510 lines
22 KiB
TeX
510 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-8-veracity}{%
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\section{Chapter 8: Veracity}\label{chapter-8-veracity}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A pleasant lie finds more ears than a sharp truth.''}
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-- Proceran saying
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\end{quote}
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``Seriously?'' I said. ``I mean, I know you're with the old guard about
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this stuff but this is pretty on the nose.''
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``The classics became such for a reason,'' Kairos stiffly replied.
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He sounded a little miffed, I noted.
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``I bet you even have a speech, don't you?'' I mused. ``Some tortured
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extended metaphor about the nature of Creation and our role in it.''
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The Tyrant of Helike glared at me woefully.
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``This rook represents the inherent emptiness of moral philosophy,'' I
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suggested. ``Maybe mention something about how Good is prone to
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stagnation and therefore fundamentally inferior.''
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``Do you even know how to play?'' he challenged.
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I glanced downwards at the shatranj board a pair of his little twisted
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gargoyles had brought. I picked up a footman and wiggled it a bit.
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``This moves diagonally, right?'' I beamed.
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His eyes closed, even the red one.
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``You pain me, Catherine Foundling,'' Kairos said. ``You pain me
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\emph{deeply}.''
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I hummed thoughtfully, then took advantage of his distraction to turn
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the board around. The poor gargoyles it was resting atop squeaked in
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dismay, though they didn't flinch.
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``I'll take black,'' I said.
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I discreetly pocketed the footman from the white side of the board I'd
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not for a moment intended to give back. His eyes opened just a moment
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too late to catch me red-handed.
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``This is most improper,'' the villain protested.
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``They don't call me the \emph{White} Queen,'' I pointed out.
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``Are you so bound by what others think of you?'' Kairos gallantly
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tried.
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``Point for effort,'' I said. ``But I've had better.''
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I opened the game most illegally by pushing forward a footman.
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``I had something for this,'' the Tyrant muttered. ``Give me a moment.''
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He didn't even bother to comment on my open cheating before moving up a
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knight. Well, it wasn't like I was going to stop anyway. I was passable
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at shatranj, but years of being punitively demolished at the game by
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Vivienne and Hakram had made me aware of my limitations. Vivienne in
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particular liked to allow me to think I could win before methodically
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flogging the conceit out of me.
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``Weren't we horse-trading?'' I reminded him.
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I pulled at my pipe and breathed out, letting the cloud of scented smoke
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waft up. Another footman went up, propping up my centre. The Tyrant let
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out a little noise of agreement, then snapped his fingers.
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``Exactly,'' he agreed. ``Imagine, if you would, that you were a
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deity.''
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``Not my cup of tea,'' I drily replied.
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``Evidently,'' Kairos mused, too-sharp eyes flicking across me. ``Yet
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humour me.''
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``Done,'' I said.
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He was being a little too slow to move, so I moved again. The Tyrant of
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Helike raised an eyebrow, and I painted embarrassed surprise over my
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face. Like I'd thought he'd already taken his turn, which was clearly
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the only reason I would keep going on. I withdrew the footman with a
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contrite smile, but only one square of the two it had moved.
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``As a deity,'' the Tyrant said, moving up a footman to contest the
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centre, ``though of unfathomable power you find yourself limited. Unlike
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the likes of us, who can command -- Catherine, why is one of my footmen
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missing?''
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``Desertion is an inevitable part of war,'' I sagely replied. ``So, we
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can move every piece but the Gods can't. That the gist of it?''
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``You're taking all the enjoyment out of this,'' Kairos complained.
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``That \emph{is} my favourite part,'' I revealed.
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One of my knights went up, my opponent staring with suspicion at the
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legal movement. That was fine, I wasn't going to nudge it up until he
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was distracted anyway.
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``Consider that perhaps one piece in ten can be moved,'' the Tyrant
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said. ``Exceptional pieces, to be sure, or at least made to be so. Yet
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they must be sufficient to both carry out your godly intent and
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influence the other pieces, which sadly move largely according to their
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own petty desires.''
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A few moves in quick succession as we traded footmen in the centre and I
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moved up my priest under cover of pretending to put away the pieces I'd
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taken.
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``That sounds like you don't believe the House of Light is a faithful
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servant of the Heavens in this earthly world,'' I chided. ``Which would
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be \emph{heresy}, Kairos. For shame.''
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``Ah, and so you touch upon the second limitation,'' the Tyrant said.
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``That these disobedient pieces not only have the gall to not directly
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answer your desires, but they also dare to influence the pieces that
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\emph{do}.''
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``As a goddess, I am most displeased by this,'' I blandly said.
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``As well you should be,'' Kairos agreed. ``Bloody chaos, not at all the
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orderly matter you had envisioned. Sadly, direct intervention would be
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costly in more ways than can be easily understood. A more\ldots{}
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elegant solution is required.''
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``Someone who can dole out the nudges I cannot,'' I said.
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``The proverbial finger on the scales,'' the Tyrant of Helike smiled.
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``Of course, such an entity would need to be constrained. It is a tool,
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after all. It would not do for it to get \emph{ideas}.''
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``Bindings,'' I said.
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The left side of the board was turning into something of a debacle for
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me, I saw. My dear friend was a fair hand at the game, and I was now
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down a priest. That was fine, since as the defender of all things Evil I
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could boast of a certain talent at necromancy -- a reasonable
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explanation for why said priest had mysteriously reappeared on the right
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side of the board. And all it'd taken was kicking a gargoyle so it would
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yelp and my opponent would look.
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``Three things she always keeps,'' Kairos Theodosian lightly said. ``She
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speaks, she sees and she knows stories.''
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He eyed my returned priest with a degree of skepticism, forcing me to
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withdraw it from the board. Time for contingencies, then. My fingers
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closed around the stolen white footman under my cloak, allowing Night to
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seep inside drip by drip.
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``There's two sides to a coin,'' I said.
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The Tyrant conceded to that with a slight inclination of the head.
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``Three things she always flees,'' he said. ``Promised death, direct
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touch and her heart's desire.''
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Truth, I decided, though cloaked in vagueness. Some things I'd already
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known -- Black had put her in the face of certain death thrice, during
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the Liesse Rebellion, and she'd been forced to withdraw for a time --
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other's I'd only suspected. If `direct touch' really stood for an
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inability to directly intervene, anyway. It might go a little further
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than that, though. Vivienne had once mentioned to me she'd never seen
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the Bard take a wound she was not directly responsible for receiving. As
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interesting as the Tyrant's words were was the fact he could speak them
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at all. Where \emph{had} he learned all this? Back when I'd still had
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him on the list of possible invaders of Callow I'd gone through what
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records the Eyes of the Empire had on him, and Helike as a whole.
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There'd been persistent rumours that something was kept under that
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city-state's palace with oracular abilities, but with the rumour came
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the restriction of only one question possible. I could think of half a
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dozen ways to get around that, sure, but if Helike had unrestrained
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access to that potent a tool they wouldn't be one of the powers in the
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League. They would \emph{be} the League, their banner flying above every
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rampart in the region.
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``Fleeing her heart's desire,'' I casually repeated. ``You almost make
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the role sound like a punishment.''
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The Tyrant smiled.
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``I have a theory,'' he said. ``You see, for someone to \emph{truly}
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make a mess on this board, they would need certain qualities.
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Perception, affinity, knowledge. A combination thereof. You understand
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my meaning, yes?''
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``An awareness of patterns,'' I said.
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``Exactly so,'' Kairos replied. ``And, plague as I am by a suspicious
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nature, it occurred to me that these qualities are as rare as they are
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useful. That neither Above nor Below are prone to waste in such
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regards.''
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My fingers stilled over the rook I'd been about to take in hand. Eyes
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flicking back up, I studied his face.
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``An elegant solution, you called it,'' I softly said.
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Poison made into remedy. A trap inherent to the lay of Creation. It
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made, I thought, a horrifying amount of sense.
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``Were someone qualified to be trouble,'' he echoed. ``They would be
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most qualified to quell it.''
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I moved up the rook, took a knight I'd been careful to strip of
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protection.
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``And interesting theory,'' I said. ``Though we strayed from our
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purpose. Should such an entity exist, what would it \emph{want}?''
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Kairos' eyes came to rest on me, unblinking.
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``Horse-trading, Catherine,'' he said. ``Not horse-\emph{giving}.''
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My pipe held nothing but ashes, by now, so I leaned back to empty it on
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the head of one of the gargoyles. I could have garbed what I had to say
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in vagueness and a touch of the cryptic, but he'd win out if we played
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that game. No, best to cough up my part in a way that benefitted me as
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well. There was as much to learn from questions asked as secrets
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offered.
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``She knew the Dead King while he was still mortal,'' I said, after
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stowing away my pipe. ``And watched his rise with great interest, from
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as close as she could.''
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The Tyrant's lips quirked.
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``And what was she looking for?'' he asked.
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Interesting, I thought. Kairos had understood my meaning earlier when
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I'd mentioned \emph{intercession}, and the only individual I'd ever
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heard call the Bard the `Intercessor' was Neshamah. Considering the Dead
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King had mentioned the Tyrant had reached out to him when we'd spoken in
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Keter last year, I'd assumed the information came from there. But it
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seemed he wasn't fully aware of the history between those two, if that
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question was any indication. Not that I could reasonably assume \emph{I}
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was, but odds were I knew more about than that most. Including even this
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damnably well-informed man, looked like.
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``How villains are made,'' I said.
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He was good, I thought, but that red eye gave it away. The triumph he
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was feeling, like something he'd suspected for years had just been
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confirmed. So, my eternal friend had encountered an application of that
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knowledge at some point. I'd heard that entire conversation, including
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the parts I hadn't mentioned, so I had a suspicion as to what was
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important here\emph{. I won't solve the riddle with the tools they gave
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me, so it seems I must learn craftsmanship of my own,} the Bard had
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said. Her methods were her own, no gift from the Gods. Which meant she
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was capable of making mistakes. I thought of the madman down in the
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city, silently recording trials, and wondered if I had not just
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discovered a very important piece. Kairos had arranged the election of
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the Hierarch. Kairos had dealt a defeat to the Wandering Bard.
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That did not feel like a coincidence.
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``Your turn,'' I said.
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I was talking about more than the game, as we both knew.
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``War is a messy business,'' the Tyrant of Helike casually said. ``Not
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at all a precise tool. Of course, it is not without its uses. Sometimes
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when you need something dead, where a dagger will not do a landslide
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will serve.''
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Which begged the question, of course, of what exactly the Wandering Bard
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had failed to see stabbed. This couldn't be about the Calamities, it
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wouldn't make sense. They might have been a successful outlier in
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sustained victory for Evil, insofar as my father really cared about
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waving the banner, but getting rid of them couldn't be the \emph{point}
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of this. I didn't doubt for a moment that she'd branded Black in the
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Free Cities just as harshly as I had branded the Lone Swordsman that
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fateful night in Summerholm, but there would have been no need for a
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crusade to hammer that nail fully in. The Doom of Liesse had killed the
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trust between Black and Malicia, which made it just a matter of time
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until the partnership keeping Praes together collapsed. She didn't need
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to start a war, or a Grand Alliance, to send the Dread Empire scuttling
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back to the old ways.
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``A lot of people get killed in landslides,'' I noted.
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``Losses are losses,'' Kairos waved away. ``I suppose it would be more
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apt to compare it to a fire being lit. One can do quite a bit with a
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fire, if one can guide where it burns.''
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My brow furrowed, and I barely paid attention to the move I made on the
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board. If he was implying the Bard had either started -- or, more
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likely, fed and sped up -- a continental war to clean up loose ends,
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then she'd have a finger on both sides. An argument could be made that
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by screwing with Black she'd given the East a push, since through him
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she could get at both Malicia and myself. That sounded horribly risky
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and requiring an amount of insight and foresight that should be fucking
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impossible, but we were dealing with an entity that even the Dead King
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claimed to have never won against. I had to at least consider the
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possibility. It was where she was guiding the Tenth Crusade through that
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I was having trouble to understand. The Grey Pilgrim had influence in
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Levant, sure. But the foremost Ashuran hero was the White Knight, who as
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far as I knew had no real ties to the ruling class of the Thalassocracy.
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And arguably the most powerful Proceran hero was the Saint of Swords,
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someone I very much doubted Cordelia fucking Hasenbach would take
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political advice from. Which made the whole theory fall apart, since the
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First Prince was the mortar of the Grand Alliance and by far, even now,
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the most powerful member. And since we were operating under the
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assumption the Bard couldn't just walk up to someone not Named and pull
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the strings, this put all the rest into question.
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``Incomplete,'' I said. ``At the very heart.''
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Kairos smiled, and it twisted his face into something barely human.
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``She has a cousin, Catherine,'' he reminded me.
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My fingers clenched. \emph{The Augur. Shit, I can't believe I forgot
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about the Augur.} That was a very dangerous angle. It should be hard to
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manipulate an oracle, but then what we knew about the Augur's power --
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and the Bard's, for that matter -- was limited. Even information about
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Agnes Hasenbach herself was thin on the ground. It was known, however,
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that her crowned cousin trusted her a great deal. Why wouldn't she? The
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Augur had helped her win the civil war that put her on the throne in the
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first place. Still, it didn't mean that the First Prince was in the
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Wandering Bard's pocket. Not even close. But it did mean that the
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Intercessor could get the right words at the right time to end up in
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Cordelia Hasenbach's ears. I met the Tyrant's eyes and found open
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amusement in them. He was well aware that even if I went to the First
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Prince with this she'd just see it as me poisoning the well on one of
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her most effective advisers. A kinswoman, to boot. \emph{And you're
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pleased, you little shit, because you know that means actually allying
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with Hasenbach just got a whole lot more risky,} I thought.
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``Assuming you're right,'' I said, refraining from voicing `and not
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feeding me a well-crafted lie to make this war even more bloody than it
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already is', ``then a lot of effort has been expended. She has been
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\emph{visible} in way she can't often have been before.''
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If she meddled this heavily every few decades, there would be damned
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records of it. That implied something was forcing her hand here and now,
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or she was after something worth the risks. The moment word that
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something like the Wandering Bard was out there pulling strings, a lot
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of her influence waned. And these weren't the days of the Kingdom of
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Sephirah anymore: cleaning up all mentions of her wouldn't be as easy as
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it would have been back then. Not unless she had some divinely-gifted
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aspect for that specific purpose, but I very much doubted that. Sparse
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as they were, there \emph{were} records of her existence. Black had
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found some, and myself others.
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``Indeed,'' Kairos said. ``What makes this age different, I wonder?''
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There was no answer following, just me losing my last priest to an
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unwise trade.
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``Yeah yeah, trading and not gifting,'' I sighed.
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I paused, drumming my fingers on the side of the board. What could I get
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out of him, by telling him this one?
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``On at least one instance, she struck a bargain on the behalf of
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Below,'' I finally said.
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His brow rose, and I got the impression he was distinctly unimpressed.
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``The bargain was not struck with Named,'' I added quietly.
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My eyes were on his red one, awaiting a reaction, but I found none. His
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lips quirked into a smile and I got the distinct impression I'd been
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played. Had the glint of triumph earlier been a fake out? To hide a lie
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when I caught it, or to take away my attention this very moment -- when
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something he actually minded me knowing was on the table? \emph{Tricky
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bastard}, I thought. Getting a read on him was like trying to paint on
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smoke. That'd been a risk from the start, though, I conceded. It was the
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questions that were telling the tale here.
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``How was she summoned?'' the Tyrant pleasantly asked.
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\emph{Gotcha}, I thought. He hadn't know that was possible, then.
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Because this wasn't about specifics -- we both knew that even if I'd
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learn the specifics of the ritual the Sisters had used to reach out to
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Below I wouldn't share them with him -- it was about fresh risk
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introduced to already existing plans. He needed to know if some pious,
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desperate soul out there could call out to Above and get the Intercessor
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a foothold instead. Which meant whatever he was up to, the Wandering
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Bard could still fuck it up if she got an in. \emph{So is that why
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you've been sticking to the Hierarch like a leech?} I thought.
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\emph{He's not just your sword, he's your shield as well?}
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``She was not sent for,'' I said. ``She was sent. Audience was bought
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and paid: desperation, blood and need.''
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His good eye narrowed.
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``And?'' he pressed.
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``There was a lot to lose,'' I said. ``You could call it
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\emph{weight}.''
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Somehow I doubted everyone who slaughtered a priesthood in their own
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seat of power and prayed got a personal visit from the Bard with terms
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to offer. Below, the Intercessor had as good as admitted, didn't want to
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lose the entire Everdark to a catastrophic blunder by the Twilight
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Sages. I tossed him that last part as a bone, a reassurance of sorts.
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It'd take more than a Proceran prince losing his holdings to get the
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Bard an angle. Of course, with our good friend Neshamah on the march the
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stakes for our little scuffle had been raised rather high. The Tyrant
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wasn't out of the woods yet, and so I smiled pleasantly at him.
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``You dropped this, by the way,'' I suddenly said.
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I tossed him back the footman I'd stolen before the game even began. To
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my surprise he failed to catch it, and it bounced off his chin and down
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on the floor. He eyed me with displeasure, and while he bent to pick it
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up I casually switched the places of my last rook and my queen. That
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ought to stave off kingtip for a few more turns.
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``This has been invested with power to explode,'' Kairos amusedly
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accused when he straightened again.
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Ah, so he \emph{could} sense that. Good to know. The Night wasn't
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exactly subtle stuff, but that he could discern the intent I put to it
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wasn't something I'd been entirely certain of.
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``I'm offended you would even say that,'' I said, hand over heart. ``I
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gave this back to you because of my deep and abiding belief in fair
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play.''
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``You really are terrible at this game,'' the Tyrant of Helike noted.
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``I can't believe even after so much cheating you're losing this
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badly.''
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``It's part of the metaphor,'' I lied. ``Like the whole horse thing.''
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``Elegantly done,'' Kairos praised. ``I believe we were speculating as
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to the bounty worth the risks being taken.''
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I did not reply, half-debating reaching for my pipe again as I watched
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him.
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``There is one element singular to our little war,'' the Tyrant idly
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continued. ``A common friend, I believe.''
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The Dead King, was it? Wasn't sure I bought that. Oh, an argument could
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be made. After the series of disasters that had been the crusades headed
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into the Kingdom of the Dead, it might have been easier to assemble a
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coalition of that sort if it was initially headed for Praes instead. But
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it didn't fit with Neshamah's methods. It wasn't like there'd never
|
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before been chaos south of the lakes for him to take advantage of. The
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Hidden Horror was still kicking around through careful application of
|
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the epithet's first part.
|
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|
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``And?'' I said, echoing his earlier rejoinder.
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``Quite the stage, isn't it?'' Kairos said. ``A crusade turned to the
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Tower. The might of the west spent, but not broken. The east eating
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itself alive, to various degrees. Our friend comes rather late to the
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|
banquet.''
|
|
|
|
So that was his story, then. Neshamah had come out to play because he'd
|
|
been invited, as he had been in the days of Dread Empress Triumphant.
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|
The invitation meant he wasn't \emph{the} Enemy but instead \emph{an}
|
|
enemy. This little continental waltz of death was the Intercessor
|
|
finally tying up her oldest loose end, having set out her finest bait to
|
|
draw him out. It was neat and tidy notion, so naturally I distrusted it.
|
|
It wasn't that I would but it beyond the Wandering Bard to have
|
|
engineered this butchery over several decades -- if not more -- just to
|
|
put down the King in Keter. I had no doubts she'd be capable of it,
|
|
whether morally or in actual capacity. But the story felt wrong to me.
|
|
The Intercessor striking out after the arguably most prominent champion
|
|
of Below, Kairos beginning his scheme with the Hierarch to kill or
|
|
cripple her before she could. Sure, that would end up counted as a win
|
|
for the old crowd. Procer devoured, the arbiter of the godly pissing
|
|
contest losing an eye in the grand old tradition of Evil and what Good
|
|
nations managed to survive the wreck would be eclipsed by the
|
|
Below-aligned powers remaining on Calernia. That was the thing, though.
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|
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|
This was too \emph{simple} a game.
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|
|
|
Which meant the Tyrant of Helike had fed me secrets, armed me with just
|
|
enough to interfere, and now intended to loose me into the middle of all
|
|
these delicate plans being laid down. It also meant he was lying to me,
|
|
or close enough, but I couldn't find it in me to be offended by that.
|
|
Might as well blame a fish for swimming.
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|
|
|
``Interesting,'' I said.
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|
|
Then I shrugged and tipped my king. It was, after all, just a game. And
|
|
I'd already gotten what I came from. The Tyrant watched me with a smile
|
|
as I rose to my feet, leaning on my staff.
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|
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|
``I expect I'll be seeing you soon,'' I said.
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|
|
|
``How could I disappoint my closest ally?'' Kairos replied.
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|
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|
I only took a few steps before turning, mostly on a whim.
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|
|
|
``What would actually happen,'' I asked, ``if you won?''
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|
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|
The Tyrant laughed, the sound of it strangely honest.
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|
|
|
``Ah, Catherine, that's the entire point,'' Kairos Theodosian smiled.
|
|
``\emph{Finding out}.''
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|
|
|
I waited until I'd left the changing house to snap my fingers. Enough
|
|
Night had been fed to the piece for the entire set to be shattered in
|
|
the explosion. I supposed that, in a way, it could be considered my
|
|
rebuttal.
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|
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|
If the game got out of hand, I wasn't above breaking the board.
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