411 lines
21 KiB
TeX
411 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-69-repute}{%
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\chapter{Repute}\label{chapter-69-repute}}
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\epigraph{``Assertion that the end justifies the means in in truth embrace
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of the Heavens, for it is they who will decide the Last Dusk and so all
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justice then derives from them.''}{Hektor the Ecclesiast, Atalante preacher}
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It was a little unsettling to see that even without the Name my teacher
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could still shed the face of Amadeus of the Green Stretch and become the
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Black Knight. A single sentence and humanity slid down his face like
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morning dew, leaving behind a cold-eyed thing weighing the necessity of
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harsh violences to visit. The Grey Pilgrim, on the other hand, did not
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look surprised. Troubled, the lines on his face deepening with
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weariness, but not surprised at all. The blue-eyed old man cast a glance
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at Black, fingers tightening with something like concern at what he saw,
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but the faint weight that was the attention of the Choir of Mercy
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scrutinizing him was batted away like overbold fingers. Perched atop the
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same stone where the Intercessor had sat, two great and shadow-feathered
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crows gazing down with merciless eyes. They had no claim on my father, I
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knew, and he was the kind of man who would rather die straight-backed
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than accept patronage. The extended warding had been offered as a
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courtesy to me, their thoughts whispered against mine, though all three
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of us knew they'd have mourned losing out on an opportunity to take a
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swipe at a Choir without starting a celestial war.
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I breathed in smoke, disconcerted by the way it was warm and barely
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touched when it felt like that pipe had been lit for so long. Masego had
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told me, once, that there was no such thing as time: only the perception
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of it, and entropy's ruining touch. I couldn't quite grasp that, truth
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be told, for even entropy's encroachment must be measured by
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\emph{something}. Yet the disparity between the acrid smoke against my
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tongue, the weight of the dragonbone pipe still mostly-full, and the
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span of the conversation I'd had with the Wandering Bard? They'd lent me
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a glimpse, perhaps, at what he meant. Had I still been Winter's Queen,
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such a sliver of understanding would have been turned into peril and
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artifice without batting an eye. As the priestess to dark goddesses,
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instead I hoarded it away the way I did so many other half-espied
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revelations and the secrets they led to. I had little wisdom of my own
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to offer, but I was not above passing through that which had been
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bestowed upon me by wiser souls.
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``That is an accusation not without gravity,'' the Peregrine said.
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He flicked a glance at Sve Noc, as if he'd felt their intervention,
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though what he saw there had him recoil from the unpleasantness. The
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cold night went colder still, and as the stars above grew more radiant
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from the wroth of the Ophanim the Sisters cawed out in mockery -- though
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their touch against my mind was agitated, as the attention of an irate
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Choir of Mercy felt like a burn on their godhead. To my eye, there were
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times and places where Sve Noc would cow the Ophanim should it come to a
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contest of might. After they'd taken a petty shot at Mercy's own
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favourite son was not one of them, though. I cleared my throat, intent
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on distracting the angels by distracting their champion.
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``You don't look all that surprised, though,'' I mused. ``Something
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you'd like to say, Tariq?''
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The white-haired hero turned his attention to me, and as expected the
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weight of Sve Noc's chiding began to wane with the turn. \emph{You're
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welcome}, I uncharitably thought. \emph{Now please cease screwing with
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the hero I'm trying to convince, if you would.} Komena cawed in
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irritation at my gall, though Andronike signified amusement. I forced
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myself to ignore the distracting dance of their thoughts against mine,
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for this was too important a talk to attend to it only half-listening.
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``That though you've been known to have\ldots{} broad an understanding
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of what constitutes as such an attempt, I have no difficulty believing
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there was dispute,'' the Peregrine said. ``Younger Bestowed might defer
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to my decision to take a chance on you out of respect, even if
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disagreeing, but the Bard is both my elder and greater in the service of
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the Heavens. She would not feel bound to yield to my decisions.''
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I breathed out and did not clench my fingers, for it would have been an
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obvious tell of my sharply risen anger. A \emph{broad fucking
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understanding}, was it? Coming from a man who'd tried to send me to my
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death or shackling down the spine of a redemption story, that was a
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little rich. He could try to pretend he'd kept his hands clean all he
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wanted, in the hands of a Named a story was no less murderous a tool
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than a knife.
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``You admit to the likeliness of an ally's attack and in the same breath
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castigate her for having a dainty disposition,'' Black mildly said.
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``Come now, Pilgrim, if you're in the business of betrayal at least have
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the decency to display some \emph{skill} at it.''
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He looked like a person again, and not a monster with a mask of clay,
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but beneath the calm affability he'd painted over his face I could see
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the blades were still bare. I'd seen him smile just as pleasantly before
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he Spoke and ordered Akua to nail her own hand to a table.
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``I scheme no treachery, Carrion Lord,'' the old hero bit back. ``And
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jeering at me will not serve whatever purpose you seek from it.''
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``And he's going to stop anyway, isn't he?'' I sharply said.
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Wondering, beneath the sharpness, if he was being so acerbic with the
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Pilgrim for the very purpose of my reining him in or if he was simply
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enjoying mocking a hero. Knowing Black, I grimly thought, it was likely
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to be both.
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``If I must,'' he nonchalantly shrugged. ``Shall we then return to the
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Peregrine simultaneously absolving himself of responsibility for the
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actions of his ally while also refusing to denounce her? `Twas a
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charming bit of rhetoric. Add a few insincere protestations of
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friendship and it'll be like I never left Praes.''
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Ouch. That one had to sting a bit, especially when taken by someone
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whose understanding of the Wasteland would be through the latest horrors
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mighty enough to leave Praes and become a peril for everyone else.
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``I do not condone attack, if attack was had,'' the Grey Pilgrim sharply
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replied. ``Do not speak for me, much less with viper claims. Yet neither
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will I pretend that all servants of Above will follow me in making
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bargain with the Black Queen. As for the Wandering Bard, her Bestowal
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forbids as much as it allows. Behaving with grace will ensure she
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neither wants nor \emph{can} act against any of you.''
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``She's not a heroine, Pilgrim,'' I said. ``I've seen her make pacts on
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behalf of Below. If you don't believe me, I'll even ask the Sisters to
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let your little winged friends have a look at me to ascertain the
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veracity of what I saw.''
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That either the Ophanim or Tariq Fleetfoot himself would feel entitled
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to have a look at my bloody soul simply so that my words would be given
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due weight was infuriating, but that was the nature of the game. Trust
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was ever in short supply, in matters such as this. Especially when
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accusations were being thrown around.
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``So have I,'' the Grey Pilgrim calmly said.
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I went still with utter surprise. \emph{What?}
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``I suspect I am a great deal more learned in what the duties of the
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Wandering Bard entail than you, Queen Catherine,'' the old man
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continued. ``An envoy does not decide the substance of the offer they
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carry, and some of the bargains the Bard was sent to offer were dark
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indeed.''
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``You know she has a greater game, then,'' I pressed.
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``I know that across the faces she has worn she has warred against Keter
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wherever there was war to be had, and ever done good over evil whenever
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the choice was given to her,'' Tariq said. ``That the Gods Above do not
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have sole claim on her works does not mean she is not a heroine.''
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``The moment before this conversation began, she dragged me out for an
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aside,'' I flatly said. ``And she-''
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``It does not matter what was said, Queen Catherine,'' the Pilgrim told
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me. ``For you were being tested, as I have seen others Bestowed be and
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once was myself. By choosing rectitude over baseness, you emerged
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unharmed and proved you were not a menace that must be seen to.''
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``So you're agreeing, then, that the Wandering Bard just took a swing at
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me,'' I slowly said.
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He frowned.
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``She would have if you were less than you are,'' he said, as if it was
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evident. ``You were not, and so this was merely confirmation.''
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Black laughed, softly, the sound of it like cool silk.
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``See, Catherine, there was nothing to it,'' he smiled, sharp and cold.
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``The ordeal would only have stung were you a heretic, which makes
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wanton use of it perfectly permissible. Indeed, how dare any of us
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question the Wandering Bard's right to pursue our demise whenever the
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whim takes her? How very impious.''
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``He's being a bit of a shit right now,'' I said, ``so it rather pains
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me to agree with him, Tariq. Even if you trust in the Bard -- and Gods,
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I'd like to know what you have on her for that to be the case -- then
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how the Hells does that translate to her getting the right to pull
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things like this? Nobody here is your fucking vassal, Pilgrim, much less
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Above's. This wasn't a test, it was a fucking act of war. And you're
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defending her right to have done it.''
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``I trust in a woman I have seen dedicated a lifetime to carrying out
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good deeds wherever and whenever she could,'' the Pilgrim said. ``I have
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known her to do this since before either of you were born, and in her
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deeds she has not spared heroes when they courted disaster. I do not
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know what she intended by acting as she did tonight, nor do I blindly
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presume it was righteous. Nor will I, just as blindly, accept your
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belief that she is\ldots{} by your words, some manner of sinister
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immortal schemer?''
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``You've seen part of her work,'' I flatly said. ``I've seen others, and
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they're hardly pleasant. Her enmity with the Dead King is more or less
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the only thing I take as a given with her. She was part of the Lone
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Swordsman' band, before he called down Contrition on Liesse. She was in
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the Free Cities before it all went to shit there, and she had a hand in
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Akua's Folly as well -- though the exact nature of what she did remains
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unclear.''
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``And so she fought the occupation of Callow through every means at her
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disposal, when the rest of the servants of the Heavens forsook their
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duty to the fallen kingdom,'' Tariq kindly said. ``I've no doubt her
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actions were harmful to you or others beloved of you, but that does not
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make her sinister -- only a foe you never evened your scores with.''
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This wasn't going to work, I thought. And it was why the Bard had been
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so utterly unworried about my talking with Tariq: she'd known she had
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decades if not half a century of a solid record with the man that'd
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weight against whatever I said. And the more I made this about the
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places where I'd fought her, the more this became a personal grudge
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between myself and his old friend. Bringing in Black's run-ins with her
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would make it even worse, given that the Pilgrim would wholeheartedly
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endorse the decimation of the Calamities and the break-up of the
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partnerships that'd kept Malicia's reign so strong. My teacher had
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mentioned she'd openly admitted to allowing a heroine to die so that
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Sabah's death would be set in stone by a story, but she'd also likely
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been fucking with his head at the time so that his break with myself and
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Malicia burned all involved. And even if he believed us\ldots{} well,
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Captain had killed more than a dozen heroes over the span of her career.
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From a practical Good perspective, trading a young heroine for the death
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of an old monster and the first crack in the Calamities would be worth
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it. I'd been counting on the shock of the Intercessor having acted on
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Below's behalf to create the Night to jar him into re-examining their
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history, but there'd \emph{been} no surprise. Which left me only with a
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second-hand memory in which the Bard had still outright advised
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annihilation over taking the bargain.
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Shit. She'd covered all her angles there, hadn't she? It made sense. The
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Grey Pilgrim had been Above's foremost agent in the west of Calernia for
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at least half a century now, by sheer dint of the stories he'd have been
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involved in they would have encountered each other quite a bit. Plenty
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of time to work on him, which once more made sense considering how
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influential a man he'd been headed towards being for a very long time.
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No, it would have been absurd for the Intercessor \emph{not} to foster
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strong ties with him: she was too old and too fair a hand at weaving to
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have left such an obvious loose end unattended. And to have attended to
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it in a manner that I couldn't feasibly shake right now, I grimly
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thought. I had interests in common with the Peregrine, maybe even some
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shared principles, but also a red history that'd turned amicable only
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very recently. Hells, I'd \emph{killed} the woman that'd probably been
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the closest thing he had to a friend without wings not even a week ago.
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Truce and my begetting the Liesse Accords was not enough to have him cut
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ties with the Bard. It'd be like going at an iron chain with a butter
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knife: how long had she spent to ensure the strength of those ties? How
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much time had been\ldots{} Oh, \emph{oh}. No, I'd been thinking about
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this all wrong, hadn't I? I'd learned a few tricks in the art of
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bargains and how to wag my tongue instead of my sword-hand, but in the
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end I was not more silver-tongued than \emph{the} silvertongue.
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It'd been laughable of me to even try, because once more I was letting
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the Bard pick the face of our struggle.
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The Intercessor had invested time and effort and trustworthiness in her
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relationship with the Grey Pilgrim, but while he trusted her he did not
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seem to defer to her outright. When he defended her actions, it was as
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an act of trust. Trust she'd earned over decades, and I'd tried to fight
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with respect mere days old. I'd been so fixated on removing the
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Wandering Bard from this entirely I'd missed the obvious: that the ties
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went both ways. That if she was relying on relationships she'd forged in
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the past to have a finger in every pie, then she had to live up to the
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terms she had set to those relationships. And considering the high
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esteem in which the Grey Pilgrim apparently held her, the standards
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she'd set could not be low. So if I made a reasonable request born out
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of reasonable -- if, in the Pilgrim's eyes, still unwarranted -- fears
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then unless she had a damned good reason then she couldn't go against
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it. No, wouldn't be enough, I thought as I parsed out what doors it
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closed for her in truth. Relying on the decades of trust she'd be able
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to make apologetic noises but get away with it by simple virtue of
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producing one of various skeleton keys: it was necessary to beat the
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Dead King, allowing it would have caused suffering in years to come, had
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to prevent the rise of a great Evil. The Pilgrim would be angry, maybe,
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but the expectation would still be there that as long as the damage
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wasn't too bad for the greater good I'd have to grin and fucking bear
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it. On the other hand, was I good? They couldn't both treat me like
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Triumphant incipient and expect me to be their own personal Choir of
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Endurance. I'd surprised heroes pleasantly over the last few years
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because their expectations of me were low.
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Well, they were certainly the easiest kind to live up to. Feigning
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indignation here would be risky, for though Tariq's inability to
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understand that one could be good without being Good had left him
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strikingly naïve in some ways he was frighteningly perceptive in others.
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Thankfully, I wouldn't have to. My jaw clenched and I did not have to
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look far for the anger. I'd stowed away the wroth, chosen the benefits
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of a clear head over it, but it had not \emph{disappeared}. How many
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times was I supposed to let the whip crack against my back because my
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\emph{betters} were not willing to see to their own? How many times was
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I supposed to let it go, that to kill me or mine was a virtue but that
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daring to crawl out of the ash alive -- much less fight back -- was a
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sin? I blew out the wakeleaf smoke, and the bitterness that lingered
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against my tongue was not only from the herb. There were parts of my
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father's madness that I would never make my own, but some that'd always
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rung true: in the end, in their eyes we were not equal. And we'd never
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be people until we followed their rules and spoke their prayers, until
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we'd admitted that their way was right and ours was wrong.
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``For small slights,'' I hissed, ``long prices.''
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The Pilgrim's blue eyes widened in startlement, and he raised his hands
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in appeasement.
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``Your Majesty-'' he began.
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``Yes,'' I coldly said. ``That is who I am, Peregrine. The Black Queen.
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The Arch-heretic of the East. It seems you have forgot how we came to
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stand here on this night. Shall I help you remember?''
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``There is no need for threats,'' the Pilgrim evenly said.
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And yet I could see it in his eyes, the rising awareness of who it was
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he was dealing with. \emph{Remember, you arrogant old priest,} I
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thought. \emph{Remember that you did not take me for Triumphant come
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again without reason and then curb your fucking priestly tongue.}
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``You sing the praises of she who strikes at me and declare her worthy
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of passing judgement upon my works,'' I mocked. ``\emph{You}, Tariq
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Fleetfoot? By what right?''
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I grinned, sharp and vicious.
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``You are not victor here on this field,'' I said. ``You are the
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defeated, breathing only by the grace of the aspect I \emph{ripped} out
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of you with my own hand. Your plots I shattered, your armies I routed
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and your own Choir stepped aside when faced with the glare of my
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purpose. And now you strut about like a green boy, arrogating the rights
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to lecture me when it is only my mercy that spared your throat my
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boot.''
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``This is not the talk of an ally,'' the Grey Pilgrim warningly said.
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``You do not behave like one,'' I snarled. ``And if you can only
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conceive of amity as vassalage, then this truce is at an end.''
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``You have sacrificed much to deliver it,'' the Peregrine reminded me
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flatly. ``And through such savage actions you would end any chance of
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the Accords being signed.''
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I laughed, full-throated and cold.
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``You think I'd give you a choice?'' I smiled. ``You think I chose peace
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because I \emph{fear} the other path? I'll not fight the Grand Alliance,
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Pilgrim. I'll leave and let you die like whimpering dogs, alone in the
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dark.''
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I took a step forward, limping, and he drew back.
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``I'll return only when I have the full might of the East behind me in
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array of war, and when I come back wherever the veil of night falls all
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will have a choice,'' I snarled. ``You can take up a sword and join my
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war against Keter, or you can do it as a \emph{walking corpse}. If
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treaties and alliances fail, I'll take steel and fire to the Dead King
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as Dread Empress, Victorious.''
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His eyes went cold.
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``You will find me waiting at the end of that road,'' the Grey Pilgrim
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said.
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``At the end?'' I grinned. ``You'll be the first damned thing I step on,
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Peregrine.''
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He looked at me searchingly, looking for lie or weakness, and found
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none. Harsh as my words had been, Gods but the truth of them simmered in
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my belly. I had chosen peace, but I was not beholden to it. And if the
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only way through was crowned in dread, then so be it.
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``What do you want, Black Queen?'' the old man finally asked.
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``WANDERING BARD,'' I screamed out into the night. ``INTERCESSOR.''
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I waited a beat, to see if she would appear. She did not. No matter, it
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would be enough to attract her gaze.
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``You spoke for that faceless thing, Peregrine,'' I said. ``And so now
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you answer for her as well. If you shelter and safeguard her, then you
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are responsible for her actions: if she schemes against me or mine, if
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she moves against truce or Accords, then I will take it as betrayal from
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both of you.''
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My jaw clenched.
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``That will not be without \emph{consequenc}e.''
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And I would tell every soul willing to listen. I'd tell the First
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Prince, I'd tell Princess Rozala, I'd tell the Blood and every hero
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willing to hear me shout from behind a blood wall. But most of all, I'd
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just told the Pilgrim himself. From now on, if she acted against me she
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was knowingly fucking over the Accords and the truce that was the only
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thing keeping Procer standing in the war on Keter. If she pulled
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something, she now had to justify it to Tariq as something more
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important than the death of several million people. Silvertongue or not,
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there wasn't much that would even those scales. This was, I ruefully
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thought, the principles of the Accords used once more: the practical
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realities of Creation being used to restrain its stories. Ties went both
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ways, didn't they? Sure, if the prize was worth it the Bard would make
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her move anyway. But she'd lose the Pilgrim, and when she did strike I
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fully intended on being ready for her\emph{. If you're without ties, you
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have no strings to pull}, I thought. \emph{If you keep them, though,
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then a strong enough tug on the strings makes it a thin line between
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puppet and puppeteer.} Tariq looked tired and grieved, but I was out of
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pity to spare.
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``At dawn I'll begin work on the gates into the Twilight Ways for the
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armies,'' I said. ``Be there or not, as you wish.''
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I began hiking my way back up before he answered, intent on returning to
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the soothing warmth of fire and booze and good company. And before the
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end of the night, I thought, there would be a need to speak with Masego.
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He'd get whatever he needed to test his Quartered Seasons theory, even
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if I ended up cutting corners elsewhere for the allocated resources.
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Deicide, sadly, was unlikely to come on the cheap.
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