642 lines
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642 lines
29 KiB
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\hypertarget{interlude-terms}{%
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\chapter*{Interlude: Terms}\label{interlude-terms}}
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\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{interlude-terms}} \chaptermark{Interlude: Terms}
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\epigraph{``The doom of carefully laid plans is two unfeeling sisters by the
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names of mishap and surprise.''}{King Pater of Callow, the Unheeding}
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``She'll be here in two days, we believe.''
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Masego thoughtfully peered down at the blade, insofar as it could truly
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be called that.
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Though Helmgard had eventually been able to forge a sheath for it, an
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ornate affair of enameled steel, even that skilled heroine's finest work
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had not proved sufficient for full containment. The sheathed blade was
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being kept in a deep pool of ice cold water so that the power it
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constantly emanated would be dispersed, though to his practiced eyes it
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seemed like there would be need for more liquid: as matters stood, the
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surface of the pool subtly stirred as if touched by winds and the
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Hierophant believed that someone dipping a finger into the water was
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near certain to lose it. The aspect that Catherine had extracted of the
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Saint of Swords' corpse had been a temperamental thing even
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\emph{before} seven Named and one had lent their hand to making a proper
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artefact of it. Masego was careful not to stand too close to the edge of
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the pool, for the edge of his robes would be no more immune to the power
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than flesh, and he frowned. Though the capacity of what had been forged
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here could not be denied, he suspected that he might well be scolded for
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the unfortunate impracticalities of certain aspects of it.
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The odds were at least six in ten that anyone drawing the blade would
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die, after all.
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``And you're not listening to me in the slightest, are you?'' the Rogue
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Sorcerer sighed.
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``Perhaps if we made a suit of armour,'' Masego considered. ``That
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allows one to withstand using it.''
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Though in principle he supposed use would be `withstood', if at the
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likely loss of limb and or head. It was all a matter of defining the
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acceptable boundaries of loss. It would take significant time and effort
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to create such a suit of armour, however, and a wielder for the blade
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would have to be decided upon first. Such matter, to his admittedly
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half-hearted understanding of the politics involved, might become
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somewhat contentious.
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``You could at least deny it,'' the Rogue Sorcerer complained.
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What were they talking about again? Hierophant vaguely remember talk
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about hearings, and beliefs. A trial of some sort, he decided.
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``I agree,'' Masego said, which usually got him out of these situations.
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A heartbeat passed.
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``Yet we should discuss it in greater detail with the others,'' he
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cunningly added.
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It would not do to accidentally approve of another bout of foolishness
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like a wine cellar being added to the Workshop, even if acceding to that
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request had ended up making the Hunted Magician unusually agreeable for
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a few weeks. Either that or drunk, Masego could sometimes find it hard
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to tell.
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``You only ever say that when you haven't been listening, Masego,''
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Roland said. ``It's the single most transparent evasion in an arsenal
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made of particularly thin air.''
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Hierophant's brow furrowed. He'd been seen through, then. Fortunately,
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Indrani had taught him how to escape this sort of situations flawlessly.
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Pushing down his general dislike of physical contact with anyone but a
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few, he laid a hand on Roland's shoulder and put on a sympathetic
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expression.
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``I am flattered by your interest,'' he said, ``but I do not reciprocate
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the attraction.''
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Roland looked down at the hand, then back up at him. It would probably
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take a few heartbeats to work, Masego mused. Referring even obliquely to
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sex made people skittish, which made sense as it seemed like a lot of
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trouble for middling returns. It wasn't like children couldn't be made
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with the proper alchemies, either, though admittedly the lack of soul
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might be off-putting to some.
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``It is important to me, my friend,'' the Rogue Sorcerer slowly said,
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``that you understand the Archer is not an appropriate person to take
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cues from.''
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Masego's brow rose, loosening the silken blindfold before this glass
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eyes.
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``In what context?'' he asked.
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``In \emph{any} context,'' Roland feelingly said.
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That sounded rather dubious but then, for all his intelligence and
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learning, the man \emph{was} a hero. And Proceran as well, which some of
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the bolder treatises about bloodlines from the ninth century considered
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to be a birth defect. Masego withdrew his hand, having left it there
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quite long enough.
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``As you no doubt already knew,'' Roland said, tone rather pointed for
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some reason, ``Queen Catherine has reached out to one of the boundary
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stations and informed the garrison that she will be arriving within two
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days.''
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It would take the better part of a day to get to the Arsenal proper from
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any boundary station as well, Masego knew. He'd never known the
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translocation to happen in less than six hours, and it had to be
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initiated at the proper time besides.
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``It will be good to see her,'' Hierophant agreed.
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``It will,'' Roland sighed, then muttered under his breath about herding
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cats.
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That was a notoriously difficult activity, Masego knew, which meant the
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other scholar had likely reached a dead end in one of his research
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ventures. Hierophant could sympathize, given that proving his Quartered
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Seasons theory had become increasingly difficult. If there was truly a
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fourth realm of power out there, or even the husk of one, it was
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resisting his best efforts to locate and measure it. Yet Catherine's
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return, he thought with a brightened mood, would -- as if often did --
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open up the option of using overwhelming brute force against a complex
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problem.
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``Is this why Tomas and Helmgard have been holed up in their private
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workshops for two days?'' he suddenly frowned. ``Catherine wouldn't
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insist on running them ragged to finish the last touches on the Mirage,
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she's always found the Observatory quite sufficient for all her needs.''
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Masego allowed himself a degree of pride over that last truth, for he'd
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known granting his request to built in those first months after her
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coronation had been ab extension of trust on her part. It was deeply
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pleasant to know he'd not failed that trust. Besides, while she knew
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neither the Blind Maker nor the Bitter Blacksmith he doubted Catherine
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would want them to face consecutive sleepless nights on her behalf.
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``It's not for her personal use, it's for a full council session of the
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Grand Alliance's highest officers,'' Roland said, as if he ought to
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already know this. ``Twilight's Pass sent the Kingfisher Prince to speak
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in its name, but neither Princes Rozala nor the Iron Prince will be able
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to make the journey. That means the Mirage will have to be fully
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functional or we'll be relying on constant scrying-chains.''
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Hierophant idly wondered if he should start paying more attention at the
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daily evening briefings of the Belfry. Maybe, since he'd had no notion
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of any of this. Would he? Probably not.
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``The Order cadres in Salia would prove sufficient for the task, when it
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comes to Vivienne and the First Prince,'' Masego said.
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It was a little unseemly, resorting to such slick wiles to ascertain if
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either of these would be coming. Yet to do otherwise would shatter the
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illusion he'd been maintaining that he devoted his full attentions to
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any part of those meetings that was not about funding or the attribution
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of staff.
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``It won't be necessary, with both of them here in person,'' Roland
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replied. ``Mind you, there might be as much as a week between Queen
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Catherine and the arrival of the rest of them so we're not out of time
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quite yet.''
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``It would be best to be ready ahead of time in case of any surprises,
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though,'' Masego caught on. ``That is reasonable. I'll take a look at
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the complex myself.''
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``That would be appreciated,'' Roland said, inclining his head.
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Hierophant briskly nodded but cast a lingering look at the sheathed
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sword within the waters. When the other Named moved he willed one of the
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glass orbs within his skull to pivot and watch him, noting the
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short-sleeved cloth shirt and simple trousers the other man wore.
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Tinkering clothes, the kind that would not get caught on things and
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would not be a significant monetary loss were they irreparably damaged.
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The shorter Named strode up the five steps to the edge of the pool, only
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there ending his advance. Out of politeness Masego kept an eye on him,
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even if he did not turn his head.
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``We still haven't agreed on a name for her, have we?'' the Rogue
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Sorcerer mused.
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``It is not a sentient artefact, it cannot have a gender,'' Hierophant
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noted. ``And I remain in favour of \emph{Severance}.''
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``\emph{Severity} has the better ring to it, as far as I'm concerned,''
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Roland replied.
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``It hardly matters,'' Masego said, ``unless one adheres to that
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Pelagian nonsense about term resonance.''
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Though Procer's sorcery was largely of the unfortunate Jaquinite mold,
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there were several enclaves in the Arlesite territories where older
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methods were at work. The Pelagian theory of magic was a child's mimicry
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of what the Gigantes could to with Ligurian methods, liberally seasoned
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with ignorant mysticism and rites more religious than magical. Pelagia
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herself had been famous in her time for her splendid enchantments, and
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some of that talent still remained in those who claimed to be the
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inheritors of her ways, but the few shards of truth to be found there
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buried in a sea of drivel.
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``I do believe in it,'' Roland reminded him.
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Ah. He'd quite forgot that, admittedly.
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``Naming something cannot stabilize its `nature', which is a rather
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dubious concept in any case,'' Masego bluntly said. ``There has been no
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dependable evidence of this being the case.''
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``When it comes to most things, I would agree,'' the Rogue Sorcerer
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said, then he flicked a glance at the blade in the water.
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Ever-roiling, as if waiting for the hand that would wield it.
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``But there are bodies in Creation that obey different rules as the
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rest,'' he said. ``How can I not believe that, having seen it with my
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own eyes?''
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``We are all ignorant children trying to piece together the truths of
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titans,'' Masego said, ``but the moment, Roland, that was we are
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\emph{satisfied} with an explanation we are lost. Observation is not
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understanding, and is there anything as hateful as willfully lingering
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in your own ignorance?''
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The other man's lips quirked.
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``You've a surprisingly poetic bent, on occasion,'' the Rogue Sorcerer
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said. ``But in the end, my friend, you are a scholar of the Gift while I
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remain a mere practitioner. If I only ever used what I understand, I
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would use nothing at all.''
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``You are deepening your faults beyond the reasonable,'' Hierophant
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informed him. ``Though on occasion you act more like a collector than a
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mage, you've also used sorcery from every extant theory of magic without
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going stark-raving mad.''
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That was, as far as Masego knew, largely unprecedented. At best one of
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the Gifted would borrow insights from other approaches to sorcery, as
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delving deep into another after already being taught tended to learn to
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severe mental sicknesses as well as deeper spiritual weaknesses. In this
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matter Hierophant suspected that it was one of the Rogue Sorcerer's own
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aspects that shielded him from the backlash inherent in genuinely
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believing often fundamentally opposing facts about magic, the same that
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allowed him to flawlessly wield any sort of magical artefact he touched:
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\emph{Use}, simply termed for how frightfully deep the waters of it ran.
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``Collector's accurate enough,'' Roland quietly said. ``Though I like to
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believe myself a principled specimen of the breed.''
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The man was in an odd mood, one Masego found it hard to decipher, so he
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decided to press forward.
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``Would you accompany me to the Mirage?'' Hierophant asked. ``If I find
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defects in the work, I'll have to seek you out regardless.''
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``If that is agreeable,'' Roland replied. ``Shall we?''
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Masego nodded. A few steps took them away from the pool where the blade
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that once been an aspect lay sheathed and seething, and the pulsing
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runes carved into the otherwise bare stone walls shone brighter as the
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pair of them left the room before winking out. Behind them, enchanted
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doors barred themselves shut and they continued across the granite
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walkway leading them further from the cube they'd been inside of. The
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holy water within, regularly blessed by priests, swept over the walkway
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the moment their feet reached the other side: the wretched Blessed
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Artificer, though utterly unpleasant in most regards, had been somewhat
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helpful in providing mechanisms that would allow the walkway to rise and
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lower without relying on sorcery the blessed water might disrupt. The
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precautions were, in the end, warranted: that blade was, so far, the
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closest to a weapon capable of destroying the Dead King the Arsenal had
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come to making.
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Another set of enchanted doors closed behind them as the pair entered
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the Depository proper, which Masego tended to think of as an overly
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grandiose name for what was in effect a glorified warehouse. There were
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parts of it more protected and restricted than others, the one they were
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leaving most of all, but the least secure parts were typically large
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rooms full of crates awaiting shipping out and not some mysterious maze
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of wonders. The nature of the men and women the two Named encountered
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after passing another three protective chokepoints reflected this. There
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were few of the scholars in red, white or bronze -- Gifted, priests,
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academics -- that were everywhere in the branches of the Belfry. Instead
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it was armed guards, handpicked from the different hosts of the Grand
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Alliance in equal numbers, and workers that they came across. Most
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bowed, though unlike scholars they tended to aim the courtesy more
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towards Roland than himself.
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Masego asked of his companion's latest venture, a runic seal meant to be
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able to impress that same rune into cloth or wood and have it magically
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functional, as they walked and found himself engrossed in the pleasant
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conversation as they made their way out of the Depository, through the
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curling hallways of the Knot and through that oft-messy and crowded
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crossroads up warded stairs and into the silent hush of the Chancel.
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There only a few were allowed entry, and the wards guarding the sanctum
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had been of his own design. Though the Chancel was the smallest section
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of the Arsenal, it held within its walls several matters of variable
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importance: the central warding array, the restricted stacks and the
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offices of the Arsenal treasury. It also held the reason the two Name
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had come: the great enchanted room called the Mirage, which Masego
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suspected might just be the first example of the sorcery that would come
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to replace scrying.
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The lower level belonged to the treasury and the restricted stacks, the
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latter of which being warded and guarded, but the Mirage and the central
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warding array were further above and even more heavily restricted. At
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least the Mirage was not the furthest level up, where the array awaited:
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the guards here, heavily armed and armoured as they were, were not
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allowed beyond the first checkpoint. The second gate would open only for
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a drop of the proper blood, fresh from the body, and would fill the
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hallway with hellflame should it not be provided quickly enough. The
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last and seemingly third gate was kept closed unless one of a limited
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set of keys was used, though depending on \emph{which} was another
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action was required beyond it -- else a mounting accumulation of power
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in a hidden enchantment would grow to trigger an alarm ward. The Mirage
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\emph{was} meant to be used, however, and restricting access too much
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would be inconvenient.
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A series of comprehensive checks and another set of wards were all the
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two Named had to wait through before entering, though the guard captain
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supervising notified them there were already people within.
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``Scholars?'' Roland asked, brow rising.
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``Chosen, Lord Sorcerer,'' the soldier replied. ``And one of the Damned
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as well.''
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Masego strode pas the two of them, mildly curious but rather more
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interested in inspecting the latest refinements of the Mirage. The room
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itself was not so large, a circle of a mere two hundred feet in
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diameter, but it had still taken a colossal amount of work to ensure
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that not so much as speck of the floor, walls and ceiling would offer
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magical interference with the delicate sorceries meant to be worked
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within. For that reason the great round table at the heart had been made
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of stone as well, as materials that had previously been alive had been
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judged risky, though the parts worthy of admiration were not these.
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Around the table, exactly twenty armchairs of stone had been placed
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within boxes of glass just slightly apart from each other. Linked to the
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scrying pool hidden beneath the table, ropes of a dozen different
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purified metals -- including grey adamant, which only the Gigantes knew
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how to make -- connected to different parts of the ritual arrays hidden
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under the floor of the seats, connected to the glass of the boxes
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through a superbly clever bridging enchantment of the Repentant
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Magister's invention.
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The result was a nearly perfect illusion carried by the glass: with the
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proper preparations made on both sides, anyone seated at the table of
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the Mirage would be within an illusion perfectly mimicking the immediate
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surroundings and individual of whoever was being scryed by the central
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ritual. When Catherine would claim her seat here, she'd be able to
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converse with the likes of Rozala Malanza and the Iron Prince as if they
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were all truly in the same room. The difficult part had been creating
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the portable kits that'd allow the illusion to carry from the
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\emph{other} side, and there imprecisions remained in need of fixing.
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But an elementary kit for connection had already been provided to all
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three fronts, and at this point the burden of work was largely on the
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Arsenal's side: it was the room here that needed to be flawless so that
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everything would function. Which was why Masego's lips thinned when he
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saw that one of the glass boxes had been opened, the seat within removed
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and the tile of stone covering the hidden arrays taken out.
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Of the three people already in the room, two were kneeling and digging
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into the entrails of the array while the last was on his feet and
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looking down with apparent indifference. The Hunted Magician, as the
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only one not occupied, was the first to notice Hierophant's entrance.
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The dark-haired man in ornate court dress took a bow.
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``Lord Hierophant,'' the Magician said. ``An unexpected pleasure.''
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The sound of boots scuffing stone informed Masego that Roland had caught
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up, and the Rogue Sorcerer answered before he bothered to.
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``Magician,'' Roland said. ``Shouldn't you be working on a replacement
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wardstone for the Army of Callow?''
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The distaste between those two had been instant and instantly shared,
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which Hierophant found a waste given that they were the two finest
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Proceran practitioners he'd met.
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``Have my hours suddenly become accountable to the likes of you,
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Sorcerer?'' the Magician nonchalantly replied.
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``A pleasure to see you as well, Lord Magician,'' Masego finally
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replied.
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If he was lucky, his intervention might even end the bickering before it
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truly began.
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``Roland, kindly abstain,'' one of the kneeling pair called out. ``I was
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the one who requested his assistance.''
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The Repentant Magister rose to her feet after speaking, smoothing down
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her robes.
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``Assistance with what?'' Masego asked.
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``Worry has been expressed that the Black Queen's mere strength in the
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Night might serve as a disruption of the Mirage,'' the Hunted Magician
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said. ``And so there was a need to get at the lower arrays for
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testing.''
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The Proceran villain had been the one to design the enchantment that
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kept the stone tiles in place, so both his presence and the way he'd
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merely been waiting around when Masego entered were explained in a
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single stroke. Yet a question was begged by what he'd been told.
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``And when it comes to matters of Night,'' Hierophant said, turning his
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head towards the Magister, ``you did not come to consult me?''
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``She didn't need to,'' the last person in the room said, rising to her
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feet.
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The Blessed Artificer smiled tightly in his direction. Her dark skin and
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golden eyes, the signature of Wasteland highborn of the oldest and most
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powerful lines, were always jarring to behold when paired with the truth
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of what she was: a priest with a blacksmith's hammer, an ignorant
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meddler of the worst sort. Masego was not Roland, to let his
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irrationally strong dislike of the other Named affect his judgement, but
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neither would he deny that something in him always itched to \emph{crush
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her work utterly} whenever he caught sight of it. It was quite
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distressingly visceral a reaction.
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``After all, she already had an expert on hand,'' the Blessed Artificer
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said.
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``You have never even encountered Night,'' Masego replied in clipped
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tones. ``And you hardly have the proper academic frame to even begin to
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conceive of it.''
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``You're a Praesi miscarriage of a person,'' the Artificer smiled.
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``You've no proper frame to conceive of anything at all.''
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Her hand slipped into her tunic, fingers closing around some half-seen
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device, Light bloomed and then Masego saw nothing at all. Not that he'd
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fallen into unconsciousness, but rather that some sort of device was
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interfering with the sight of his eyes. How deeply unpleasant of her.
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``\emph{Adanna},'' the Rogue Sorcerer reproached.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Witness}, Masego thought, and his Name sang. His eyes burned
|
|
behind the blindfold, with Summer flame and something entirely his own,
|
|
and in the Artificer's grasp he found the whirling device of steel and
|
|
Light she'd used to blind him.
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Wrest},'' the Hierophant coldly said, raising a hand.
|
|
|
|
The Light ripped out of the device, uncontested for the lack of will
|
|
behind it, and it formed into a ball above the palm of his hand. He
|
|
closed his fingers into a fist. When he opened his palm again, it was to
|
|
reveal dispersing wisps of Light.
|
|
|
|
``You broke my device,'' the Blessed Artificer harshly said.
|
|
|
|
``Be thankful it was not your spine,'' the Hierophant replied, just as
|
|
harshly.
|
|
|
|
Both eyes on the heroine, he did not catch sight of the sculpture until
|
|
it bounced off the side of his head with a perfect bopping sound.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
On most days, Indrani was all for the amount of pretty people in this
|
|
room getting all red-cheeked and flustered but sadly this looked a lot
|
|
more likely to end up in the Eleventh Crusade than clothes hitting the
|
|
floor. Something had to be done, so Archer turned to a method that had
|
|
never failed her: throwing things at people until they did what she
|
|
wanted. The wooden sculpture she'd been working on over the last wander
|
|
just because it made Alder and Aspasie embarrassed bounced off Zeze's
|
|
head magnificently, catching the eye of all five other Named in their
|
|
secret hush-hush magic room.
|
|
|
|
``Is that a naked woman?'' the Repentant Magister asked, cocking her
|
|
head to the side.
|
|
|
|
``Is that Catherine?'' Masego asked, sounding rather curious.
|
|
|
|
Bless his soul, Indrani fondly thought, he no longer even bothered to
|
|
comment on her tossing things at him.
|
|
|
|
``You've seen the Black Queen naked?'' Roland asked, sounding shocked.
|
|
|
|
Indrani swaggered up to her paramour, throwing an arm around his
|
|
shoulder so he'd be too distracted to mention it was the faint scar
|
|
carved across the belly and not the nice ass that'd revealed the
|
|
identity of the woman she'd been carving.
|
|
|
|
``He's been in her quite a bit, Ro-ro,'' Indrani told the Rogue
|
|
Sorcerer, wagging her eyebrows.
|
|
|
|
``Quite regularly, during the Tenth Crusade,'' Masego agreed
|
|
absent-mindedly, which was just perfect.
|
|
|
|
The Repentant Magister -- Nephele, wasn't it? -- cast a look at her
|
|
carving that bore curiosity of more than merely academic nature, so
|
|
Indrani almost patted herself on the back for being such a good friend.
|
|
The Stygian heroine was quite the beauty, with those curls and curves,
|
|
so one might even argue she was being a \emph{very} good friend.
|
|
Indrani's intentions to keep stirring the pot for entertainment and also
|
|
the sake of peace, she supposed, were neatly waylaid by utter surprise
|
|
when Masego turned and put a hand on her shoulder. He stood almost a
|
|
head taller than she, Indrani froze when he leaned down and pressed a
|
|
soft kiss on her right cheek and then the left. His lips were soft. He
|
|
smelled of ink and cool stone.
|
|
|
|
She was \emph{not} blushing.
|
|
|
|
``Welcome back, Indrani,'' Masego warmly said.
|
|
|
|
``Er, yes,'' she said. ``Lovely to welcome you too. Back. You know what
|
|
I mean.''
|
|
|
|
``Not particularly,'' Masego cheerfully admitted.
|
|
|
|
He extricated himself from their embrace and she let him -- she'd known
|
|
from the start it would be best to let him set the boundaries of their
|
|
involvement, when it came to physicality -- only after they'd separated
|
|
tugging down her tunic.
|
|
|
|
``You can keep the sculpture,'' Archer told the Magister, winking. ``You
|
|
know, for comparison purposes.''
|
|
|
|
The Stygian reddened, speaking a denial in tradertalk that shouldn't
|
|
fool anyone with any sense.
|
|
|
|
``What a delight to have you among us once more, Lady Archer,'' the
|
|
Hunted Magician smiled at her.
|
|
|
|
Ah, yet another pretty one. That one was all about the chase, though, as
|
|
Alamans tended to be -- the way he was simultaneously pursuing the
|
|
Bitter Blacksmith and the Blessed Artificer spoke to that. Both of them
|
|
looked they wanted to cave in his head, on most occasion Indrani had
|
|
seen, but also there seemed to be a lot of feeling reluctantly
|
|
flattered. Right on time, the Blessed Artificer shot the man an
|
|
unimpressed sideways look.
|
|
|
|
``Same, Mags,'' she drawled. ``Brought in a new girl for you lot, so put
|
|
on your fairday best.''
|
|
|
|
``I would not dare to disappoint, Lady Archer,'' he drily replied.
|
|
|
|
``New girl, you said. A mage?'' Roland asked.
|
|
|
|
He looked all hopeful now, which made it all the more a pleasure to
|
|
crush his happiness. In her defence, Archer wouldn't have kept picking
|
|
on the man if it wasn't so \emph{fun}.
|
|
|
|
``She's called the Red Axe,'' Indrani grinned. ``And she screws with
|
|
magic just by being around it.''
|
|
|
|
``That would be interesting to study,'' Zeze agreed, blind to the
|
|
disappointed look on Roland's face.
|
|
|
|
``Brought in the rest of my band too,'' Archer idly mentioned. ``Rest
|
|
and recovery, until we head out again. Magister, you know the Vagrant
|
|
Spear right?''
|
|
|
|
``We fought together in Cleves,'' the heroine agreed. ``Though I would
|
|
not consider us closely acquainted.''
|
|
|
|
The way Indrani had heard it Nephele had been pretty much a twat up
|
|
there in Cleves, before she got her shit together, so she wasn't
|
|
surprised to hear it. Then again, Cat did like the catty ones so it
|
|
checked out.
|
|
|
|
``You'll be staying for some time, then?'' Masego asked her.
|
|
|
|
``At least a week,'' Archer shrugged. ``Why?''
|
|
|
|
``Catherine will be arriving in two days,'' he told her. ``I'll have
|
|
your affairs moved to my quarters.''
|
|
|
|
Indrani suppressed a smile. It was pleasant to sleep in the same bed,
|
|
and even more so when he seemed to enjoy that intimacy as well.
|
|
|
|
``You could buy me a drink first, at least,'' she said, fanning herself.
|
|
|
|
``A wine cellar has been added to the Workshop, so that shouldn't be
|
|
necessary,'' Masego revealed.
|
|
|
|
Indrani flicked a look at the Hunted Magician, whose lips twitched, and
|
|
she bestowed upon the man a nod of solemn approval. It was heartening to
|
|
see at least one of these people had their priorities straight.
|
|
|
|
``That'll be fun to break into,'' Indrani mused, the eyes the calmed
|
|
situation in the room and decided that if she left all the ingredients
|
|
here the brew was likely to start boiling again. ``Come with me to have
|
|
a look at the Red Axe, would you? I want to know if the poor girl will
|
|
be locked into a room for the rest of this or if she can wander around
|
|
some.''
|
|
|
|
To her appreciative surprise, Masego not only agreed but offered her his
|
|
arm. Considering she'd made it clear that he shouldn't offer physical
|
|
contact unless he wanted it, a lesser woman might have been chuffed by
|
|
how unhesitatingly he extended the unspoken offer. Not Indrani of
|
|
course, unless you squinted a lot in the right light. She threaded her
|
|
arm through hers and offered the rest of the Named a nonchalant wave,
|
|
allowing herself to be escorted back out.
|
|
|
|
``So, is it me or do you have even more Named kicked around than
|
|
before?'' she asked as the began their way down the stairs.
|
|
|
|
``It isn't you,'' Masego replied. ``The First Prince got her hands on
|
|
the Forgetful Librarian, but we've added two since your last visit: the
|
|
Blind Maker and the Doddering Sage.''
|
|
|
|
``Heroes?'' Indrani idly asked.
|
|
|
|
``We are not certain for the Sage,'' he admitted. ``His moments of
|
|
clarity are rare, if incredibly useful. We've also a guest in the person
|
|
of the Wicked Enchanter, though he'll not be staying. He's more a hedge
|
|
mage than a true practitioner, even if he has mastered some lesser arts,
|
|
so his value outside the field is limited.''
|
|
|
|
``Anything fun?'' Archer said, mildly curious.
|
|
|
|
``Mind control, though rather imperfect,'' Zeze replied. ``Some
|
|
elemental conjuring as well, but his arsenal is essentially varied
|
|
methods of domination.''
|
|
|
|
Indrani's steps stuttered.
|
|
|
|
``The Wicked Enchanter,'' she slowly said. ``Where did he come from?''
|
|
|
|
``Valencis originally,'' Masego said, ``though he spent some years in
|
|
Helike and lately in --''
|
|
|
|
``- Orense,'' Indrani finished. ``He was in Orense, where he slew and
|
|
robbed and raped his fill in the villages around the outskirts of the
|
|
Brocelian.''
|
|
|
|
``You have heard of him before,'' Masego realized.
|
|
|
|
``I just spent two months travelling with the heroine he made,'' she
|
|
grimly replied. ``So we best hurry and keep them apart, or there'll be
|
|
blood on the floor.''
|
|
|
|
They were too late.
|
|
|
|
Archer realized, with a sinking feeling, that she might just have helped
|
|
make a \emph{very} large mess.
|