381 lines
18 KiB
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381 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-84-declaration}{%
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\section{Chapter 84: Declaration}\label{chapter-84-declaration}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``To concern yourself with wickedness and virtue is to raise
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partitions within your mind, expecting the world to heed them
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thereafter. There can be no sin, save for fettering.''}
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-- Translation of the Kabbalis Book of Darkness, widely attributed to
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the young Dead King
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\end{quote}
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Kairos Theodosian died before the light engulfed him. I couldn't know
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that for sure, for the Tyrant of Helike had already been a half-mangled
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corpse by the time he rose, but some part of me just\ldots{}
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\emph{knew}. Night wrapped around me like a cloak, for without its cold
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embrace I would have been blinded, I watched as the brightness burned
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and consumed and finally ended. Of the boy-king who'd played half the
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crowns of Calernia, not so much as a speck of dust remained. The fury of
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the Choir of Mercy had swallowed him whole, though too late. Not long,
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truly, in the greater scheme of things, but in affairs like this a
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single beat could make all the difference in the world -- and he'd
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clawed to him a great deal more than that. The fading light of his
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absence left me feeling disordered, for though Kairos Theodosian had
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been an appalling monster in some ways in others he had been almost
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admirable. I would not miss him or fall into the snare of remembering
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him as more than he had been: mad, treacherous and like poison to all he
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touched. Yet neither would I pretend he had not been brilliant, in his
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own wicked way.
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The world was better for his passing, but in some terrible way perhaps
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lesser as well.
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In the gutted temple that'd been the seat of this lunacy of a trial, the
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dust settled and the darkness I had called down thinned until nothing of
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it was left. The Grey Pilgrim laid in a bed of shattered wood and
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ground, made unconscious by the heavy grip of the Choir that'd reached
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out through him. The White Knight's hand still clutched the side of the
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broken altar where he'd stood as the living channel to Judgement, or
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perhaps the anchor around its neck. It was hard to tell if the Tyrant
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would have been able to bait -- although could it really be called that,
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when all he'd needed to do was shine a light and let nature take its
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course? -- the Tribunal into this disaster of a situation without the
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White Knight at hand to work through. And a disaster it had been, no two
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ways about that. Mercy would walk away from this with little singed save
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perhaps its pride, should even have such a thing, but Judgement? I could
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still feel in the air the weight of the power it'd thrown around,
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smiting the Hierarch into the ground again and again as he refused to
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bow to their authority.
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I could still feel his power, too, the same heavy lingering furor that'd
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swallowed Rochelant whole. It had been more sharply wielded here, turned
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against the Seraphim instead of allowed to run rampant, and perhaps been
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stronger for it. It'd glimpsed things at the heart of the storm, images
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I hardly understood -- a stele in stone, a woman dying -- but one thing
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was clear: there had been power behind the Hierarch, and it was not
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simply the power of a Named. The weight had come from elsewhere, and it
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had been\ldots{} oppressive. In every sense of the term. And though it
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had failed to cow Judgement, neither had it been willing to be cowed by
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it. More worryingly, when that stalemate had grown beyond what either
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side would tolerate the Hierarch had, for a lack of better term,
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pursued. I'd not felt a speck of power from either him or the Choir
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since.
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Still, my eyes looked beyond as I waited. To the other thing that yet
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waited.
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``And?'' I quietly said.
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``He was still alive,'' the Hierophant said.
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Masego's feet tread across the scorched earth unerringly, his stride as
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sure and certain it had been even as Choirs raged and darkness swelled.
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What would the works of godlings matter, to one like him?
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``That last strike by the Seraphim burned him clean through,'' I said.
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``Not even bone left, Hierophant. What business does even the likes of
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the Hierarch have surviving that?''
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``You mistake life for the wearing of flesh,'' Masego replied. ``I know
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not if it was willingly or by chance, yet the Hierarch sacrificed his
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own as skillfully as any Old Tyrant: the loss of flesh was taken as
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victory by the Choir of Judgement, and so they withdrew.''
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Above us the afternoon sky grew darkened, and slowly the sky began to
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weep ash. It felt, looking up, like the dusk heralding the end of the
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worlds. Gods forgive us all, it might yet be.
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``And he withdrew with them,'' I softly said. ``Hooked into the hallowed
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flesh by the ironclad belief he had the right to judge it.''
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My old friend's steps slowed and finally ceased as he came to stand by
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my side, shoulder-to-shoulder. Masego, wearing cloth over eyes of glass
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and the ragged dark robes like a doomsday prophet, seemed more the man
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of the moment than I. The truth, though, was that he had been spectator
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while I'd had my hands all over this blunder.
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``I am uncertain what will come of it,'' Hierophant admitted, tone
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displeased. ``It may be that the man becomes an obstruction in all
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things, as a seal ever judged and judging.''
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``Or he could be a poison,'' I murmured. ``Taint in the blood, changing
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what stood incapable of such until now.''
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The latter, I thought, felt more like the parting arrow of Kairos
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Theodosian. Something wounded but not slain, a crippling rendered back
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unto the Creation that had so carelessly wounded him since his first
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breath.
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``Let us hope it is that,'' Hierophant said, and my brow rose.
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He dipped his head to the side, conceding to the need for elaboration.
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``A poison will be purged, whether it takes an hour, a decade or a
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millennium,'' Masego said. ``A seal, however, might just last until the
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convictions of either side falter. And before that moment, would sever
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Judgement from the rest of Creation.''
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That would be\ldots{} dangerous, I suspected. A Choir was no small
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thing, to have one removed from the machinery of Creation could not
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possibly be without consequence. And that was without even considering
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the matter of Cordelia Hasenbach's angelic corpse-weapon: Gods only knew
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what might come of using it, now. Ash fell like rain onto the open-sky
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temple at the heart of Lyonceau, and I was forced to wonder if in my
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need to forge a better world I might not have doomed the world as it now
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stood. The Tyrant had been cryptic, as was his wont, but not beyond
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interpretation: the Bard had truly had a scheme afoot to slay the Dead
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King, and I'd taken an axe to it. I was not alone in this, it seemed,
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for \emph{the hidden sting of augury} was undoubtedly a reference to the
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Augur, but it could not be said that a great deal of the blame to be
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laid did not belong at my feet. If I'd not tried to fix it, to make it
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better, the Intercessor's scheme might have gone through and the Dead
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King would either be dead or marching towards death. \emph{He implied
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using the weapon would have had\ldots{} costs}, I reminded myself. It
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must have been the sight of those to come that'd led the Augur to turn
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on the Wandering Bard, however she'd done it.
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Gods Everburning, how harsh must that price must have been that a hero
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would have shied from paying it to slay the \emph{Dead King}.
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``I can't tell,'' I softly admitted, ``if I've made everything better or
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worse.''
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A chuckle, deeply amused.
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``Neither can anyone else, Catherine,'' Masego told me. ``Why would you
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be any different?''
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I looked up at the sky, at the trails of ash left by the wrath of
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angels, and did not answer. It was not untrue, what he'd said. Perhaps
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not the answer I'd wanted, but when had they ever been?
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``Too late to turn back now,'' I said, letting out a long breath.
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``We'll have to see it through to the end.''
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A hand came to rest on my shoulder, lightly.
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``I would have been disappointed if we did not,'' Hierophant said.
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The danger had passed, as much as it would ever pass in a place marked
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by the indignation of two Choirs, and so it was not long before the
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others began to trickle back in. The Rogue Sorcerer headed first to the
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Pilgrim -- the right choice, I thought, both tactically and politically
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-- and with visible relief pronounced him in fine health, save for deep
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exhaustion and a few bruises. Lord Yannu and Lady Aquiline lifted him
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up, with reverent care, and brought him out. The Witch of the Woods saw
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to her partner hesitantly, and I suspected she knew precious little of
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healing. She seemed pleased when Roland came to lend a hand, though less
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so when admitted that Hanno's slumber was not natural, but otherwise
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beyond his ability to see to.
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``Bring him out,'' I said. ``And if the Peregrine cannot see to him when
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he wakes, then the Crows will.''
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The heroine rose to her feet, tall and shrouded in a cloak that covered
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a long tunic. The painted mask of clay on her face hid her expression,
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but not so much I could not feel the hostility wafting off her like
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smoke.
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``As they did when the Choirs struggled against your kin under Below?''
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the Witch harshly said.
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There was, I thought, something strange about her voice. I heard her
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speaking in Lower Miezan, but there were almost other meanings woven in
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-- and with the Sisters warding my mind, I could almost discern what
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language she was \emph{actually} speaking in. It didn't sound like any
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I'd ever heard before, and I was a more than passing polyglot nowadays.
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``I warned him,'' I said. ``Sve Noc would see to containment and nothing
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else. Be glad they did, or this entire town would be drowning in fire
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and angelic anger.''
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``You brought down darkness after the Tyrant struck,'' the Witch
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accused.
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``And saved the lives of everyone on those grounds by doing so,'' I
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flatly said.
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``I could have warded us from the anger of the Ophanim,'' the Witch
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said. ``Had you not-''
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``If you could have handled it better, you should have,'' I mildly said.
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``You didn't, so I stepped in. Whining afterwards is an exercise in
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pointlessness.''
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``Every hero that speaks well of you ends up \emph{crippled}, Catherine
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Foundling,'' the Witch of the Woods snarled. ``While you grow ever
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stronger. I wonder why that is?''
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``Antigone,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``This serves no purpose.''
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``Neither does pretending she is our ally,'' the Witch said.
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``In the face of some foes, all those that breathe are allies,'' the
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Sorcerer flatly said. ``Pretending otherwise is how the day grew so dark
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in the first place.''
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``Hear hear,'' Archer drawled.
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She'd sauntered in at some point and done so quietly enough I'd barely
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heard the sound of her boots biting into the ash. Throwing arms around
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the necks of both Masego and I -- that could hardly be comfortable,
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given the height difference -- she leaned forward grinning.
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``We get you're all pissed your boy Hanno got had, but maybe if you
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whiteclads better kept your eye on the bird you wouldn't have to keep
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eating dirt,'' Indrani said, tone was deceptively cheerful.
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Her arms were tense, and I knew well how quickly she could draw her
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blades when it was time for killing.
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``You offer insolence and nothing more,'' the Witch said.
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``Really?'' Archer drawled, drawing out the word obnoxiously. ``'cause
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look at how we're standing right now, my sweet. Who are, again, the only
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ones keeping an eye on the bird?''
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And like a cold sheet of rain falling on everyone, we were all reminded
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of the presence in the back that had yet to move or speak a single word.
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The Dead King's vessel watched us all with his eyeless gaze, and it was
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true that while the Witch of the Woods was facing me, all this time
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Hierophant and I had been facing him. Indrani had spoken the observation
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lightly, but it had unpleasant aftertaste for much of the room -- enough
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that the Witch briskly and oddly moved her head in a manner I assumed to
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mean the conversation was over. The King of Death said nothing, all the
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while. Now that they'd all been warned of his presence again, the others
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in the temple felt the same thing I had since the beginning: weight. The
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old monster was waiting, and as he did his looming presence grew
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oppressive without need of a single act on his part. If he'd incited
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quarrels between us, I thought, or even mocked and scorned us, it would
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have been different. It would have felt like he was part of this, a
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villain far more dangerous than most of our kind but not \emph{other}.
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His silence, though, drew a line between him and us.
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The Dead King was not involving himself in this because he was above us.
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Because he had no need of resorting to petty tactics when we were, to
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him, little more than children stumbling in the dark.
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It flowed, after that, like a river settling into a riverbed. Like
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Creation wanted the pieces to fall into place. The White Knight was
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carried out by Roland and the Witch, carefully, and in the place of
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heroes came in the mortal crowns. Cordelia Hasenbach stood at the
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centre, the First Prince of Procer of regal bearing even in her riding
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dress but not quite successfully hiding how unnerved she'd been by the
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last hour. The Blood come to war north: Lady Aquiline and Razin Tanja,
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elbow to elbow and fitting there like a shield wall of two. The young
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ones, those, two, and rising. The old guard stood at their left,
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grizzled Lady Itima and grim Lord Yannu, both killers as fine as the
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Dominion had forged in my lifetime. And to the Warden of the West's
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right, more than half of the Woe. Hierophant, ragged and of glimmering
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eye, foe and student both to the Hidden Horror. Archer, smile sharp as
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the blades at her hip, having walked through death and come out of it
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without fear. And I, last of all, leaning on the long staff of yew I had
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chosen over the sword of a Fairfax and all it would mean. All this
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assembly, and on the other side only the King of Death. Seated, silent,
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still.
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Ash drifted down through the open-sky ceiling, coating us all in grey.
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``There is a place,'' the last king of Sephirah said, ``in the heart of
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Levant, where the first pilgrim of grey slew many men.''
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Red embers lit the hollow sockets, as the Dead King finally spoke.
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``In that place lies a secret that Tariq Isbili will know,'' Neshamah
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continued, ``and it will tell you, should you be clever enough, of the
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doom you all so narrowly escaped by the grace of Kairos Theodosian.''
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The malevolent redness lingered on Masego's face, and he met that gaze
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with glass forged in Summer's flame.
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``Follow the truth, Hierophant,'' the Dead King said, sounding almost
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amused.
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Always more secrets, I tiredly thought. Always more schemes. Would there
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ever be an end, before either he was broken or we were?
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``Enough,'' the First Prince of Procer said. ``You came to these lands,
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Trismegistus King, to this conference, and yet held your peace. Speak
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now to your intent, or begone.''
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She must be afraid, I thought. Brave as she was, she was without power.
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Not even a trained warrior, as I understood it, and she was looking at
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the oldest and most powerful monster ever spawned by Calernia. Yet
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Cordelia Hasenbach stood tall and proud, eyes hard and bearing icy. I
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caught her fingers brushing against what looked like a necklace made of
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little fangs, under the sleeve of her dress.
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``I have been considering peace,'' the Hidden Horror said, tone
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nonchalant. ``More than truce, peace. One enforced by treaties that you
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all seem so eager to embrace.''
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\emph{I would not brook you signing the Accords}, I thought. \emph{Else
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how could you be the sacrifice binding them together?}
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``But you are blind,'' the King of Death said. ``Even the finest of you,
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so very \emph{blind}. And so I wonder now what purpose would there be to
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such a peace. None. Not when the Intercessor would still use you as
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tools whenever she so wishes.''
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``You speak in riddles, of strangers,'' Lord Yannu Marave of the
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Champion's Blood said. ``Your babble means less than dust.''
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``It seems like the path of recklessness, at first glance,'' the King of
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Death pensively said. ``Yet it is more calculated a risk than waiting.
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Some chances never come again, no matter how long the wait.''
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``Has age caught up to you, dead thing?'' Lady Itimi Ifriqui sneered.
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``You speak senselessly.''
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``No,'' I quietly said. ``He doesn't.''
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Red embers moved to me, the patient and inhuman mind behind them gracing
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me with its attention.
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``That was a declaration of war,'' I announced.
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There was a thundering silence in the wake of the words I'd spoken.
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``There is still time to the truce,'' Cordelia Hasenbach sharply said.
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``Will you now break your word, Dead King?''
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The Hidden Horror considered her in turned, before he let out what I
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could only call a fond bit of laughter.
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``Hasenbach,'' the Dead King said. ``Yes, that is fitting. One of the
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old blood should be here, at the beginning of the end. Your line is a
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respectable one, Cordelia Hasenbach. Never once did the city of Rhenia
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fall to my armies, when one of your blood held it. None other can make
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the same boast.''
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``Dawn has not yet failed,'' the First Prince of Procer said. ``Nor will
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it, so long as I breathe.''
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The old monster shook with laughter.
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``Let us do this properly, then,'' Neshamah said.
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The corpse rose, tall and robed and resplendent, and from the heights he
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had not left since we first came to this temple he looked down on us --
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with ember-like burning in the hollow sockets of his skull, red
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glimmering on the jewels set in the bones.
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``There is no peace,'' the Dead King said. ``There is no truce. There is
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only the shiver before the blade claims your neck. You will fight and
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you will rage and you will weep, but in the end there can only ever be
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one end to this.''
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The red burned, burned like red star that would swallow the world whole.
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``I am the King of Death,'' the last king of Sephirah said. ``I come.''
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Beginning with the crown of the head, the bones cracked and splintered
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and shattered. From the fractures the pale ivory-like bones turned to
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dust. The jewels broke and dimmed, the metals rusted and curled, until
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there was nothing left of the vessel at all.
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Ash fell down from the sky, silent and soft.
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\emph{And so it begins}, I thought. \emph{Gods save us all, and so it
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begins.}
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