490 lines
22 KiB
TeX
490 lines
22 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-50-sunset}{%
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\section{Chapter 50: Sunset}\label{chapter-50-sunset}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Blood freely spilled always offers greater power, for it carries
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the worth of both the blood and the choice.''}
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-- Extract from ``The Most Noble Art of Magic'', by Dread Emperor
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Sorcerous
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\end{quote}
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``Huh,'' the Tyrant said. ``That is \emph{not} what I believed that
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would do.''
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I wheeled on him with cold eyes. For all that he'd helped me land the
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killing stroke on the Saint, he was also the reason there'd been a need
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for one at all. We'd been close to subduing her, before he'd decided to
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taunt Fate and loudly dare it to meddle. There would still have been the
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issue of the wounded crown, but Gods I would have preferred ending this
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without Laurence de Montfort's corpse on the ground. Not because of any
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deep affection for the heroine, though I'd had a few perturbing glimpses
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on this journey at the woman that lay under the zealotry, but because
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the Saint of Sword's death would both have a messy aftermath and rob us
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of someone who might have been able to truly hurt the Dead King. I'd
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begun this winter itching to put her down, but now\ldots{} A virtue was
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no less of one because it belonged to an enemy, and for all her horrid
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flaws Laurence de Montfort had hardly been without the opposite. My hand
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had been forced, in the end, when the choice had been between a woeful
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roll of the dice and slaying her where she stood. But for all that the
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choice I'd made would stay with me, I would not for a moment forget
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who'd forced me to make it.
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``This was,'' I said, ``one betrayal too many, Kairos.''
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``There's no such thing, Catherine,'' he confidently told me. ``And if
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there was, yet one more betrayal would see to it.''
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Shouldn't be too difficult to kill him, I thought. I had no intention of
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allowing anywhere near the decision yet to be made over the crown, or of
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sparing him after that last knife in the back, so ending this here and
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now before the Twilight Crown finished crumbling seemed the way to go
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about it. Kairos Theodosian still had a handful of attending gargoyles
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and more artefacts than anyone should have at their fingertips, but
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aside from that he was spent. He'd burned his strength against the Skein
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and then against me, shaken his sleeves enough that all his worst tricks
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had already been revealed. And while I was hardly fresh, above us two
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crows still slowly circled. Omens of death, and death was what I
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intended on delivering: if I need seek the helping hand of my
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patronesses for that, so be it. On the other hand, I grimly thought,
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there was still one last use left for the Tyrant of Helike tonight.
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``There's one path that doesn't lead to me snatching the life out of you
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tonight,'' I coldly said. ``And that's you putting on that crown.''
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``So it seems I am to die,'' the Tyrant pensively said, ``unless,
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instead, I am to die. Truly, my friend, you present me with a dilemma.''
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``Burn enough bridges and you'll find there's no pretty path left,'' I
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bluntly said. ``You just tried to get half of us killed by flapping your
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mouth, Kairos. Fuck the amnesty you bargained for: the last courtesy I
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offer you is deciding the shape of your grave.''
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The slightest flicker of power, but there were only so many times
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someone could use a trick around me before I caught on.
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``Riddle me this, Catherine,'' the Tyrant cheerfully said. ``What makes
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you think that-''
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Night flooded me, bringing strength to my hands, and I crushed the
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obsidian scabbard still in my grasp. The powder that fell I blew through
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and, shaping the Night I threaded within it, cast it outwards. The
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obsidian dust revealed Kairos' glamoured silhouette as he tried to make
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for the door and the Night I'd sent out wove itself into a noose that
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delicately went around his neck. The end of that rope fell into my palm,
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and as the noose tightened my fingers closed around it.
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``Well,'' Kairos Theodosian slowly said, glamour dispelling. ``This is
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embarrassing.''
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``Don't pay attention to him,'' the glamour I'd been conversing with
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insisted. ``He's an impostor.''
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I wound the Night rope around my fist and spread my stance to steady my
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footing.
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``How's your dilemma coming along?'' I asked.
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``Bracingly,'' the Tyrant replied without missing a beat.
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``Enough,'' the Grey Pilgrim tiredly said.
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The streak of Light cut halfway through the rope of my own making,
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severing it clean. I was, bluntly put, too surprised by the old man's
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sudden turn to properly react.
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``How many of us do you intend to slay tonight, Queen Catherine?'' the
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Peregrine said. ``Enough.''
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``If it's not him it'll have to be one of us,'' I pointed out. ``There
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is no reason to spare him, Pilgrim. One might well argue he earned that
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end.''
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``Shall we speak of endings earned then, Black Queen?'' the Grey Pilgrim
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replied, tone remote and eyes considering. ``It would be an exchange of
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some consequence, I think.''
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``You can't be serious,'' I said. ``You struck out too, Pilgrim. To
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contain her, as I wanted to. And the damned reason it had to go further
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than that was the Bard's fucking amnesty, which \emph{you} insisted
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on-''
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``I am well aware of what took place here tonight,'' the Peregrine
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harshly interrupted. ``Are \emph{you}? I'd just lent my hand to the
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killing of a woman I loved like kin and trusted just as deep. Those ties
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were already tried and tested when you were yet to be born, Catherine
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Foundling. I did this because the bargain you offer may yet save lives
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by the millions and lay the foundation of a long-lasting peace. But do
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not mistake that, not for a moment, as my having been suborned to your
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every whim.''
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``None of that means he should be sent home with a slap on the wrist,''
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I hissed.
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``A trusted and farsighted comrade has asked me to spare the Tyrant's
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life,'' he flatly said. ``And so it will be spared, no matter the nasty
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tricks he may play.''
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``You are the hero of my heart, Grey Pilgrim,'' Kairos Theodosian said,
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picking out the Night noose still around his neck and dropping it to the
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floor. ``In the spirit of my deep gratitude, I would offer-''
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The weight that fell over the room was almost a familiar thing. Above us
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Sve Noc spared a glance, and so my knees were not made to buckle, but
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the Tyrant of Helike was offered no such protection. The odd-eyed
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villain collapsed, first on one knee and then outright to the ground for
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that leg's shaking. Twitching on the stone floor, Kairos rasped out a
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pained breath as the Grey Pilgrim stared down at him. Sharing that gaze,
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the Choir of Mercy looked upon the Tyrant without the slightest speck of
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compassion.
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``You are not forgiven, Kairos Theodosian,'' the Peregrine said, voice
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ringing with power. ``You will yet serve a greater purpose, and for that
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you will be allowed to crawl out of this place through filth and dust.
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But you are not \emph{forgiven}, you creature of ruin and perfidy.''
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The Tyrant twitched on the floor still and I realized with a start it
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was as much from his convulsing body as a shivering laughter ripping out
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of his throat.
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``Coward,'' he gasped. ``Even now Mercy holds your hand.
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\emph{Coward}.''
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The old man strode forward, dusty grey robes trailing behind him, and he
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knelt before the cripple before laying a hand over his lips.
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``Through lies and deception you have brought great suffering,'' the
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Grey Pilgrim said. ``And so from you I take that poisonous gift: never
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again will you speak untruth, lest it be the last words you speak at
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all.''
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Radiant light blinded my eyes, for a heartbeat, and through the
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Pilgrim's touch I felt the Ophanim reach out into Creation. This would
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be a curse, if a villain had been the one to place it. I wondered what
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it was to be called, when a heroic hand had done the placing. My brow
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furrowed. Would lying make Kairos make a mute or kill him? It'd not been
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clear, by the phrasing. Looking at the Peregrine's shoulders, I wondered
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if that'd been on purpose. The Tyrant's body shuddered one last time,
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like someone whose fever was going the way of the grave, and only then
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did his twitching end. He exhaled a ragged breath.
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``This is not,'' Kairos Theodosian guffawed, ``the last you've seen of
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me.''
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Mismatched eyes going wide, he looked up and waited. A moment passed and
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he did not die.
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``Best get crawling then, I suppose,'' the Tyrant of Helike mused.
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``Until next time, friends.''
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Without a hint of shame he flipped onto his belly and began dragging his
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expensive robes through the filth, fleeing the throne room like a snake
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slithering on the ground. Three heartbeats later the last remaining
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gargoyles ran out after him, as quick as their little legs allowed. I
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debated, seriously, reaching for the Night and just vaporizing the back
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of his head. The temptation was there, made even heavier by the way the
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odds were good I'd manage it. But if I did, it wasn't the story that'd
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punish me. I'd be, in essence, breaking off ties with the Grey Pilgrim.
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Which I couldn't afford to, if the Accords were to be more than a waste
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of ink and parchment.
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``That was a mistake,'' I finally said.
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``If it was,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, ``then it was mine to make. Not
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yours.''
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I kept my face calm but winced beneath it. Already the cracks were
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beginning to run through what I'd wanted to be the foundations of the
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Liesse Accords. And it wasn't fair, I thought, for there was plenty of
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fault to spare and divide. But in the end, the Peregrine had stuck to
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our arrangement and helped slay the same woman whose life he'd bargained
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for. I could not truly ask more of him or begrudge his bitterness over
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having been led to this pass.
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``If you're quite finished,'' Archer spoke up, ``then I could use a
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hand, Pilgrim. I'm usually concerned only with hitting heads, not what
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comes after. Does he need healing?''
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She'd propped up the Rogue Sorcerer over her knee, supporting the back
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of his neck. The Saint had knocked Roland unconscious, but aside from a
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red boot mark on his forehead the spellcaster should have no lasting
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marks. A concussion seemed likely, though, Named or not. The Pilgrim
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hurried to the younger hero's side, wielding Light with a delicate touch
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for but a few moments before the Sorcerer woke. The mark, I noted, had
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gone from bright red from light pink but it still remained highly
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visible.
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``She's dead then,'' Roland croaked out, eyes going to the heroine's
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corpse. ``Gods, what a waste.''
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``So it was,'' I quietly agreed.
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His eyes, for once without trace of a coloured ring around the pupil,
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met mine.
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``Your work?'' he asked.
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I nodded. Behind us, as is mocking the quiet of the conversation now
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taking place, the crown continued lashing out around itself with
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tendrils of sorcery.
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``Whoever bears that will die,'' the Rogue Sorcerer frankly said. ``I'd
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be like trying to grip a naked blade as tight as you can, only with your
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soul instead of your fingers.''
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The Saint of Swords' last kill, unerringly made from beyond the grave.
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Her aged figure still lay sprawled at the foot of the throne, still and
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silent. No one had dared to touch it.
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``Look like the choice was made for us,'' Archer said, seemingly amused.
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``We're back at making a god and killing it, whether we like it or
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not.''
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``There is no choice to make,'' Tariq evenly said.
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And already I could see the lay of that, how it'd unfold. A band of five
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assembled before the eyes of princes and princesses of Procer had gone
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into broken Arcadia at the urging of the Black Queen, among them perhaps
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the two most famous heroes alive. Neither the Regicide nor the Peregrine
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would return from that journey. The treacherous Tyrant of Helike would
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escape with but a curse, and from the heroes the only survivor would be
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the Rogue Sorcerer -- a hero little known, and a mage to boot. Sorcery
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was not well-trusted, in Procer, and seemingly rare in Levant.
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We'd be at war again before Morning Bell, bargain or not.
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``Agreed,'' I said. ``It'll have to be me.''
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Three gazes turned to me, Archer's the least surprised.
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``You said it was possible resurrection would work,'' I reminded the
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Pilgrim. ``And dawn comes. If it doesn't, well\ldots{} Vivienne's been
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designated as heiress to the throne. I wish she'd had longer to prepare,
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but we don't always get to choose.''
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``No,'' Indrani said.
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I blinked at her.
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``You've cheated death too many times, Cat,'' she bluntly said. ``You've
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always squeaked out of it so far because you had a story at your back,
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but this time the wind's going the other way. You've spent your luck
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thrice over, this is just going to get you killed.''
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``It'll get someone killed regardless,'' I said. ``I don't relish the
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thought I might not come back from this, Indrani, but I knew the risk
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when I began going down this path.''
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``That's nice,'' Archer casually said. ``Very stirring. But if you take
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so much as a step in that crown's direction, I'll knock you the fuck
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out.''
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She was, I realized as I looked at her stony expression, absolutely
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serious. It was a strange thing, to both love and be furious with
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someone in the same moment for the same reason.
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``It cannot be you, Queen Catherine,'' the Grey Pilgrim agreed. ``You
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underestimate the depth of the loyalties you have earned, and not only
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here. The Army of Callow would carry your corpse to the gates of Salia
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to make a funeral pyre of it. And I shudder to think of what the drow
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would be, without their designated conscience.''
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``It can't be you either,'' I hissed. ``You think it'll go bad if I die?
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Hells, Pilgrim, your death alone would have Levant on the warpath but
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the Saint \emph{and} you? Even if the First Prince turned up just to
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order the Alliance armies down there not to fight we'd still have a
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battle on our hands.''
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``Then it has to be me,'' the Rogue Sorcerer tightly said. ``Archer has
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already been resurrected once, there is not even a chance of her being
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spared lasting death.''
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He shuddered out a breath.
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``It will have to be me,'' Roland repeated. ``It makes sense. I am the
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only practitioner among you, who best to shape this realm in what is
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needed of it?''
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``At a guess? The only person in this room to have ruled over a court of
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the fae before,'' I said.
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``Cat, you can't be trusted to make a choice like that right now,''
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Indrani frankly said. ``Whenever there's a blunder -- and I'm guessing
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you count the Saint's death as one -- you always get all\ldots{}
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self-flagellating. Like you're just looking for a sword to fall on.
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Pilgrim says it's good politics to keep you alive? Even better. I don't
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really give a shit, though. I'd rather cut the damn thing than let you
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put it on.''
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``You can't think like that, Archer,'' I sharply said. ``I'm one life.
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That's the weight on the scale. You'd be putting at risk hundreds of
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thousands-''
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``Then it's a good thing I'm not one of Above's footsoldiers, isn't
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it?'' Archer said. ``I get to be selfish if I want to.''
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I wasn't going to make headway there, was I? Touched as I was, I was
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just as infuriated. Because I couldn't be grateful for this, not when it
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might cost the world so much for her to follow through. Who was it, I'd
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wondered, who'd taught her to love people on her own terms -- much as I
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wanted to blame the Lady of the Lake for it, the dark suspicion lingered
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it might just have been me.
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``It will not be you,'' the Pilgrim said. ``Nor will it be Roland.''
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Though he'd gone pale at the notion of perhaps embracing his own death,
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I felt a sliver of admiration for the way the Sorcerer didn't simply
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take the first way out he was offered.
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``The Black Queen was correct,'' Roland said. ``There may be war, if you
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are the one crowned and killed.''
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``My death will echo,'' the Grey Pilgrim said, cocking his head to the
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side. ``I have been promised this. There will not be war.''
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The Ophanim \emph{agreed} with this? Godsdamned angels.
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``You're needed to keep the heroes together,'' I said. ``There's no one
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else with the pull.''
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Maybe, and I would not have put a lot of faith in that prospect, maybe
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the Saint could have succeeded at that. She'd had the strength, if not
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the charisma.
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``The White Knight will return,'' the Pilgrim serenely said. ``He was
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already on his way.
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``The Tyrant had plans about him,'' I said.
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``I expect he does,'' the Peregrine said, undertone amused. ``It will
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come to nothing, under the stern glare of the Seraphim.''
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``It might be that you could forgive my death,'' the Rogue Sorcerer
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hesitantly said. ``None could do the same, for you.''
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``Forgiveness was never meant to be a salve for every wound made on
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Creation,'' the Pilgrim gently said. ``It was a gift to be handed out in
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the face of grave injustice. And there is no injustice, Roland, in an
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old man being allowed to rest at last.''
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``So you're just going to lie down and die?'' I said.
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The was a heartbeat of silence.
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``The Saint of Swords is dead,'' I said. ``We all had a hand in that,
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mine looming largest by far. But that's it, Pilgrim? Your friend is dead
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and you feel tired, so you're choosing death when Calernia is facing its
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harshest test since the reign of Triumphant?''
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``Queen Catherine,'' the Sorcerer hissed. ``There is no need for-''
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``You've done some real nasty things over the years, haven't you
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Tariq?'' I said. ``We both know you have.''
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The old man's blue eyes, limpid as a cloudless summer sky, met mine.
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``You don't get to roll over for death, after crossing those lines,'' I
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said. ``After taking on that responsibility.''
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``Which of us are you truly haranguing, Black Queen?'' the Grey Pilgrim
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chided me, not unkindly.
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``I think I'll get away with it,'' I pensively replied. ``I really do.''
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Because I'd been here before. Twice. At this crossroads, making this
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call. I'd chosen death to rid myself of a pattern of three with the Lone
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Swordsman and taken my due resurrection from the Hashmallim after
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refusing the crown they offered me. I'd chosen death once more to slip
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the bindings the Diabolist had entwined me in, making myself the beastly
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keystone to her demise, and refused the crown she offered me. Liesse had
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been the crucible of my existence in a way nowhere else in this world
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could claim to be. Which of my triumphs and ruins had not been born of
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this place, or taken place among it? Here in this city I'd forged my
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claim of power over Callow not once but twice -- first through bargain,
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and then through simple might. I'd struck a pact here that allowed Akua
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Sahelian to govern this place, and when that governance led to folly it
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was on these grounds I'd torn through her heart. Indrani said I'd
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cheated my demise too often, and perhaps she was right. Twice, here, I
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had tricked life out of death. But there'd never been a third, for
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before I'd woken in the depths of the Everdark mortal once more I'd
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dreamt and within that dream asked Sve Noc a question: \emph{am I dead?}
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And the reply had been: \emph{at the threshold}. Not through. Not quite
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dead. And so, I thought, Archer might be wrong in this.
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Maybe I did still have a story at my back: twice living through death
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after twice being offered a crown. There was power in reiteration, in
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repetition, and few numbers had heavier hand on a story than three. Or,
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I knew, this might be where the pattern came to a close. This once I'd
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be reaching for the crown, and so my death would remain. It could go
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either way, I felt. Yet even then, I had a better chance of living
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through this than any of the other three. Rolling the dice on poor odds
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had always been one of my worst habits, I thought, but why stop now? You
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only lived once -- give or take a few times.
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``Three times I've been offered a crown here, by someone neither fully
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friend nor foe,'' I began. ``Three times-``
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Archer, sighing, slid behind me and to my indignation she covered my
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mouth with her palm and put me in a chokehold. I began struggling, but
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she was Named and I was not: the disparity in strength could not be
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breached my mundane means.
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``Is that\ldots{} necessary?'' the Rogue Sorcerer delicately asked.
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``If you feel like you're winning,'' Indrani said, ``the single
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stupidest thing you can do is let Catherine Foundling \emph{talk}. Go
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on, Tariq. Before she turns it around on us.''
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I reached for the Night, preparing to force her back as gently as I
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could, but it slipped through my fingers. Fear rose up in me, and I
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looked up. The Sisters were perched on the edges of the gutted throne
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room, one to the east and one to the west. They watched, silent.
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\emph{Are you worthy?} Komena asked, a whisper in my ear.
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Patrons, I thought. Not tools or companions but goddesses of which I was
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the high priestess. If I set a measure in their name, I would be
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measured by it. It was, I admitted, brutally fair of them.
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\emph{I have brought us here, through scheme and steel}, I told them.
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\emph{I've tricked mortals and Named, set the Dead King aflight and
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freed from his grasp the last of the Fairfaxes. I have slain and won
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victories, all to bring this journey to an end of my making. Who can be
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worthy, if not me?}
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Sve Noc watched me, judged me, and in inscrutable silence passed their
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judgement.
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\emph{All will be Night,} Andronike whispered in my ear, and it tasted
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like assent.
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Indrani knew me best, and so when the goddess-crows above let out a
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cacophonous caw she immediately tried to knock me unconscious.
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Unfortunately I knew her as well, and so restored not to struggle but to
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the first trick I'd even seen one of the Firstborn use: sinking into a
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pool of Night at my feet, I dissolved into a tendril of shadow and
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|
followed forward. Even in that strange, unpleasant state I could feel
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|
the clash of Sve Noc and the Choir of Mercy -- both attempting to hinder
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|
the others' champion and prevent their foe from hindering their own.
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|
They were, at least in that moment, each other's match. I could hardly
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|
see, when shadowed, for unlike drow this state of being did not come
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naturally to me. I had to leap back into mortal form to get my bearings,
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though fortunately I found myself not far from the throne. From the
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corner of my eye I found Indrani, having strung her bow, nocking an
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arrow and likely intending to wing me before I could claim the crown.
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|
The Sorcerer's jaw was tightly clenched as he worked some manner of
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sorcery, but it'd be too late. Sidestepping the Saint's corpse, I
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reached for the crown.
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My fingers went through it
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The illusion broke, now that I knew it was there, and so did the one the
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Rogue Sorcerer had woven around the Peregrine. The Grey Pilgrim took the
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wounded crown, set with his own star, and placed it upon his brow.
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``No,'' I shouted.
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Like it was the most natural thing in the world, the Grey Pilgrim leaned
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down and gently pried the Saint of Swords' blade from her cold hands.
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And, just as gently, rammed it through his own heart.
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