452 lines
20 KiB
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452 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-46-abdication}{%
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\section{Chapter 46: Abdication}\label{chapter-46-abdication}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``One hundred and two: defeat is inevitable, yet it can be just as
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useful as a victory. Fate assures you at least one loss, so make sure
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it's the right kind.''}
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-- ``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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We'd won, so naturally in the heartbeat that followed it all went to
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shit. Masego stumbled down his throne with gasping breaths, fingers
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blindly clawing at the rune-carve stone. He'd always been tall, but
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never before had I seen him so \emph{thin} -- it made him look spindly,
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like some long-legged insect in ragged black robes. The sorcery that'd
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been hanging heavy in the air was gone now, like some great gust of wind
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had blown it out, and I suspected that whatever it was that'd achieved
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that was the same thing that had Masego's limbs trembling. Heaving, he
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began to puke and I had to restrain myself from going to him after
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taking a unthinking step forward. It'd have to wait just a little
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longer, graceless as that truth was. Before the rest I needed to be sure
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that I wasn't going to be asked to make an ugly choice between two
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people I dearly loved.
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``Pilgrim,'' I said. ``What ails him, does it threaten his life?''
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Even if the man did not know, the Ophanim would.
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``Only if not attended to,'' the Peregrine said after a moment. ``The
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fever will rise and his body will weaken: it will take weeks if not
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months of recovery.''
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``Then raise Archer, if you would,'' I said.
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I'd phrased it politely but we both knew it for the order it was.
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Wordlessly, the Sisters left my shoulders
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``We don't raise the dead, Foundling,'' the Saint sharply said.
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``Resurrect, then,'' I replied, rolling my eyes.
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I met Tariq's stare and slowly he inclined his head in agreement. I
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wondered if I was right in guessing he'd not immediately brought Indrani
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back because he'd thought Masego might yet die and that, in the war on
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the Dead King, the Hierophant would be more useful than the Archer. I
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set aside the thought, for there was nothing to gain from pursuing it.
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Even if he'd been thinking that way the colder part of me had to
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acknowledge that it might not be a bad thing at least one of us had
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been. I was too close to this, to them, to be able to genuinely do the
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same. Leaving the Grey Pilgrim to the business of overturning death, I
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hurried to the still-crawling Hierophant. By the looks of it there
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hadn't been much in his stomach, which no doubt made the heaves worse as
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the body stubbornly tried to spew out something that wasn't there. His
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glass-crafted eyes moved wildly beneath the eyecloth, but he did not
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seem completely blind. I knelt in front of him, swallowing a pained
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wince, and made sure he saw me before further approaching.
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``Masego,'' I softly said. ``It's me? Do you recognize me?''
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``Catherine,'' he croaked. ``It's gone.''
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``I know,'' I softly agreed. ``We all saw you push the Dead King out. We
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struck at it together.''
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I caught his shoulder and, shivering at the weight it put on my bad leg,
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tipped him back so he was leaning against me instead of half-sprawled
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over the floor.
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``Here we go,'' I said. ``I'm going to get the vomit off you, Masego, is
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that all right?''
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``Not the Dead King,'' he rasped. ``It's all gone, Catherine. My
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\emph{magic}.''
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I stiffened at the announcement. I wished he'd spoken in a softer tone,
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so that the heroes -- and Kairos, who'd remained dangerously silent
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through all of this -- would not have heard him. As they most definitely
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just had. I immediately rebuked myself for the thought, for he was in no
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state to consider such matters. \emph{Are you sure}, that pointed little
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question, held on the tip of my tongue for a heartbeat before I buried
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it. It'd only insult him: he wouldn't be this devastated if he wasn't
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sure.
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``It'll be all right,'' I whispered. ``We'll fix it. There's always a
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way, Masego. Always.''
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A lie, I thought, but one I would have wanted to be told in his place.
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He'd be able to speak to this more clearly when he'd rested and
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recovered, and when he did he'd have Akua to help and the knowledge of
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Sve Noc to look through. If there was a path to be had, we would find
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it.
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``I feel warm,'' he said. ``Fever. My teeth hurt. \emph{I can't fix
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it}.''
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Sickly as he was, Masego was larger and heavier than me -- I had to draw
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on Night to subdue him without hurting him, his sudden violent flailing
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taking me by surprise. Shit. I'd wanted him awake for the last stretch
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of this but he was going a bad way. Weaving a long thread of Night as
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gently as I could, I pressed my thumb against his forehead and let the
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working gently tug him into slumber. His thrashing subsided until it was
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little more than twitches and I let out a shaky breath of my own. All
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right. It looked bad, but once we got back to camp it could be fixed. We
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had mages and priests and I was owed by the foremost hero on Calernia, a
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man who had an in with a Choir. He'd come out of this all right, and
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then we could see about clawing back his magic from our enemy. Breathe
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in, breathe out. There was no place for weakness in me when the Tyrant
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and the Saint were looking. I unclasped the Mantle of Woe and bunched it
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together, sliding it under Masego's head so he wouldn't scrape it
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against the runes. I rose back to my feet, leaning against my staff.
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``Touching,'' the Tyrant of Helike drawled. ``I do not jest, Catherine,
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it was truly-''
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``There's a general that's been with you from the start,'' I said,
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meeting his gaze. ``Basilia, is it?''
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``Are you threatening me?'' Kairos asked, sounding amused.
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``Finish that sentence,'' I said, ``and you'll find out.''
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Whatever might have followed that was to remain unspoken, for with a
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gasp Indrani returned to the land of the living. I limped past the
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Tyrant, making my way to her side. Tariq had put her on her back before
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digging into his aspect, and now miraculously enough there was no trace
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of the hole that'd been blow through her head save for dried blood over
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her face. The Saint was gazing down at her with a sneer when I arrived,
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while the Pilgrim gently asked her to cease moving so the Light could
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heal the last of her scrapes. Indrani's hazelnut eyes swam into focus
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when I arrived, first staying on me and then moving to the other two
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heroes by her `bedside'. Leaning to the side, Archer spat out a little
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mucus and wiped her lips.
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``Cat's always been fine and I can be sold on the Saint -- gotta love a
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girl who knows her way around a sword,'' she drawled. ``But a
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\emph{priest} too? Gods, there can't have been that much liquor in the
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city.''
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In a moment of quicksilver surprise, I saw the Saint of Swords looking
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like someone had just personally pissed in her morning porridge and the
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Grey Pilgrim looked utterly, wickedly delighted before I had to cover my
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mouth with a hand lest I burst out laughing.
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``I wasn't always a priest, I'll gave you know,'' the Peregrine
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sanguinely replied. ``As a young man I once even attempted to become one
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of the Hidden Poets.''
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``They of the seventy-eight methods of carnal love?'' Indrani asked,
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sounding somewhat intrigued.
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``Indeed,'' he agreed. ``Alas, my kamil declamations were judged
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unworthy and so I took an interest in healing instead.''
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``You look rather spry, for a dead woman,'' I said.
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I looked at her searchingly even as I spoke, looking for a flinch or
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darkening of mien that would have given away a shadow cast on her soul.
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Resurrection was too great a boon to come without a cost, in my eyes,
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though that did not mean that price would be paid immediately. Yet I
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found nothing and so offered up my hand to cover my surprise. Indrani
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took it, and with a grunt I dragged her up.
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``Well,'' Archer said, ``I did get to take a nap. I'm all refreshed
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now.''
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\emph{I} almost winced at that. I'd not seen her die, but the sight of
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her head missing a chunk was going to haunt my nights for a few months
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to come. Indrani's eyes moved to the sleeping form of Masego, lingering
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on the rise and fall of his chest. The twitched were already rarer, but
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still I caught his leg in a spasm as he turned and a moan escaped his
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lips.
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``What happened?'' she quietly asked. ``I know how I\ldots{}''
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She hesitated there, and I found an almost troubled look on her face
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when I looked. Not entirely without marks, then. I reached for her
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shoulder, but she shook it away.
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``We knew it was a possibility,'' she said, tone grown firm. ``But it
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should have shaken him out of the Dead King's hold. What went wrong?''
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``Your little friend pushed out the Hidden Horror,'' the Saint of Swords
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said, approaching. ``Long enough for us to help strike him down.''
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``When the shard of the Dead King ruling over the Hierophant was
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destroyed, it took his magic with it,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said.
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Both the Pilgrim and the Saint shot a look at him, and he dipped his
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head as if to confirm something.
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``Roland?'' I asked.
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``It is part of my Choosing to know when there is sorcery to
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confiscate,'' the hero told me, face grim. ``There is none left in the
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Hierophant.''
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``Shit,'' Indrani murmured. ``That's going to leave scars even if we fix
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it.''
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``Which we will,'' I meaningfully said.
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Indrani questioningly glanced at my neck, more specifically the height
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where my cloak's collar would usually be.
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``If anyone can,'' I agreed. ``Otherwise, well, praise the Night and
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we'll figure something out.''
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``Crows might know something, yeah,'' Archer said. ``They're basically
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magpies only with, you know\ldots{}''
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She gestured vaguely, trying to get across the concept of godhood.
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Something that had eluded the finest mages and theologians of the
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continent for millennia.
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``That's heresy,'' I piously said.
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Komena cawed in the distance, unamused by the way I hadn't entirely
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disagreed in my own thoughts.
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``See, you've angered the gods,'' I said.
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After the hellish, riotous night we'd gone through -- and which had yet
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to end -- trading barbs with Indrani like this was like a balm for the
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soul. The rest of the band had been looking on with various degrees of
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amusement and impatience, which was fair. Most of us were allies of
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convenience, if even that. I cleared my throat, Archer falling in at my
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left like it was the most natural thing in the world. I found strength
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in that where earlier I'd begun to find mostly exhaustion.
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``The five of us have made it to the journey's end,'' I said. ``And so
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now we bring about an ending.''
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``This where you reveal the last crown?'' Laurence de Montfort bluntly
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asked. ``Overdue.''
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``I'll confess to some curiosity as well,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said.
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There was a moment of silence, a courtesy I was offering to the man in
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question -- the opportunity to speak himself, if he preferred it that
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way.
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``It will be mine,'' the Grey Pilgrim said. ``Though the Dominion of
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Levant has no kings, I was born to the bloodline that has ruled it since
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its founding.''
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The Saint spat to the side.
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``Funny how it's always us who ends up paying the butcher's bill
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tonight,'' she said. ``Almost like it was planned that way.''
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I didn't answer that. It was true, at least in part, though I regretted
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nothing. For all that I'd scraped them raw, I'd made them fair offers
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and would deliver on all I had promised. As we'd begun the year deathly
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foes, I considered that far more generous treatment than was owed by the
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ways they'd dealt with me in the past.
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``There can be no \emph{us} and \emph{them}, Laurence, if we are to
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survive the decade,'' the Pilgrim quietly said. ``Not against the kind
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of foe we face. And it is no great loss, I assure you: I know better
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than most how ill-suited I would be to rule.''
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``Some would say merely knowing that would make you better ruler than
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most,'' the Saint replied.
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I bit down on my tongue, because now was not the moment to express my
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strong opinion on the matter. Humility wasn't necessarily a bad thing in
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a king, but it was hardly a \emph{qualification}. Ambition wasn't a
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flaw, it was the character trait behind most -- no, now was not the time
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for that. Gods, was this my shatranj speech? Of all the damned habits I
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could have picked up.
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``Oh, please \emph{do} have him elected Holy Seljun,'' the Tyrant
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grinned. ``That would be delightful. We'll have to have his\ldots{}
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great-great-nephew? Close enough, I think. We'll need to have the
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current Seljun assassinated first, that is my implication, but worry
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not. Mercantis offers very fair prices on poison these days.''
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``Must you, Tyrant?'' the Rogue Sorcerer asked.
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``It's simply getting a little too chummy in here for my tastes, if
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you'll forgive my language,'' Kairos cheerily replied. ``As if most
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people in this room had not tried to kill each other at some point.''
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``Well,'' Indrani mused. ``He's not wrong. Why is he alive, anyway?''
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``He made a deal with the Wandering Bard,'' I said.
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``That is the \emph{opposite} of a reason to keep him alive,'' Archer
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pointed out.
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``A courtesy was extended,'' I said, tone informing her the line of
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questioning was at an end.
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``Hear that, Saint?'' Indrani grinned. ``We're being courteous to you.
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So maybe you try not being such a-''
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``\emph{Archer},'' I hissed.
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``-card,'' Indrani adjusted at the last moment, ``I was definitely going
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to say card.''
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Kairos gasped, as if deeply shocked by her foul language.
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``It will not be long before dawn rises,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, ``even
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given the nature of this place. We must attend to the tasks ahead.''
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``Namely, to slay a god,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said.
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That bought an aftermath of silence for a few beats. If he'd not been
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Proceran I would have assumed a pun, but given his origins my
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assumptions erred on the side of clemency.
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``Unless you're holding out on us, Foundling, the odds are not skewed in
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our favour,'' the Saint of Swords bluntly said. ``It would have been one
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thing with the warlock, but he's done. The five of us and your cheap
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Ranger imitation won't cut it.''
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``There were more than simply the Huntsman outside,'' Roland said. ``The
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entire Wild Hunt was standing vigil around the room. We will be
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outnumbered.''
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``We won't be, my dear friend,'' the Tyrant of Helike said, ``for the
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same reason that the Hierophant is nowhere to be found.''
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Three pairs of eyes sought Masego, and when they found nothing at all
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turned to me instead. Alas, without my cloak I'd been robbed of my pipe
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and wakeleaf. Hadn't thought that through properly, I mused.
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``Did you think she wanted this done before dawn for the ambience?''
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Kairos Theodosian grinned. ``Oh no. She wants the war ended before
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daylight scatters her little army of darkness.''
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``I've dealt with fae royalty before,'' I mildly said. ``A story is the
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one blade they can't parry and that we earned, as our band of five. But
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you still need to sink in the knife and that means power. I've provided
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it.''
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Of which there would be no lack, before the coming of dawn. The Sisters
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were circling in the sky above, patient and slow, but the Mighty I'd
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sent for would have long ago made their way through the broken grounds
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of Liesse and reached this deeper palace. If the coming Court and my own
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side came to blow, as I expected they would, I would have warriors
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awaiting more than the match of a Wild Hunt reforged.
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``You think our Larat's going to be a rougher ride than High Noon?''
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Indrani asked.
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``If we let him get a grip, that seems likely,'' I grimly replied.
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None of the others here had been part of our fight against Princess
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Sulia, the general of Summer's hosts and herald of its sun, so while the
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idle reference by Archer was not gibberish to them neither was it really
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\emph{understood}. The Saint and the Pilgrim had faced villains and
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monsters I'd never known the likes of, but the fae were\ldots{}
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different. Less and more dangerous at the same time. And Larat, once the
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Prince of Nightfall, had been all sorts of dangerous even before his
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service under my oaths had taken him across the breadth of Calernia. Fae
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couldn't learn, not the way mortals did. Their natures were static in
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the way our weren't. Yet I knew from experience that they could learn
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to\ldots{} interpret themselves through different eyes, shaping
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themselves through oaths and stories. The Wild Hunt, while bound to me,
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had seen more of Creation than the rest of their likely had in
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centuries. I fully expected any Court they had a hand in making to be
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dangerous in ways that the ancestral forces of nature that were Summer
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and Winter could scarcely have imagined. I breathed out, rolled my
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shoulders to limber them.
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``Ready yourselves,'' I warned. ``We begin.''
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I seized my staff and struck down at the ground, a thin wave of Night
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rippling out, and from that darkness I leaned down to snatch out the bag
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that held seven crowns. Without even needing to look, I knew that the
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fae had come. As I strode towards the throne on which Masego had sat,
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when in the throes of the Dead King's enchantments, from the corner of
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my eye I saw silhouettes standing atop the walls. In ripping out the
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ceiling, I had made of this throne room an arena of sorts -- and in a
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silent circle above the Wild Hunt stood, eyes watchful. I emptied the
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sack at the bottom of the throne. An old crowb of ivory and gold, set
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with a great carved topaz. A straight-edged cavalry sword, wrapped in a
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cloak. An ornate longsword, specked with its dead owner's blood. A
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silver tiara, bitter surrender. A bloody knife, regicide absolved. A
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bare blade within a banner, and last of all two silver wings ripped in
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spite. A harvest of royalty that cast a shadow over a third of the
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greatest realm under Calernian sun. No small harvest, this. The Grey
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Pilgrim padded forward as I threw aside the empty sack, and with
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measured ceremony came to stand before the pile. The old man brusquely
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snapped his own staff over his knee, the old thing breaking like it'd
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been fragile as driftwood, and tossed it onto the pile. He whispered two
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words under his breath, though I caught only one: \emph{izil}.
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With that last addition the seven crowns and one I'd promised were
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offered, and so the creature I'd promised them to arrived. Larat drifted
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in from right, steps silent and smooth, long black hair trailing behind
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him. He near brushed against me as he passed, though it was not jostling
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-- it was an acknowledgement of his presence. We were, I thought, long
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past the petty games of posturing other times might have brought.
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``I had thought, my queen, that you might destroy me before the debt was
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paid,'' the fae amusedly said. ``Or make of me something\ldots{} tamed
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and hollowed.''
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His sole eye flicked a glance upwards, where two crows still circled.
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``I am a woman of my word,'' I replied. ``However terrible that word
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might be.''
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``So you are,'' Larat said, dipping his head. ``Let all witness it, and
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Creation remember it.''
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He ran an almost loving finger against the stone of the throne before
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him, having fluidly stepped around the crowns that were his due. As I
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watched every last thing tossed onto the pile turned to ash, until
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naught was left but that, and under Larat's watchful gaze those ashes
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rose up. They spun once, twice, thrice, and with every spin they
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gathered more tightly into something being forged. A crown, I thought.
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It was made of grey chalcedony and mother-of-pearl, one twisted like
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threads and the other hanging in star-like spots, but something more
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eldritch leant both darkness and radiant lights to the shaping artefact.
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It thickened, until the last touch was added -- a distant radiant star,
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shining on the brow, stolen and set for the pleasure of the newborn
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Court.
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``And so is born the Court of Twilight,'' the fae said. ``Under the
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pilgrim's star, willingly given, and winding through the many realms of
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mortals wicked and righteous both. We tread the span of dusk and dawn,
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unhindered and unseen, watchers of boundaries and makers of secret ways.
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Let none think themselves our masters, for we are the children of the
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debt repaid and the tricks woven in death.''
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Pale fingers caught the crown and Larat softly laughed.
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``I thank you, Sovereign Under the Night,'' he said. ``Not for the
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bargain fulfilled, for that was as ordained, but for what you gave us
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all freely.''
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He'd not put on the crown, I thought. It had not yet begun.
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``And what would that be?'' I asked.
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``We cannot learn as your kind do, Foundling Queen,'' Larat smiled.
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``But we can\ldots{} mimic. That is our gift. And you have shown us a
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great many things. You taught us, my queen, the greatest trick of them
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all.''
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Larat, smiling, put on the crown.
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``Hear my first decree, one and all, as Twilight's King,'' he laughed.
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Larat, smiling, tossed it back down onto the throne.
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``My crown I abdicate, and let the worthiest of you bear it.''
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