461 lines
20 KiB
TeX
461 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-1-visitation}{%
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\section{Chapter 1: Visitation}\label{chapter-1-visitation}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Even a devil can be merciful once.''}
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-- Callowan saying
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\end{quote}
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The night was full of shadows and every last one answered to me.
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Fairy gates had never been quite as precise an art as I would have
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liked, particularly when the needle was threaded half-blind, but these
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days I had more than Masego or Akua adding up the numbers for me. The
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sisters understood these matters in a way no mortal ever could, and
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considering it was their -- ours, I supposed -- army I was taking
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through Arcadia they'd not balked at charting the path for me. Well,
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that wasn't entirely true. Komena had complained about being a goddess,
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not a cartographer. I'd wholeheartedly agreed: after all, a cartographer
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would have given me an answer instead of petty whining. You'd think
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finishing apotheosis would have done something for her sense of humor,
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but instead I'd been given an indignant silent treatment for a few days.
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Which was fine by me, really. There was only so much croaking I could
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take from the damned birds they'd sent with me. The night-feathered crow
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on my left shoulder stirred in displeasure and I snorted.
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``Fine, fake birds,'' I said. ``That better for you?''
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Indrani cleared her throat, less dainty scoff and more middle-aged
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dockworker about to spit.
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``Catherine, you're talking to the crows again,'' she said.
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I shrugged.
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``It's fine as long as I don't expect to hear them talk back, I think,''
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I noted.
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``Caw,'' the crow on my left shoulder drily said.
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The word, not actual cawing, because Andronike had developed a taste for
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the sardonic since shaving off a sliver of her godhood and sending it if
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off with me.
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``Wind's real loud tonight,'' I said, blithely pretending I hadn't hear
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anything.
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``Well,'' Archer mused, ``it \emph{is} winter.''
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And wasn't it just? The heartlands of Procer were pretty as a painting,
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under moonlight. Open fields of driven snow, sparse trees trickling down
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icicles and the occasional game wandering through the frost. It said a
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lot about the drow, I thought, than an army of fifty thousand of them
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hadn't scared off every beast for four miles around it. There'd been
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some childlike wonderment at first, when the grey-skinned host had first
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witnessed the world covered in white. Drow centuries old patting at the
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snow like they couldn't quite believe their eyes, strangers as they were
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to a surface winter. I remembered that fondly, the innocence of it.
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There were some things that even millennia of constant bloodshed could
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not entirely erase. Tonight, though, there would be no wide-eyed
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fascination. The warriors I'd sent out had moved out across the snow
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like ghosts, melting back into the darkness they'd been born to.
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Indrani had come to keep me company as I stood, watching the small town
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in the distance. My friend -- we'd shared a bed more than once, by now,
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but lover ill fit what lay between us -- was half a shadow herself, the
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hooded leather coat she wore over fine mail hiding her face away from
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the light of the moon. Now and then I could see her hand twitching
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slightly, the urge to reach for the large bow strapped to her back only
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barely repressed. Archer had never been one to shy away from a fight,
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which was the reason I hadn't sent her out with the drow in the first
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place: corpses weren't what I was after. Not tonight anyway. There were
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a few long years ahead of us, I knew, and there would be blood spilled
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before they came to a close. \emph{Whose}, I thought, \emph{is the
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important question, isn't it?}
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``What's the place called again?'' Indrani asked.
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More out of need to fill the silence than true curiosity, I suspected.
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``Trousseau,'' I replied anyway.
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Finding a hunter out in the plains had been a lucky stroke, and result
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in a vague notion of where we were in Procer. Somewhere in eastern
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Iserre, for one, which was what I'd been aiming for. Unfortunately said
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hunter had never gone all that far from her hometown, and had little
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news of what was currently taking place in the Principate. No map,
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either, but that much I'd expected. Those were damned expensive, and
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even halfway-accurate ones not usually in the hands of commoners.
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``Bit of a shithole, to be honest,'' Archer said.
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Trousseau probably had no more than a thousand souls living in it, most
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of the time, but these were not that. War and conscription would have
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thinned the town. I'd decided to charitably attribute how run-down the
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place was to the removal of so many able hands, though odds were the
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place was poor enough it looked like this even on a good year. There
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were as many huts as houses, all huddled around a few streets that were
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more streaks of cold mud than anything, and what cattle could be seen
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held in pens around the town was thin and sickly. Though Indrani's gaze
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had lingered on the ramshackle and no doubt bitingly cold huts, I'd been
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more interested in something that wasn't there. Namely, walls. I
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honestly couldn't think of a single town of a thousand in Callow that
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wouldn't have at least a palisade up, or tall piles of stones without
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mortar. For my purpose of the night, however, that defencelessness was
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not unhelpful.
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``If it were worth putting on a map, Black would probably have burnt it
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on his way south,'' I said.
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She hummed in agreement, and only spoke again a few heartbeats later.
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``You think rumours about what's happening to will have trickled into
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here?'' Indrani asked, glancing at me.
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``Worth a try,'' I grimly said.
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Archer's footing shifted almost hesitantly, and I blinked in surprise
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when she put a comforting hand on my shoulder. I could almost feel the
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warmth of her through the cloak and doublet, and my heart beat a little
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faster. Not because of attraction, this time, though that was never far.
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That I could feel warmth at all was still a feeling I could only
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luxuriate in.
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``We don't know he's in trouble,'' she said.
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``He should be back from Thalassina by now,'' I replied. ``And still we
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can't make contact with the Observatory. \emph{Something} happened.''
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``He could be buried up the neck in some hidden library,'' Indrani
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smiled. ``Only to remember the rest of Creation still exists in a few
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months.''
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The smile was slightly forced, I knew her well enough to tell. I wasn't
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the only one worried about Masego and the resounding silence from Laure.
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``Shouldn't it be me comforting you, anyway?'' I said.
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``He can take care of himself,'' Archer quietly said, though her eyes
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flicked east anyway.
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I clasped her bare fingers with my gloved ones, squeezing tight, and she
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shot me an amused look before removing her hand. Where our conversation
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would have wandered after that would remain a mystery, for I felt a
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ripple in the Night headed our way. Mighty Rumena -- crow-Komena pecked
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at my shoulder and I rolled my eyes -- \emph{General} Rumena, I mentally
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corrected, had not ceased in its attempts to sneak up on me even though
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not a single one had succeeded since I'd become First Under the Night.
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It was hard to pull a Night-trick on someone who had a finger on the
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pulse of that very power.
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``So, the way you don't leave footprints in the snow,'' I called out.
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``Is that an illusion, or are you so feeble and delicate you're light
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enough not to leave one?''
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Grey fingertips appeared out thin air a few feet in front of me, coming
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down to tear away at a veil of Night and revealing the creased face of
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the ancient drow. Even stooped the bastard was taller than me, which
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unfair in so many ways, and ever since it'd been appointed to the
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command of the southern expedition it'd made a point of looming over me
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whenever it could.
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``Many are the mysteries of the Night,'' General Rumena vaguely replied.
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I eyed him skeptically.
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``So where'd we land on whether or not I have power of expulsion from
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the faith again?'' I finally asked crow-Andronike.
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``No,'' she replied.
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``Maybe,'' crow-Komena said at the same time.
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The two crow-shaped slivers of Sve Noc turned to glare at each other.
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``There can be no-'' crow-Andronike began.
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``It is necessary that-'' her sister interrupted.
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I smothered a grin, though not quite well enough. Both turned their
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glares towards me. That was never going to get old, was it? A heartbeat
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later I was yelping as a pair of godly crows started flapping around my
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hair and pecking vengefully at my scalp, though I valiantly managed to
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shoo them away with only minimal loss of dignity. The two of them flew
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off, possibly off to torment some poor luckless rabbit. Made of Night as
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they were they hardly needed to eat, though that certainly hadn't
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stopped them from toying with the animals they came across. Amusement
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bled out of me a moment later and I turned my eyes to Rumena.
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``Report,'' I ordered.
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It did not bow, not that I'd expected it to.
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``The town has been seized,'' the old drow said.
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``Casualties?'' I asked.
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``Seventeen wounded, no dead,'' General Rumena mildly said. ``Some
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stubborn souls insisted on resisting confinement.''
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I chewed on my lip. Too much to hope for this to be entirely bloodless,
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I supposed. I'd tell Akua to have the wounds healed if she could. And if
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the people were willing to take healing from the likes of us which was
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less than certain.
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``No priests?'' I asked.
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``None resided within. There is a moan-haste-ree to the north where
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servants of the Pale Gods hold court, but they only visit
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infrequently,'' the old drow said.
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``Monastery,'' I corrected absent-mindedly. ``Good, that would have
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complicated things.''
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Priests tended to frown upon dark hordes beholden to eldritch horrors of
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the night strolling into their backyard, and I'd rather not cut one's
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throat if I could avoid it.
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``Send a sigil up to keep an eye on the monastery road,'' I finally
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said. ``No blunders tonight, Rumena.''
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``Ah,'' the general mildly said. ``Will you be absenting yourself,
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then?''
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To my side Indrani shook with a suppressed laugh, the filthy traitor.
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``You just wait,'' I grunted. ``One of these days I'll talk the damned
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crows into letting me write your holy book and there'll be an entire
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hymn about how much of a prick you are.''
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I began the trek towards Trousseau immediately, carefully refraining
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from hearing Rumena's skepticism at my ability to rhyme on purpose even
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as Archer cheerfully waved him goodbye.
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As usual, I was surrounded by insubordinate backtalk and wanton
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treachery.
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---
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There were a few houses near the centre of the town made of stone, but
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this wasn't one of them. I approved, truth be told. From what I'd read,
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large towns and cities in the Alamans parts of Procer were usually
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governed by an official appointed by the ruling royal -- quite often
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some toady or relative that could be counted on to keep the coin flowing
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towards the principality's capital. On occasion, some wealthy landowner
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ended up in charge instead but given that those occasionally got ideas
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about who should be the local royalty that was rarer. In smaller towns
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and villages, though, a degree of freedom emerged. Someone needed to be
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in charge so the lawmen and the tax collectors would have an arm to
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twist, but the people were left to their own devices as to who should be
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picked. Trousseau should be small enough for that to apply, and that the
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town's mayor was living in a wooden house instead of a stone one implied
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wealth hadn't been why he was put in charge. Half a dozen drow bearing
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the mark of the Soln Sigil were keeping a sharp watch on the premise,
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and if the ripple I was feeling in the Night was any indication my old
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friend Lord Soln itself wasn't far.
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It had amused the Sisters to send what little remained of the army I'd
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once led against them on the southern expedition. I wasn't complaining:
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the oaths binding us might have been broken, but they were quicker to
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obey my orders than most drow. The covenant under Winter had left marks
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that would not easily be erased. On another night I might have taken the
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time to flush out Soln from its hiding place and share a few words, but
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not this one. I had business to finish, and no inclination to delay it.
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As far as I was concerned, the quicker we moved on from here to
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undertake our campaign proper the better.
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``Want me to come with?'' Archer idly said.
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I glanced at her, catching a glimpse of her hazelnut eyes under the
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hood. I read an expectation of boredom there, but still she had offered.
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I did not fight the flush of affection that brought out in me.
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``No need,'' I said. ``Find something to entertain yourself, I'll catch
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up.''
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She smirked.
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``Bound to be at least \emph{one} tavern in this dump,'' she mused.
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``We pay for what we take,'' I reminded her.
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``Gods,'' she muttered under her breath. ``Between you and Akua I feel
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like I've joined the most ironic nunnery in Creation.''
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I grinned and waved her off.
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``Don't get too drunk without me,'' I said.
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She grinned back, and promised not a thing. I watched her saunter away
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for a moment, coat swaying behind her, but before long my gaze had
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returned the door in front of me and the good mood drained. The two
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closest drow were looking at me from the corner of their eyes and I
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offered a nod.
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``Restrict interruption to Peerage and my own people,'' I spoke in
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Crepuscular.
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``Losara Queen,'' one murmured back, though both bowed.
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I left it at that, and knocked at the door out of habit. There was a
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long beat of silence, before a male voice hesitantly bid me to enter.
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\emph{Ah}, I thought. The last people to come in would not have been so
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polite. I pushed open the surprisingly well-oiled door and entered. A
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man was standing by a brazier, my eyes lingering only long enough to
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note he looked only in his mid-thirties before they pressed on to take
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in the rest of the house. One bed, shoddy as it was, but four cots. The
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table was old but well-maintained, and the roughly-hewn chairs struck me
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as of recent make. Not much else to see, aside from wooden shelves
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filled with foodstuffs. When my eyes returned to the man, his face had
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gone ashen. His hands were still above the flames, but now they were
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trembling. I wiped my snow-sodden boots on the straw by the door before
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offering a bland smile.
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``I am told your name is Leon,'' I said in Chantant. ``And that you are
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mayor of Trousseau.''
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The man drew back as if struck. It was almost comical, given that he
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stood at least two feet taller than me and was built like a sandy-haired
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ox. Almost.
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``You're the Black Queen,'' Leon shakily said.
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``And so introductions have been seen to,'' I mildly said. ``Take a
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seat.''
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Something like anger flickered across the man's face. Not someone used
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to be ordered around in his own home, was he? But even as his jaw
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squared, his eyes came to rest on the sword at my hip. Caution won out,
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and slowly he drew back a chair and sat down. Wiping my boots one last
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time, I limped across the floorboards and sat across from him. I could
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have drawn on the Night to chase away the pain for a time, but I
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disliked relying on that measure unless blades were out. I leaned back
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against the chair, the Mantle of Woe bunching up as I did, and calmly
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took off my leather gloves.
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``I have questions to ask of you,'' I said.
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``I am the mayor of a half-empty town,'' Leon replied. ``What could I
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possibly know of import to a queen?''
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His gaze was steady, I thought, and his back straight. But he'd not
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quite managed to hide his hands away from me, and I could see how
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tightly clenched his fingers were. Afraid, but trying not to show it. I
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wondered if he expected he'd be dead by the end of this conversation. My
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reputation in Procer had been less than gentle even before the entire
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fucking priesthood of the west had declared me Arch-heretic of the East.
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``More than you think,'' I said. ``Peddlers come through, even in a
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deserted town. And peddlers carry rumours.''
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``I put little stock in rumours,'' the mayor replied. ``And so know
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little of them.''
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I glanced to the side, already knowing what I would find. The bed was
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large enough for two. Some of the cots were too small for adults. The
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man had a wife and children. All of which were currently under the guard
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of my drow in a previously house. When my gaze returned, Leon's face had
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grown tight. The steady gaze was gone, replaced by desperate fear.
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``No merchant has passed in months,'' the Proceran said. ``We are not a
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town with coin to spend. Those few of wealth have already left.''
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I raised an eyebrow.
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``For where?'' I asked.
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``Iserre,'' he said. ``Walls and safety.''
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I leaned forward.
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``Safety from what?'' I pressed.
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The man grit his teeth. I could see them war on his face, fear and
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principle. I was, to be honest, admiring his spine. How many of my
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countrymen would have it in them to even hesitate answering a question,
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if a villain of my repute was asking it? I'd not sat in conversation
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with a human other than Indrani in months, and in some ways this felt
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fresh to me. I could see the tremor in his arm, the beading sweat on his
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brow. This was not a drow, I thought. I understood the shape of this
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one's thoughts, the milestones by which he saw the world.
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``Heavens preserve me from the Enemy,'' the mayor of Trousseau shakily
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said. ``Still my tongue and ward my hand, that I may give it no succour
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nor relief.''
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I slowly breathed out, studying him. I might have continued, if not for
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the knock on the door.
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``Enter,'' I said.
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The door opened to reveal Akua Sahelian's silhouette, and closed after
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she fluidly stepped in. I cocked an eyebrow, meeting her golden eyes,
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and she nodded. \emph{Good}. She leaned back against the wall without a
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word and I turned to the mayor.
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``Do you see the Heavens in this room, Leon?'' I softly asked. ``I
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don't. There's just us, and the consequences of our choices.''
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``I will not sell out my home, Black Queen,'' the large man said. ``Not
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an inch, not a league.''
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The fear had not left, I thought. And yet he'd said it anyway.
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``I hold your family,'' I said.
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The tone was casual, as it discussing the weather. I had learned from
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Black that mildness could be much more disquieting than the most
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thunderous of wraths. Leon swallowed drily. I had not made threat, and
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would not need to. My name itself was a threat, these days.
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``Even so,'' he said, tone thick with grief. ``Gods, even so.''
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To do right, even if it cost you everything. That, at least, the Houses
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of Light on both sides of the border taught just the same. I thought of
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Amadis Milenan, then, and wondered what such a man had ever done to
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deserve a subject like this. Nothing. But then that was the whole point,
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wasn't it? That the underserving so often ruled. That there could be
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more heroism found in a terrified man sitting across a monster and
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refusing to answer a question than in an empire's worth of royal lines,
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or a legion of heroes.
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``It's a strange thing, fear, isn't?'' I said. ``I have known those who
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rule by it. I have fought those who deny its very existence. And yet I
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have come no closer to understanding what splits the brave from the
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mad.''
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I met his eyes with equanimity.
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``But I do know one thing, Leon of Trousseau,'' I said. ``That knot in
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your stomach, right now? That part of you that keeps your back straight
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when death meets your gaze?''
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I did not blink. Neither did he.
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``That is the weight of the choice you made,'' I said. ``Remember it, in
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the years to come. Learn from it, grow from it. Because one of those
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days you might find someone else sitting on my side of the table -- and
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unlike me, they might not admire what you chose.''
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I pushed back the chair and rose to my feet, picking up my gloves and
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slipping them on. The mayor hesitated.
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``That's all?'' he said.
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I smiled, thin and mirthless.
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``Do you know why we praise bravery, Leon?'' I said.
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He did not reply. Did not dare to, I supposed, when it seemed possible
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he might survive our little chat after all.
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``Because it surpasses our baser nature,'' Akua spoke from behind me,
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and I could feel the smile in her voice.
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I could see the moment when the man understood, the anger and the
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sadness and the burning indignation.
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``Someone talked,'' I gently said. ``Someone always talks.''
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I limped back into the cold, and left him to sit in his silence.
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