519 lines
24 KiB
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519 lines
24 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-89-sing-we-of-ruin}{%
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\section{Chapter 89: Sing We Of Ruin}\label{chapter-89-sing-we-of-ruin}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Fifty-five: if your powers are lost, they will nearly always
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return greater than before so long as the appropriate moral lesson is
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learned. With kindness and humility comes overwhelming martial might.''}
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-``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown
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\end{quote}
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It was over.
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The League's soldiers withdrew, the hostility between the different
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forces open but reason prevailing just enough for battle not to erupt
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less than a day's march from the capital of Procer. Considering the
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people involved, I'd not considered that a given. Secretary Nestor and
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his attending scribes withdrew for the night but requested permission to
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send an embassy under daylight. The clear intention was to request the
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presence of Secretariat scribes and chroniclers up north, and I accepted
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tonight as I fully intended to accept tomorrow. There'd be restrictions
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and conditions, but in principle I had not objection to their work. If I
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got lucky, maybe a report making its was south would even stir some
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Delosi to shed neutrality long enough to cease recording the end times
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and actively try to turn them back. A girl could dream. General Pallas
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and her \emph{kataphraktoi} swore oaths and sent back half their number
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to claim their equipment and supplies still in the League camp, the rest
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returning with me.
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Adjutant had finished speaking with Talbot and the remaining senior
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legate when I arrived -- Tendai, wasn't it? Sounded Soninke -- though he
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opened his report by passing a dry comment on my `dragging yet another
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army home'. Like it was a bad thing, the wretch. As it turned out
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Juniper's report had been essentially confirmed, with the sole fresh
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developments a few accusations of `Praesi treachery' and `Callowan
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purges' tossed around by soldiers that'd ended in brawls. One dead, from
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an unlucky broken neck, and both Tendai and Talbot had come together to
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hang those involved as per Callowan regulations. Adjutant argued for the
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growing urgency of intervention there, even if risking dire consequences
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to the compelled, but I had no order to give him. I hesitated still to
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speak when those words might just kill Juniper and Aisha, among others.
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I presented General Pallas to him instead and dropped onto his `drily
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humorous' lap the work of getting the cataphracts settled.
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There'd be talk later of how many soldiers Pallas was proposing to bring
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north, though it shouldn't be more than ten thousand. Less, probably,
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though there likely to be the most finely drilled and commanded troops
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among the coalition's armies. At least one good thing had come out of
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this otherwise ruinous night.
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Archer wandered off, likely to check in on Masego though given the work
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I'd asked of him he was like as not to ignore her presence beyond what
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basic courtesy required. If even that much. Vivienne was speaking with
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General Abigail's staff tribune to pick out what soldiers would be sent
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out as her escort, and I made a mental note of having the general
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formally granted the authority of a Marshal of Callow until Juniper
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could be declared fit to resume it. I'd no intention of promoting her to
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the rank, not for many years yet if ever, but to get affairs in order
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with the Army she'd need to have the weight of that authority behind
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her. Both the inherited structure of the Legions of Terror and the
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Hellhound's preference for strict lines of command had resulted in
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formal authority being needed to get anything moving in the Army of
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Callow. Akua remained with me, a shadow shadowing mine, and though I
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could guess she wanted to address the fact that she'd been outed I did
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not approach the subject. It'd be out and about before long, I knew. If
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Malicia felt comfortable enough handing out that information to the
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likes of Prodocius and Honorion, it meant she was comfortable putting it
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out there.
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I was still uncertain how my people would take it, on the Callowan side
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at least. If Akua had still been stuck in my collar save when I let her
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out I suspected it would have been taken as a long price, but `Advisor
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Kivule' was not a prisoner or entirely unknown to the men. Like as not
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it'd cost me a few feathers in the eyes of the heroes in the Grand
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Alliance, too, though I'd not hesitate to call Cordelia a damned
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hypocrite if she spoke so much as a word in condemnation. She didn't get
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to play that card when she had people lugging a Seraphim's corpse around
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Procer. Truth be told, given the hour I probably ought to head to bed.
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The immediate necessities were seen to, and the rest was probably best
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approached with a well-rested mind and a clear head. Black was awake,
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there could be now that about that, because Scribe would have missed
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little of what had unfolded or left him to sleep during it. I was still
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not looking forward to that conversation, and arguably waiting until
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daylight for it would not be a bad idea. It'd allow Scribe's people in
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the Eyes to learn more, and that when we held council we'd both have a
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clear idea of what was happening before decisions were made.
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It was over, the succession of twists and turns that'd swallowed up my
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night. Or at least it ought to be over. If it was, though, why would my
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shoulders not loosen? Like I was awaiting a blow I was clenching onto
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myself, my instincts screaming there was something yet to come. And
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there were not, I thought, a thousand directions from which further
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trouble could come. So grimly I sent Akua away for the night and, cloak
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trailing behind me, limped towards empty smithy the Carrion Lord had
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claimed as his home for the duration of the conference. There were no
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legionaries at the door, or near either of the two windows, which
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was\ldots{} unusual. Black had been the one to teach me that a Name was
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a useful thing but that it was no substitute for people watching your
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back. His Blackguards might not have been able to do much against a
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Named assassin, but there weren't a lot of those and there were
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\emph{lot} of the regular kind. Especially when you crossed Praesi
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nobles. The heavy wooden door was not locked and did not resist when I
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pushed it open. The burning glare of the lit furnace within blinded me
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for a half a beat, flames roaring tall and proud.
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The shadows they cast on the walls of the smithy, which had been
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stripped bare of much it would contain during warmer seasons, were long
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and shivering. Amadeus of the Green Stretch sat alone by a blackened
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iron anvil, his drab grey tunic and worn boots making him look like an
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aging shopkeeper instead of the Black Knight of Praes. On the anvil was
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a bottle, and not of wine. An empty one had been set on the ground by
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the anvil.
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``Catherine,'' the green-eyed man greeted me. ``An eventful night for
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you, I am told.''
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It was so genuinely taken aback by the slight slur to his voice I didn't
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manage to entire hide my surprise. I could not remember, in all the time
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I'd known him, seeing my teacher even half as drunk as he clearly was
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right now. Not even once.
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``You too, looks like,'' I said, flicking a glance at the bottle.
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``Salian brandy,'' Black replied, tone amiable. ``It struck me as
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fitting.''
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Shit. I wasn't familiar with the Salian kind in particular, but brandy
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was hard liquor. Not necessarily the hardest-hitting stuff, but if he'd
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really drunk more than a bottle of the stuff I could only be reluctantly
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impressed he wasn't falling down his Legion-issue folding chair.
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\emph{This isn't like you}, I almost said, but bit down on it. I'd never
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seen him like this before, true, but then when I'd been young he'd still
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had the Calamities with him. People he could unwind with, as I myself
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did with the Woe. Who was left of that for him now, save for Scribe? So
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instead I snatched a cup from his table and braced my staff against the
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side of it, freeing my other hand to claim the other folding chair. I
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bit down on a hiss of pain as I limped forward to the other side of the
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anvil, dropping my seat there as pale green eyes followed me. I let out
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a sigh when I sat down, glad for the rest, and set down my cup atop the
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iron by the side of his. Without a word he filled it with brandy, and
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his own again.
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``What are we drinking to?'' I asked.
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``Epiphany,'' my teacher said. ``Harsh mistress that she is.''
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That was not a promising start, I thought, and drank deep of my cup. The
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brandy burned on the way down and if I'd had swallow of that at sixteen
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I suspected my eyes would have watered. It was smooth on the tongue, so
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clearly good stuff, but it couldn't be called anything but heavy.
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``It's been a day,'' I agreed. ``And a night, even.''
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``Yes, it has,'' he mildly said. ``Eventful enough I'll confess the
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tumult blinded me, at first. Time to think set that weakness to rest.''
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``Kairos took us all for a ride,'' I said. ``Our enemies a little more
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than us, which is the saving grace of this, but everyone took a few
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bruises. It'll be months if not years before we can really glimpse the
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scale of what he wrought.''
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``Kairos Theodosian's schemes are of only passing interest to me,''
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Black said, pausing to knock back a quarter of his cup without batting
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an eye. ``No, it is the moments that led to his swan song I have been
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dissecting.''
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The conference. Malicia. \emph{It won't matter}, Scribe had warned me.
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\emph{He always forgives.} I might not love the woman, or even like her,
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but I that did not mean she had been wrong in this.
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``Scribe told you about the Legions-in-Exile,'' I guessed.
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``I knew within an hour of your knowing,'' Black agreed. ``And now I
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ponder how it all came to be.''
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``It must have been a contingency the Empress had in place for years,''
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I said.
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Another quarter of his cup went down his throat. The breathy slip of
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laughter he let out after that had my fingers clenching in dismay. It
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was\ldots{} unpleasant, seeing him like this. So close to losing
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control, when control had always been at the heart of him.
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``Decades,'' my teacher corrected. ``The sheer breadth of possibly
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compromised individuals is simply staggering, viewed in retrospective. I
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assume it is the consequence an aspect. Wekesa would have noticed such a
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contingency were it sorcerous in nature and told me of it.''
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Most likely, I silently agreed. Masego had rubbed elbows with Juniper
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for years while holding an aspect related to sight and then eyes forged
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of Summer flame without noticing a damned thing, so I was not overly
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surprised that the Warlock had caught nothing. Named power could imitate
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sorcery, but it should never be mistaken for it -- it answered to
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different rules, took different shapes.
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``Or he might not have,'' Black then genially said. ``It appears that
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the many warnings I received of sentiment being more blinding that I
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believed were accurate.''
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``The writing was on the wall after Akua's Folly,'' I reluctantly said.
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Not for reluctance to speak the truth, but knowing how deeply painful it
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was to him.
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``Oh no, not when it comes to Alaya,'' Amadeus of the Green Stretch
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softly said. ``It is Eudokia I gravely misread.''
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\emph{Fuck}, I thought, and kept my face blank. I'd waited too long. All
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this time I'd been agonizing over whether I should tell him or not, if
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the likely fallout was worth the honesty, and somehow it'd never
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occurred to me he might just figure it out on his own. How much did he
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know, though? I'd gotten a confession and explanation, while he must
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have simply pieced together details on his own.
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``It is a bad habit, forcing lack of expression,'' Black chided. ``You
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still do it sometimes, when taken aback. It reveals that you know
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something, by consequence of revealing you have something to hide.''
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I grimaced. He drank again.
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``Not that confirmation was truly needed,'' he noted. ``Your request
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with a private conversation with Scribe stood out even at the time.''
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``I did not know whether I should tell you,'' I admitted.
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I might have, I thought. I liked to think I would have. But I would not
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lie to him and pretend it had been a sure thing.
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``It would be ill-done of me to rebuke you for behaviour I instilled in
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you myself, largely through example,'' Black said, sounding darkly
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amused. ``Though it is a fresh novelty to be treated in so high-handed a
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manner by anyone save Malicia.''
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``Scribe, she believed, \emph{believes} she was saving your life, you
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know,'' I said, then hesitated before continuing, ``and I'm not sure I
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disagree with her.''
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``Would you like to know how I inferred what happened?'' the green-eyed
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man idly said, filling his cup anew.
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I'd yet to finish mine, or him his, but down the bottle went. I slowly
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nodded, though I was not sure I actually did. He drank from his cup and
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I matched him, the brandy's burn a pleasant distraction from the roaring
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heat of the furnace and this miserable conversation.
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``In the moment it bled me, that Alaya stood in that hall and saw me
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only as a hindrance,'' Black said. ``That she had not, beforehand, even
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attempted to speak to me so it might be made into a game of silk and
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steel. That she'd considered a decision that so wounded me to make as
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inexorable, a betrayal assured -- so assured there was no need to even
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\emph{attemp}t conversation.''
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He paused.
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``Then I made myself cease to think of her as Alaya and began to think
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of her as Dread Empress Malicia,'' he mildly said. ``And I still saw an
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unexplainable mistake from a woman whose judgement I yet hold in some
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esteem.''
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``You figured she knew something you didn't,'' I said.
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``The moment Eudokia intrigued to pass the blame onto her for the
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botched Salian coup, everything that followed was set in stone,'' he
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mused. ``Either I had ordered this, and now stood her foe. Or I had been
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deceived, and anything spoken to me could aid Scribe in furthering her
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attacks. Or potentially reveal how they had been anticipated and
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answered. Either way, even a secret missive would have been a foolhardy
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risk.''
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I drank again, deep, since what I had to say was like as not to be
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unpleasant to get through.
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``That doesn't excuse anything,'' I said. ``She's still the ally of the
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Dead King. She still spent decades seeding commands in the minds of
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people. No one \emph{forced} her to order the Night of Knives, Black.
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Hers might have been choices with reasons to them, but that does not
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excuse a single fucking thing. You've been preaching personal
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responsibility to me since the day we met -- why would she, alone of all
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the people in Creation, get a pass?''
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He held up his cup to the light of the furnace and it cast a streak of
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shade over his eyes.
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``\emph{I trust people to act according to their nature},'' he quoted.
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``\emph{Anything more is sentimentality.} She said this not long after
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her formal claiming of the Tower, when there was still talk of who might
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be her Chancellor. It was the talk of Ater for weeks and remains her
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words most often quoted in Praes. I never thought much of the saying,
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for it presumes much, but it speaks to the woman who spoke it.''
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The cup went down, and the green gaze was pensive.
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``Malicia seeded commands preparing for a betrayal, and that betrayal
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came,'' he said. ``I blame her for this no more than I blame you for the
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terrible habits your learned at my side, though I would chastise another
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for them.''
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``Brandy makes you chatty,'' I said. ``You're muddling cause and
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consequence, Black. Fucking with the minds of your subjects is something
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that deserves answer. It's not a betrayal to recognize that. You're just
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being\ldots{}''
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I bit my tongue.
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``Sentimental?'' he finished, slightly slurring. ``So I am. Eudokia said
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the same, when we spoke.''
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I went still.
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``And what else did she say?'' I slowly asked.
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``That she regretted her actions,'' Black said, tone dry. ``And would
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not repeat them. That she understood it had been a mistake. I thanked
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her for this, naturally, for it was a needed lesson to us both.''
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And yet she was not here, drinking with him.
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``So where is she?'' I pressed.
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``I wouldn't know,'' the green-eyed man said. ``Neither does it matter,
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for she is no longer in my service.''
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My fingers clenched.
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``You're drunk,'' I flatly said, ``you're regret this after-''
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``I made that decision without having had a drop,'' Amadeus of the Green
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Stretch said, tone eerily calm.
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``Then you're grieving, not in your right mind,'' I hissed. ``There's
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nothing practical about-''
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``No longer extending trust to someone who deftly manipulated me into
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rebellion and undertaking a road that ends in the murder of someone dear
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to me?'' Black said. ``An interesting premise. I offered no rancor and
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held no grudge. It is a parting of ways, nothing more and nothing
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less.''
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``You can't afford to lose Scribe,'' I bluntly said. ``If you do you
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lose the Eyes, and if you no longer have the Eyes the Empire will eat
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you alive.''
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``I considered this, but then decided it to be irrelevant,'' he amiably
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said.
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He drained the rest of his cup then, with clumsy fingers for one usually
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so sure-footed, produced a small strip of parchment from a pocket within
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his tunic. He put it down on the anvil, without a word. It was in
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Mtethwa, two words: Come home. I knew not the handwriting, but then
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unlike him I'd not spent decades corresponding with the Empress.
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``You can't be serious,'' I quietly said.
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``All of this might genuinely have untied the knot, you see,'' Black
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said, sounding highly amused. ``I \emph{did} betray her, in the end. As
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she always believed I would, deep down. And after that betrayal failed
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and she triumphed over me so utterly she can now, at last, feel at
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ease.''
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He poured his cup full again as I did absolutely nothing to hide the
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horror I felt.
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``Of course, I will never question her again,'' he said. ``I will have
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lost that right, alongside any notion that this is partnership instead
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of vassalage. But the doors of Ater will be open to me and, as far as
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she is concerned, kneeling before the throne as every lord and lady of
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Praes watches will be my great penance.''
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``It can still be turned around,'' I said. ``I know it's a blow, the
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Exile Legions leaving and Scribe having manipulated you, but this isn't
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your only choice. You have allies, Black.''
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The green-eyed man tipped back his cup, taking another swallow.
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``You misunderstand,'' he said after. ``I could no more do this than I
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could pretend I still put my trust in Eudokia. It is best to look what
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you are in the eye, as a villain. Lying to yourself is ever a dangerous
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business.''
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``And what is it you are?'' I quietly asked.
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``Not yet content,'' he said, smiling as if he was having a private jest
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at my expense.
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I wasn't helping him, I realized. Sitting here with Black and finishing
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that bottle would not make him feel any better. This breakdown had been
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a long time coming, maybe as far as Captain's death, but letting him
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drink and entangle himself in his thoughts would solve nothing.
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Gingerly, I rose to my feet.
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``Sleep it off, Black,'' I sighed. ``Scribe won't have gone far, and
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that woman would forgive you nearly anything. She'll forgive you this.
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We can make plans after dawn, when we're all sober and rested.''
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He looked at me for a long moment, then set down the cup. For a moment
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he looked about to say something, but instead he smiled crookedly.
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``Good night, Catherine,'' my father said.
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I left, limping, and left the blazing heat of the smithy in favour of
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the cold. The coolness outside leant a refreshing touch the sweat on my
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brow and neck, but the exhaustion I'd expected never came. Even now,
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after all this, restlessness lingered in the marrow of my bones. High up
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above, under the stars and moon, to great crows feathered in darkness
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drifted across the sky. Their thoughts touched mine, gently, and shared
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a sight they were glimpsing in the distance. One man, leaving Salia.
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Well now, that was earlier than anticipated. I saddled Zombie and rode
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out, declining escort, and the journey on her back was swifter than it
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had been on foot. The small farm had not changed at all since my last
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visit, though perhaps that should not have surprised me: it might feel
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like an age ago, but I'd last stood here two nights back. The cattle
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wall, I saw, had been built anew. And stones had rolled down, as I'd
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warned the White Knight they would. By the eyes of the Crows I would not
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have company for some time yet, so after tying Zombie to the side of the
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farm I was spared a few breaths to consider how to comfortably wait.
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Inside would be most reasonable, I thought. But the cold was pleasant,
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and I was reluctant to part from it. Instead I propped up my staff
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against the sidewall and, after soothing my leg with Night, hoisted
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myself up the side of the farm. The roof was as sturdy as it looked,
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good tiles and well set. Grimacing in pain even through the Night trick,
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I crawled atop it until I was resting my back against a chimney stump.
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Tightening my cloak against me comfortably, I let myself drift into the
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mixture of warmth around my belly and coolness against my face. It was
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soothing, and I almost fell asleep. I was not sure how long I'd been
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there when I finally heard approaching footsteps in the snow. I heard
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the White Knight chuckle as he figured out where I was, then deftly
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climb up the side. As Hanno dragged himself up on the roof, I finished
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stuffing my pipe and went looking for a match to light it. Finding one
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of my last sapper pinewoods I struck it against my sleeve but it failed
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to light. Sighing, I discreetly tapped a finger and seeded with black
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flame before hastily lighting my pipe with it.
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The White Knight rose to his feet and strode to the edge of the roof,
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the two of us watching the nearing dawn begin to light up the sky.
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``Back so soon?'' I said, blowing out a stream of wakeleaf smoke.
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|
``Within an hour of Tariq waking, he drew me out of my own slumber,''
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Hanno said.
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|
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All else about the man aside, there were Named out there with the word
|
|
`healer' in the Name who weren't half as good at the art as Tariq Isbili
|
|
was. Hells, for a time he'd even been able to cure death.
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|
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|
``And now you're here,'' I said.
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An invitation to elaborate, but he did not take it.
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|
|
|
``You were Queen of Winter for a time, were you not?'' Hanno asked
|
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instead.
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|
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|
I hummed, pulling at my pipe.
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|
|
|
``Close enough,'' I said. ``If only by virtue of being the sole
|
|
scavenger with a road to it.''
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|
|
|
``And you are no longer,'' the White Knight said.
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|
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|
``Took a leap of faith,'' I acknowledged. ``All things considered, I
|
|
don't regret it.''
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|
|
|
``And when Winter left you, Black Queen,'' he softly said. ``Did it feel
|
|
like an absence?''
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|
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|
\emph{Oh}, I thought, and was surprised to find I yet had pity in me.
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|
|
|
``It felt like flying out of a pit into the blue sky,'' I gently said.
|
|
``It felt like the first drink of water after a long day in the sun. But
|
|
I never loved that power, White Knight, nor did it love me.''
|
|
|
|
Not as he so obviously loved the Choir of Judgement, strange as that
|
|
sentiment was to me. He stood there for a long moment, looking at the
|
|
lightening horizon.
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|
|
|
``They have all been asking me,'' the White Knight said, ``what befell
|
|
of Judgement. Would you like to know, Catherine Foundling?''
|
|
|
|
I had half a dozen flippant replies on the tip of my tongue, but I was
|
|
not feeling so callous right now as to offer them up to a decent man so
|
|
obviously grieving.
|
|
|
|
``Tell me,'' I said instead.
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|
|
|
He flicked his wrist, and in the dawning light I caught the shine of
|
|
silver. A coin, flipping, for a moment I almost struck out with the
|
|
Night. But Sve Noc was silent, and I remained still. The White Knight
|
|
caught the coin and did not even look at what had turned up. To him, and
|
|
so to me, it'd just been a flip of the coin. There had been nothing more
|
|
to it.
|
|
|
|
``Silence,'' Hanno of Arwad said. ``Only silence.''
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|
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|
I let out a breath I hadn't known I was holding.
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|
|
|
``The Hierarch still fights them, then,'' I quietly said.
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|
|
|
``You warned me,'' the dark-skinned man admitted. ``I did not listen,
|
|
for never before has the strength of Judgement failed before my eye. You
|
|
warned me, and now there is silence.''
|
|
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|
And silence stayed there, hanging in the air.
|
|
|
|
``And now what?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``I am blind,'' Hanno of Arwad said. ``Yet even a blind man can see that
|
|
war must be waged on Keter.''
|
|
|
|
``I have pledged myself to this,'' I said. ``And do not take such oaths
|
|
lightly.''
|
|
|
|
He turned towards me, his broad silhouette ringed by morning's light,
|
|
and met my eyes.
|
|
|
|
``Then we are allies,'' the White Knight said, and offered his hand.
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|
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|
I took it.
|
|
|
|
And so we went to war, against the King of Death.
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