and militias and career soldiers whose allegiances
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were only loosely bound together by Named madness and happenstance, and
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awaited our arrival. It would have been customary to rein in the horses
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before them and speak, I knew. Diplomatic. I kept riding.
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``Black Queen, we greet you,'' one of the Helikean officers called out.
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Hurriedly, I noted, as we'd not slowed in our advanced.
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``You're one of Kairos','' I noted. ``Run back to your master, soldier.
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Tell him if Archer and the Rogue Sorcerer are not freed and in full
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health by the time I reach him, I'll rip out his fucking heart and feed
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it to Adjutant right here.''
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I jutted a thumb at Hakram, who gallantly displayed every inch of fang
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there was to display. I'd been told he had impressive pearly whites, by
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orc standards. It was a lot of teeth, and none of it friendly.
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``You cannot threaten-'' the officer indignantly began.
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``She just did,'' Akua daintily sighed, as if put-upon by the man's poor
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breeding. ``Best start running now, for we'll not slow in deference to
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the likes of you.''
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``Treachery,'' the call came from further down the field.
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The Atalante contingent, by the looks of the banner.
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``You knifed the rest of Calernia in the back at the Dead King's
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behest,'' I coldly replied. ``And are now breaking the same truce you
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begged for last night. You have exactly once chance to make reparations
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before every army on this field marches against you.''
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``Seeking extermination, this time, not surrender,'' Akua casually
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added. ``One does not \emph{twice} allow a rabid dog to run free.''
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Ah, and there was that Wasteland highborn breed of nastiness. I'd not
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missed in the slightest, though having it turned on my opposition was a
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refreshing novelty. We could have lingered further, reasoned with them,
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but that would imply that we were in less than complete control of this
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situation. That we needed to speak with them, rather than having granted
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them the privilege of being spoken to. So we resumed our advance as if
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we were untouchable, and so went untouched. No one, I realized with
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amusement, wanted to be the first to step forward. As much for fear of
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death as for the calamitous consequences that laying a hand on any of us
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would bring, I thought. However rude we were, they must be painfully
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aware they were a long way from home facing better and hostile armies
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more than twice their number -- and that there would be no swift retreat
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from Arcadia, now that the shard had been settled into a newborn and
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broken realm.
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So they moved aside, and two Helikean riders peeled off in haste to
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bring warning.
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I was too tired to properly assess the enemy's camp and so left that to
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Adjutant's watchful gaze, contenting myself with noting that just like
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the getting parties their tents remained highly divided. This was not a
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great army, it was a coalition of smaller ones. On the field, even if
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they had significantly greater numbers than either my eastern coalition
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or the Grand Alliance individually I would bet on those over \emph{this}
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mess. Helike and Stygia fielded fine hosts, but none of the others were
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of that quality. Arguably, now that Ashur had been broken the League of
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Free Cities was now the preeminent sea power of Calernia -- but down
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here, on the ground and in Iserre? Juniper would eat these poor bastards
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for breakfast, and she'd actually lost battles to the Grand Alliance in
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this campaign. It was only the prospect of casualties that kept
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everyone's sword in the sheath, and these days Kairos Theodosian was
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proving too much of a nuisance for that to keep being enough. Under our
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unfriendly gazes some attendants in servant robes came for us when we
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entered the edge of the camp, guides meant to bring us to the Tyrant of
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Helike and his `guests'. We followed, and so tasted the Tyrant's warning
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pulsing blindly and dimly in the distance. The same invisible current
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I'd felt in Rochelant, and again made as a sword in Kairos' hand. The
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Hierarch had returned, and though his ruinous leviathan of an aspect was
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still slumbering its presence could still be tasted in the air.
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Waiting until it could wake again, and feed.
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Neither of my companions had been exposed to it before, and I glanced at
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them in worry. Distant as the pounding was, faint like a sleeping
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dragon's breath, it still trembled in the air. Adjutant, though remained
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as calm as ever in the face of it. And as for Akua, she simply cocked an
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eyebrow.
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``Quaint,'' she murmured.
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``Quaint,'' I repeated, disbelieving.
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She smiled at me, golden eyes almost visible through the veil.
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``Whatever else I am,'' Akua said, ``I am a Sahelian still. What a
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shallow chalice this would be to drink from, compared to the many heady
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madnesses of my forbears. My blood has known great sweeps of lunacy,
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heart of my heart, and this kind is not so great I would fear it.''
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Well, who was I to deny that hard-headed arrogance couldn't let you
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fight the run of the world? I'd never truly understand -- could never --
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that hard Wasteland pride rooted in old blood and deeds always terrible
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and sometimes great, for it was a highborn pride. I was the daughter of
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orphanages, raised to Wasteland lessons on Callowan lips, and the only
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blood I trusted was that which my hand had spilled. But I would not
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fully deny the bones of Akua Sahelian's vanity, for it was not fully
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unearned. We rode on, until a great pavilion awaited us and the
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guide-servants bowed, and only then did I dismount. The shade followed
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suit, and without waiting to be announced we strode within. To my utter
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lack of surprise Kairos Theodosian awaited within, not the Hierarch
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whose slumbering aspect I could still feel further in or even any of the
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greats from the other cities of the League. It was grimly satisfying to
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see that even a jackal's grin could not hide the black eye I'd given him
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or his exhaustion. There were but a few gargoyles left to attend him,
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for near all those he'd brought with him in the seeking of Twilight had
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been broken by my own miracles. He was, I thought, slowly but surely
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running out of artefacts to spend.
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``Catherine,'' he affably greeted me. ``In a fine temper, I see.''
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We were deep in the Helikean camp now, surrounded by thousands soldiers
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whose loyalty to the Tyrant would be absolute. Unless we slew him with
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the first strike -- unlikely, given the faint whisper of sorcery
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lingering within the tent -- attacking him would start a fight I could
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not win. Yet my hand still itched with the desire to make a matching set
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of blackened eyes.
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``Archer,'' I said. ``The Rogue Sorcerer. They're in your hands.''
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``Honoured guests,'' he assured me. ``Kept safe until you came to fetch
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them.''
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``I have,'' I bluntly told him. ``Where are they?''
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``They've been sent for,'' Kairos said, ``though there has been
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something of a complication.''
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He could not lie, I knew. The Grey Pilgrim had seen to that. Yet he was
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not cripple in wits as he was in flesh and could easily deceive without
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outright speaking an untruth. Tariq, I thought, might have actually made
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him more dangerous. Knowing he couldn't lie I'd been inclined to believe
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him, until I'd realized he'd never specified exactly \emph{who} it was
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he'd sent for.
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``Complication?'' Adjutant asked in my stead.
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``Archer, while having peacefully enjoyed her pick of our bottles
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earlier, now appears to have killed her way through the company of
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soldiers sent to fetch her,'' the Tyrant sighed. ``She's now retrieved
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her armaments and is suspected to be coming to kill me.''
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``And you would know this how?'' Hakram asked.
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``There was talk of beating me to death with one of my own gargoyles,''
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Kairos informed us. ``Well, shouts to be more accurate.''
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That did \emph{sound} like Indrani, I'd admit to that.
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``Your presence has since been known to her,'' the odd-eyed king said.
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``One hopes it will be enough to stay her hand.''
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I inclined my head.
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``The Rogue Sorcerer?'' I asked.
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``Last I heard he was hesitating over which of the ancient tomes I've
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provided for his perusal he will keep. I've offered such a boon as a
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parting gift,'' the Tyrant said.
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Tiredness had slowed my wits, but not slowed them so much that I would
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not understand the implication here. The two Named that'd stumbled into
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his grasp had been treated very well, and there would be no trouble in
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retrieving them. They'd not been hostages, then, but instead a pointed
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invitation.
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``You wanted me here, obviously,'' I said. ``Here I am.''
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``Would you like a drink?'' he offered.
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``I'd like two days of sleep and to see you eat your own hand before a
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jeering crowd,'' I casually replied. ``Get on with it, Kairos. My
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patience wears thin.''
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``There is no need for us to be uncivil,'' the Tyrant of Helike chided
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me.
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Akua's head inclined towards me the slightest bit, a question asked. I
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replied with the ghost of a nod. If she wanted to speak, then by all
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means.
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``A surfeit of treachery is the mark of an insecure hand,'' the shade
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casually said.
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``Did one of your most infamous emperors not style himself Traitorous?''
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Kairos said.
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She laughed, rather cuttingly.
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``Traitorous?'' she smiled. ``Oh, youth. You are barely even a
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\emph{Malignant}.''
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Hadn't one of those started the War of Thirteen Tyrants and One? No, I
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decided, it'd been the First War of the Dead. Gods, the Praesi had had
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so many damned civil wars. Procer could try as it might -- and most
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definitely had -- it had a few centuries of catching up to do before it
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could even begin to rival the Wasteland in this regard.
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``Third?'' Hakram asked.
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``Second, of course,'' Akua daintily replied.
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``Harsh,'' he commented, undertone appreciative.
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``You are tamer a beast than I believed you would be, Akua Sahelian,''
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the Tyrant of Helike said, tone friendly. ``Learned to love the hand
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that cowed us, have we?''
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So he'd been able to see through that, had he? I was too tired to be
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afraid, and not certain I would have been even if I'd been well-rested
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and sober. Kairos could shout this on every rooftop across Calernia, if
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he wanted to: he'd burned too many bridges to still be believed.
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``I see now, why you so easily strike a chord with so many of them,''
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the woman who'd been Diabolist said, offering almost fond amusement.
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``You are, in essence, a poor man's Carrion Lord.''
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Gods, but I'd forgotten how genuinely vicious she could be with a turn
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of phrase. How easy it was, now that the sharpness had been dulled and
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turned to teasing and bantering insult, to forget that while I was
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playing in the streets of Laure and skipping my lessons Akua had spent
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her days learning to flay the pride of others with mere sentences. To
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play all the deadly games of the Wasteland highborn, those beautiful and
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elegant monsters with eyes of gold and poisonous tongues. Kairos' face
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tightened, imperceptibly. Were less tired, less raw, I suspected it
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would not have. But it did, and the woman who'd once been the Heiress
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saw the weakness bared.
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``So eager to offer insult,'' Kairos said, tone friendly. ``Shall we
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play that game, then? I know of the rules.''
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``Then you have played \emph{poorly},'' Akua said, scathing. ``Look at
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you now, Tyrant of Very Far Away. You pretend it power that you can
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greet us without the greats of your League but we both know different,
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don't we? It is an admission that if they see you bleed, they will turn
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on you like hungry wolves.''
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``Am I to take lesson from you?'' Kairos grinned, red-eyed and mutedly
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furious. ``Oh, that strikes me as \emph{folly}.''
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``I have seen boys like you played to death by the dozen,'' Akua said,
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almost gently. ``Minds like pretty baubles of glass, thinking themselves
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untouchable for their sharp edges. It does not take brilliance or
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treachery to end the likes of you, did you know? All it takes is a thick
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enough boot.''
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A flicker of power, but not in here. Outside, and familiar. Discretely I
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gestured at Hakram. If it was Roland, I would prefer for them to await
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without entering. For looking at Akua now I saw cruelty like frost, yes,
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but not only that: I also saw a woman lancing an old and festering
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wound, and of that I would not brook interruption. Adjutant quietly left
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the pavilion, the gargoyles following him with their eyes but neither
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the Tyrant not the once-Diabolist even noticing.
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``And yet you pair me to the man who called your kind to heel,'' Kairos
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idly said. ``Who took the proud High Lords of the Wasteland for mere
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horses to be broken in, and then proved the truth of that contempt.''
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``A pale imitation, in truth,'' Akua mused. ``Armies and cleverness and
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parlour tricks, only without everything laudable in our man. Even made a
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shivering ghost, still he commanded enough loyalty for armies and pupils
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and companions to seek him. You? Victor and surrounded by armies, you've
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ruined yourself and call it brilliance. You are \emph{alone}.''
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``So are we all,'' Kairos Theodosian said, and it was too harshly said
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for it to be pretence. ``They beat you and fed you, Akua Sahelian, with
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pain and scraps of affections -- until like a loyal hound you licked the
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cruel hand. The apprentice did to you as the teacher did to your entire
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people. And now you put on their masks and speak their empty creed, but
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that is a hollow thing isn't it? Compared to the truths you can still
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feel slithering through your blood, those that whisper of greatness
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instead of \emph{submission}.''
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|
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``I am more than blood,'' Akua Sahelian hissed. ``I am more than what I
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was made from. But \emph{you}, Kairos Theodosian? You are the apostle of
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the cage, the congregant of scrapped iron. And what has that made of
|
|
you, Tyrant of Least and Less? You bargain with every change of the
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|
wind, and every time find return diminished. You have run out of coin to
|
|
sell yourself with. You have made an enemy of all the world, and so you
|
|
\emph{no longer have place in it}.''
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|
|
|
``I am a droplet in the tide that will drown Creation,'' the Tyrant of
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|
Helike smiled, eye red like fresh blood.
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|
|
|
``You are yesterday,'' Akua said. ``That is the sum whole of you. And
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|
scream and wail as you will, that is all you'll ever be.''
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|
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And, chin high and back straight, she turned. She walked out without
|
|
another word and left behind her oppressive silence. I watched Kairos,
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|
and in turn he watched me. Like a furnace lit and closed, the rage could
|
|
be seen glowing at the edges of him. The tent was opened a fraction,
|
|
even as he continued trying to master himself.
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|
|
|
``Archer found the Rogue and followed him here,'' Hakram told me in
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|
Kharsum. ``Both are fine.''
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|
|
|
I inclined my head in acknowledgement without turning and the tent
|
|
closed.
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|
|
|
``You made a deal with the Bard, while we were out there,'' I said, tone
|
|
even.
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|
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|
``A greater game is in the works than you suspect,'' the Tyrant of
|
|
Helike said. ``She is no ally of mine.''
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|
|
|
``The rest I could stomach,'' I mildly said. ``But the Bard? You burned
|
|
a bridge with that. Still. There'll be a conference of the great powers
|
|
and you'll have your seat.''
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|
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|
``As was promised,'' he said.
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|
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|
``As was promised,'' I agreed.
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|
|
|
I turned and began to limp out.
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|
|
|
``We have more to discuss, Black Queen,'' Kairos called out.
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|
|
|
I glanced at him.
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|
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|
``No,'' I said. ``We don't. You want an audience? Crawl to my camp. You
|
|
ought to know how, after last night.''
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|
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|
To the sounds of his anger and the chittering of gargoyles I walked out
|
|
of the tent and did not look back until I'd brought my people safe to
|
|
camp.
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