601 lines
28 KiB
TeX
601 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-13-ingress}{%
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\chapter{Ingress}\label{chapter-13-ingress}}
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\epigraph{``One must not look down on tricks that deceive only fools, my
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son, as the better part of the people of the world are patently
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foolish.''}{Extract from the infamous `Sensible Testament' of Basilea Chrysanthe
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of Nicae}
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It'd once been a delicate balance, keeping Zombie walking at a pace that
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Hakram could easily match, not anymore. She'd grown used to it and was
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quite capable of understanding without me pulling on the reins that I
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wanted to keep pace with my towering second-in-command. Sometimes I
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wondered exactly how intelligent the undead horse was, or even if she
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was truly still that at all. The necromancy I'd used when Sovereign of
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Moonless Nights had been\ldots{} off. The dead Akua had raised in my
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place at the Battle of the Camps had famously ignored holy water, and
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I'd noticed myself that the longer they remained raised the more
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intelligent they seemed to become. That was not, I'd been told,
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something typically associated with necromantic sorcery. It was with the
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summoning arts, though, and some days I could not help but wonder
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whether I was riding a corpse or a bound spirit. I stroked the mare's
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mane softly, and she neighed softly in approval.
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``The White Knight is five days behind,'' Hakram said, breaking me out
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of my thoughts. ``He found it difficult to arrange for a trustworthy
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replacement in seeking fresh Named.''
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Trustworthy was unlikely to be the problem with Hanno arranging for
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someone to stand in his place. Even the worst pricks on his side of the
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fence tended to be at least well-meaning. I'd guess that the trouble had
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been finding someone who wouldn't pull a blade on a fresh villain or
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talk in a way that got a blade pulled on \emph{them} instead. Heroes
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with a diplomatic bent didn't grow on trees, though if I ever caught so
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much as whiff of such a thing growing anywhere I'd been sending a band
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of five after it faster than you could say `oh Gods please, just
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please'.
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``Do we know who he picked?'' I asked.
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``The Silver Huntress,'' Hakram gravelled.
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Approvingly, I noted. I was more ambivalent over that particular
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heroine, as though she was undeniably competent in all manners of ways
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she also fought like cats and dogs with Indrani whenever they got even
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remotely near each other. Archer had, to no one's surprise, regularly
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`sparred' with the heroine back when they'd both been pupils of the Lady
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of the Lake. The Huntress was eager at the notion of settling that old
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debt, and very sensitive to the perception that she might be getting
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forced back over anything by her old bully. Between that and the two of
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them being Named with a preference for bows, there were quite enough
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grounds there for seething hostility to be the name of the game.
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``She'll get it done,'' I evenly replied.
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And on that we set the matter aside, both of us having noticed the
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approach of the outriders headed our way. The fortress where we were
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headed went by the name of Saregnac, though fortress was something of a
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misnomer: it'd been as much a jail as a castle, which a less diplomatic
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woman might have said meant it'd been a pretty shitty castle. Gods, look
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at that curtail wall: the bastard thing wasn't even crenellated, it was
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like they were just \emph{asking} to be stormed.
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``It's all over your face,'' Hakram said.
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``I could take this place with five goblins and a scarecrow,'' I
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muttered back. ``I've seen the costs to the treasury, they could have at
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least sprung for a place with a proper moat.''
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``How good of a scarecrow are we talking?'' Adjutant asked, sounding
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interested.
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I flicked another glance at those walls: barely twenty feet tall, and
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I'd seen thicker ogres.
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``Below average,'' I decided.
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``I could do with three, it it's a really good scarecrow,'' Hakram said,
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the fangs he allowed to peek slightly through his lips implying mocking
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challenge.
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``Please,'' I snorted, ``any idiot could do it with that good a
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scarecrow. Just dress it up like Black and bait them into a field full
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of munitions. Scarecrow quality is the crux of the difficulty here.''
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The outriders from Saregnac reached the vanguard of our little caravan,
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though in truth our entire group was ahead of the slower-moving wagons
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as unlike those we could cut through the countryside without risking
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wheels coming off. The line of legionaries ahead of us spoke with the
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Procerans and shorty after a lieutenant peeled off from the rest to pass
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along the message. Saregnac, he told us, was ready for our arrival and
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the Arsenal had been told of our coming. We were lucky, as it happened,
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as one of the functional times for translocation was one hour before
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Noon Bell and we were nearing it. The wagons would have to stay behind
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and wait until one past Afternoon Bell, but if our little group picked
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up the pace we'd get there with time to spare.
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``Send a messenger back to Captain Forfeit,'' I ordered Adjutant.
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``We'll be going on ahead.''
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The Soninke would approve of resting the horse teams for the wagons
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beneath the shade of Saregnac's walls, I suspected, however unimpressive
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the walls in question. She'd probably enjoy a halfway decent meal and
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cold water as well, I mused, the spring days were much warmer in
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southern Brabant. Even as a messenger peeled off, the rest of us
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returned to the journey. It wasn't long before we were back on the
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Proceran country roads -- which, though it pained me to admit it, were
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better than anything in Callow save for the royal roads and what little
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highway we'd inherited from the Miezans -- which I was coming to suspect
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were the reason Saregnac had been chosen as a boundary station for the
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Arsenal. The defences might not be anything to praise, but the place did
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seem eminently accessible. That was almost as useful, though in all
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honesty I would have preferred the northernmost of the Arsenal entrances
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to be a stronger holdfast.
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The gatehouse was respectable, at least, with a drawbridge over a
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shallow dry moat leading to a well-maintained portcullis that was
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already up when we arrived. The commander of the forces holding Saregnac
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came out to meet me personally. Some middle-aged cousin of Prince
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Etienne of Brabant, which was the unfortunately not an unexpected amount
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of nepotism when it came to Proceran soldiery. They weren't usually
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\emph{stupid} about raising up kin, though, so there ought to be -- ah,
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and there was the man actually in charged. A former \emph{fantassin}, by
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the looks of the garishly dyed red and yellow hair, but he'd clearly not
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gotten the scar under his eye in garrison duty. I requested the man in
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question -- Lucien of Pitrerin, as it turned out -- to be my escort,
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pawning off the royal relative to Hakram, and was rewarded by a blunt
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assessment of the situation as we were escorted deeper into Saregnac by
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impressively well-drilled soldiers.
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``We can't hold the walls if we're seriously tested, Your Majesty,'' the
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man agreed without hesitation. ``I wouldn't even try. The place was a
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prison for nobles, so it was never meant to withstand a proper storm.''
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``I don't mean to impugn your efforts here,'' I said. ``But that's not
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the answer I was looking for, Master Lucien.''
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``We have truly defensible grounds, Your Majesty, they're simply not the
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walls,'' the man told me. ``The barbican deeper in is what the place was
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built around, and it's from the early days of the Principate. That I
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could hold against an army for days, and the room where the magic circle
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is was dug beneath into bedrock.''
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That was good to hear, I thought, though I still had concerns. While
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losing one of the boundary stations to the Dead King wouldn't
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necessarily mean losing the Arsenal -- there were further precautions --
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it'd be a hard blow. While it'd be a waste to send a Named to stand
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guard here, there were things that could be done without resorting to
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that.
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``I'll see if I can't shake loose a company of sappers and send it your
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way,'' I replied. ``Not permanently, but at least long enough to turn
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those outer defences into something it doesn't wound me to think
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about.''
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``My most humble thanks, Your Majesty,'' Lucien of Pitrerin said,
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sounding genuinely thankful.
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I waved a hand, somewhat embarrassed.
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``We're all in the same boat, soldier,'' I said. ``Gods forbid it
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capsize.''
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``I hear \emph{that},'' the man muttered back.
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By the time we reached the barbican the soldier had told me about --
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which was a solid little bastion, I'd admit to that, though hiding the
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arrowslits under gargoyles was good as, practically speaking, not hiding
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them at all -- Hakram was back in the fold, his royal lamprey in tow. I
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almost had to admire the dedication to social climbing of a Proceran
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willing to fawn over an orc. It was oddly inspiring to see petty
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ambition triumphing over bigotry, kind of like if I'd seen an imp knife
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a Beast of Hierarchy. The nearing turn of the hour served as sufficient
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excuse to escape an invitation to a meal with the man, and reluctantly
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we were led into the barbican and then through a broad downwards tunnel
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into bedrock. A few wards and fortified doors later, we stood in an
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otherwise bare ritual room large enough to accommodate maybe a hundred
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people at a time. Rituals arrays, a dizzying tapestry of circles and
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squares and interlocked arcane shapes that would give me a migraine if I
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looked at them too long, had been craved directly into the floor.
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The mages stationed here were mostly Procerans, though there were two of
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twenty that were on loan from the Army of Callow. I was attended to by
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them -- Callowans both, I learned, fresh to the service but both taught
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personally by Masego at the Arsenal -- as my escort and I were herded
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into the proper locations and finally asked to avoid leaving the circles
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we were standing in. Some larger shapes, probably meant for wagons and
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the like, remained empty. The ritual itself was not long, half an hour
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of incantations in sequence as the arrays were methodically powered, and
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then with a shiver we were all standing within an almost identical stone
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room without the mages who'd sent us here. The air here had that
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particular taste to it I knew well: Twilight's subtle sweetness, or
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perhaps freshness. Arrowslits in the walls around us were the first
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indication that any intruders would find this a well-prepared killing
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ground, though when red-robed mages from the Arsenal entered the room to
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invite us to follow them I was quick to see that was only the beginning
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of it.
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The corridor beyond had been built with seemingly two things in mind:
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for supply wagons to be able to pass through and the ability to wage a
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stubborn defence against anyone entering through the array room.
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Spike-bearing steel bars could be brought down to anchor makeshift
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palisades, portcullises were set in the ceiling every thirty feet and I
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even caught sight of runes and ritual arrays carved into the walls,
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awaiting someone to wield them. Soldiers in red, the Arsenal's own
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garrison drawn from every army of the Grand Alliance, watched in silence
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as we passed through ward after ward. This place, I thought with
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approval, would be a bloody grinder if the Dead King ever reached it.
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Which he shouldn't be able to, as it'd begun as a simple cavern within a
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mountain in the Twilight Ways before being expanded into this: no full
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route to the surface had ever been opened. At the other end of the
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corridor, we reached another ritual room that would take us to the last
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stopover before we reached the Arsenal proper.
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To my surprise, though, it was not only red-robes mages awaiting us in
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there: pushing himself off the wall he'd been leaning against as he
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waited, Roland de Beaumarais -- also known as the Rogue Sorcerer --
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stood up at my approach. His inevitable long leather coat swirling
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behind him, he made to bow until I caught his arm and pulled him into an
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embrace instead.
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``Roland,'' I smiled, ``Weeping Heavens, it's good to see you.''
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He looked about to say something, his still-tanned face beginning a
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frown, but instead he returned my smile in kind.
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``And you as well, Catherine,'' the Rogue Sorcerer said. ``It's been too
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long.''
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Over a year now: he'd not set foot outside the Arsenal since its
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construction that I knew of, at least not on Creation. The half-realms
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allowing entry to our little house of wonders didn't count. Hakram
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stepped up and the two of them clasped arms, the orc towering over the
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human.
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``Rogue,'' Adjutant gravelled. ``Always a pleasure.''
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``Deadhand,'' Roland replied with quirking lips. ``Glad to see the
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Stained Sister didn't leave you with a limp.''
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I was a little sad Indrani wasn't there to hear that, since she would
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have been able to make something damned filthy out of that.
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``Is something wrong?'' I asked. ``I'm always glad to see you, but I'd
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not expected to run into any of you until we reached the Threshold.''
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Which was on the other side of that complicated array in front of us, as
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it happened.
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``There's been some trouble,'' Roland grimaced. ``I judged it necessary
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to give you advance warning.''
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My brow rose.
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``Not Keter,'' I slowly said.
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We'd be having a rather more urgent conversation were that the case. It
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wasn't that I believed it to be impossible for the Dead King to reach
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this place -- I couldn't think of a way out of hand, given that we were
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using the Twilight Ways as way to keep his creatures out, but that
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hardly meant there wasn't actually one -- but rather that if he did get
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to the Arsenal, it would be for a killing stroke. I couldn't see
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Neshamah revealing his hand over anything less than a good chance of
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outright destroying the place: a raid would just lead us to tighten the
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defences, after the frankly ridiculous amount of Named within the halls
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drove it back.
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``There has been killing,'' the hero told me, sounding like someone
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trying very hard to avoid saying the word murder.
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If there'd been blood spilled by the mundane staff of the Arsenal, I
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thought, he wouldn't be standing in front of me offering advance
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warning. It would not be my place to address a knife fight between
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guards or a scholarly rivalry gone red. Which meant this wasn't about
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the killing so much as \emph{who} had done the killing.
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``Who?''
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``A villain by the Name of the Wicked Enchanter was slain,'' Roland told
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me, pitching his voice low.
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``And one of you lot did the slaying,'' I deduced.
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My fingers clenched, though I would not hasten to judgement. I'd given a
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bleeding boy surrounded by the corpses he'd made the benefit of the
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doubt, and it was not a principle if it only applied to people you felt
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for.
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``The Red Axe,'' he tacitly agreed. ``I will not argue for breach of the
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Terms, Catherine, but there were\ldots{} extenuating circumstances.''
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``The Enchanter has -- had -- a certain reputation,'' Hakram told me.
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``Though he was also considered a promising lead in usurping control of
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lesser dead from Keter.''
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``I hope they're damned good circumstances, Roland,'' I bluntly said.
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``Otherwise this ends with gallows and a noose.''
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I leaned a little closer.
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``This is known?'' I softly asked. ``It was seen?''
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``It was done as our people were heading out for midday meal, an openly
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fought battle,'' Roland murmured back.
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\emph{Shit}. Whatever happened now, there would be no keeping that from
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spreading. The Arsenal might be isolated from Creation and we read the
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letters going in and out, but given the amount of people that lived
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within its walls there would be no way a Named fight would stay secret
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forever.
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``How many Named are there in the Arsenal right now?'' Hakram asked.
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Good, I'd been wondering that myself.
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``Archer arrived two days past with her full band and the Red Axe,'' the
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Rogue Sorcerer replied. ``Which brings us at sixteen -- eighteen
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including you and Adjutant, Catherine.''
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In other words, I was about to walk into a warehouse full of goblin
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munitions after someone had tossed a torch into it. \emph{Fuck}. Better
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it be me than anyone else I could think of, and even better that Hanno
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was on his way, but still. In the immortal words of Queen Catherine
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Foundling, first of her name: \emph{fuck.} And there were more of us
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coming, too. The White Knight for one, but the Painted Knife and her own
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band were headed our way at a brisk pace. I genuinely could not remember
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reading of such a large amount of Named in the same place at the same
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time, at least not outside a crusading army marching on Keter itself.
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``Tell me it didn't get out of control after that,'' I demanded.
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He hesitated.
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``Tell me no one else died after that,'' I said, haggling with disaster.
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``Accusations were thrown that the Chosen were attempting a purge, and
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Archer had to pull the Vagrant Spear off of the Hunted Magician. Bruises
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and a cut, but nothing lasting.''
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I repressed the urge to swear under my breath, knowing my soldiers were
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close enough they'd be able to hear. The Vagrant Spear was one of
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Indrani's crew, so I wasn't worried there, but all my reports about the
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Arsenal mentioned the Hunted Magician as being fairly influential among
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the villains there. Masego could have edged him out of the unofficial
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leadership fairly easily, as either more or equally powerful as well as
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\emph{significantly} better-connected, but Masego would have no
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interested in playing court games as long as the Magician let him have
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his way on the things that actually mattered to him. And if he'd been
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good enough to survive as a Procer mage villain while the Saint and the
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Pilgrim were still kicking around, then it was safe to assume he was at
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least that smart. \emph{Fuck}, I thought once more. Why was it that, of
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the two Proceran spellcasters with social skills, it was the one
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supposedly on my side that was most likely to become a headache?
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This had the making of a pivot, and not one I liked the looks of.
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``Get me there, Roland,'' I said. ``Before the fucking Eleventh Crusade
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starts in our backyard.''
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``Your Majesty,'' the Rogue Sorcerer replied, inclining his head.
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He was one of the few heroes that'd never actually sounded at least a
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little mocking coming from, yet another reason I'd seriously considered
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asking Masego if it was possible to make more of him. With a Named
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wizard taking over the ritual, the second translocation was a breeze:
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Roland outright dismissed the attendant mages and handled it all
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himself, taking us into one of the larger wagon circles and muttering
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the incantation under his breath. With a sensation like having a stiff
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wind suddenly blown over my entire body, we went through after a mere
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quarter hour of chanting and when my eyes opened it was to the sight of
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a slab of stone standing surrounded by nothing. Behind us was only void
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and ahead of us was another slab of stone, but only one.
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``I took us through a shortcut,'' Roland told me. ``Otherwise we'd be
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stuck going through several checkpoints.''
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``What is it with wizards and not putting up railings?'' I wondered out
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loud, looking at the empty void surrounding us.
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There was some quiet snickering form my soldiers, to my own amusement.
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``Your horse can fly,'' Roland pointed out.
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``My horse is only coming through with the wagons, so I am distinctly
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lacking wings at the moment,'' I replied. ``Crows, at least it doesn't
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rain in here.''
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Just the thought of treading slippery-slick wet stone with only
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nothingness around was enough to have me want to wince. I'd worked
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through most of my old fear of heights, but half-finished dimensions
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like this were in a category of their own.
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``I'll be sure bring up your complaints at the next monthly assembly,''
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the Rogue Sorcerer amusedly said.
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He took the lead, walking assuredly through the first stone slab and
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then not pausing as he reached the end of the second. With reason, as
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there was another slab in place under his foot before it could be put
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down. I looked back, wondering if the first slab would disappear, but it
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was still there. This was unlikely to be a conjuration, I decided --
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it'd take a massive amount of power to make something like stone slab
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out of seemingly nothing -- but odds were this was from too esoteric a
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branch of sorcery for me to be able to make a proper guess besides. I
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simply followed, as did my personal guard, and Roland led us through a
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walk of perhaps half an hour in a straight line before we reached a
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significantly larger slab, where a circle of silvery light the size of a
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door was hanging in the air.
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``The shortcut leads into the most heavily defended part of the
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Arsenal,'' Roland told us. ``Do not be alarmed by the steel and spells
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awaiting you on the other side, they are a mere precaution.''
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``Reassuring,'' Hakram drily replied.
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While the defences were slowing our way, even with a shortcut being what
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we took, I could not help but approve of how thoroughly the safety of
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the Arsenal was being seen to. I was one of the few who'd been brought
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in on the nature of the place, so I was aware that the Arsenal itself
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was in neither the Twilight Ways, Arcadia or even Creation: Hierophant
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had, using Warlock's old research and what he'd learned by stealing the
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ruins of Liesse, hung a fortress in a stable dimension somewhere
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\emph{between} Twilight and Creation. The Witch of the Woods had then
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gone a step further and grafted on the Threshold, less dimensional
|
|
pockets between the Arsenal and everything else. That was where we were
|
|
right now, and that gate ahead ought to be the last hurdle in getting
|
|
in. Roland saw to it quickly, tracing the hanging edge with his fingers
|
|
until it filled silver and speaking in cadenced mage tongue until the
|
|
circle had become a rectangular door anchored on the ground.
|
|
|
|
``I'll have to be last to cross,'' he told us. ``But the way is open, go
|
|
ahead.''
|
|
|
|
``See you on the other side, then,'' I shrugged.
|
|
|
|
I limped through, ignoring a half-hearted protested by my escort that
|
|
one of them should be first to cross. It wasn't all that different from
|
|
a fairy gate, I decided as I crossed, though somehow more\ldots{}
|
|
precise. Travelling Arcadia or the Ways was a journey, while this was
|
|
more like\ldots{} walking up or down stairs. The other side was, I found
|
|
out, a beautifully designed killing field. Flat stone grounds overlooked
|
|
by tall structures leading into corridors, bristling with soldiers and
|
|
engines of war, and even just striding through and onto the stone I
|
|
could already feel the sorcery buzzing in the air. Wards and
|
|
enchantments and half a dozen other things too. My escort followed me
|
|
through as I limped forward, at least a hundred soldiers looking down on
|
|
us, and I noted that the only way through was a stairway wedged between
|
|
the heights. I waited until Roland crossed as well, the gate closing
|
|
behind him, and only then noticed that someone was coming down the
|
|
stairs. I smiled, recognizing him immediately.
|
|
|
|
Though Masego was tall as ever, he'd gained some weight since I last saw
|
|
him. Nowhere near what he'd worn when he was still young, but at leas
|
|
enough he no longer seemed thin -- though he was still built like a
|
|
scholar, not a warrior, as there was not much muscle to his frame. The
|
|
long braids goings down his back had shed some of the ornaments they'd
|
|
down, now limited to one ring per braid. Most of them gold but a few
|
|
silver and even bronze. All of them carved with runes. His robes were no
|
|
longer the old black ones he'd taken to wearing after becoming the
|
|
Hierophant, instead a more ornate grey set touched with tiles of pale
|
|
green and paler gold. The cloth band that covered his eyes matched the
|
|
grey of the robes, though it was not broad enough to hide the glimmering
|
|
light of Summer's sun still dwelling within his glass eyes. Masego
|
|
looked, well, hale and happy. To my admitted surprise.
|
|
|
|
I'd not exactly expected him to waste away here, but I \emph{had}
|
|
expected that without one of us to keep an eye one him he'd go through
|
|
an obsessive phase the way he had after the Observatory was first built
|
|
-- only without Indrani around to force him to eat and actually talk to
|
|
people. Evidently I'd been wrong, and I was pleased to learn it. Masego
|
|
swept down the stairs and, to my deepening surprise, brought me in for a
|
|
short embrace before leaning down and kissing my cheeks one after the
|
|
other.
|
|
|
|
``I, uh,'' I eloquently said. ``Hello, Masego. It's good to see you.''
|
|
|
|
Hierophant looked rather pleased with himself, standing a little
|
|
straighter.
|
|
|
|
``And it is good to see you, Catherine,'' he said. ``We have much to
|
|
talk about.''
|
|
|
|
A pause of a heartbeat.
|
|
|
|
``I would also enjoy catching up,'' he mused.
|
|
|
|
I choked on a startled burst of laughter before coughing into my fist,
|
|
though I found myself grinning like a fool. Some things never changed,
|
|
huh? It just wouldn't be Masego without the effortless praise and
|
|
insults, neither of which were entirely meant to be offered.
|
|
|
|
``I have missed you, Zeze,'' I admitted.
|
|
|
|
I patted the side of his elbow and he withdrew, straightening his
|
|
perfectly straight robes. While I'd been distracted Adjutant had come to
|
|
stand at my side, and the dark-skinned practitioner tuned to him
|
|
afterwards.
|
|
|
|
``Hakram,'' Masego smiled. ``Good. I have been meaning-''
|
|
|
|
``Win a shatranj and I'll consider changing the hand,'' the orc replied.
|
|
|
|
``I have been practicing,'' Masego swore. ``And I have this lovely
|
|
artefact, which has fingers but also shoots lightning and --''
|
|
|
|
``Shoots lightning?'' I mused. ``Hakram, you should reconsider.''
|
|
|
|
I was only halfway screwing with him, since I could think of a lot of
|
|
situations where shooting lightning might be useful. Like, a solid half
|
|
of all the conversations I'd ever had in my life.
|
|
|
|
``Masego, please stop bartering away ancient Mavii artefacts,'' Roland
|
|
sighed. ``Especially when our ownership of them is dubious to begin
|
|
with.''
|
|
|
|
``It was my understanding that grave-robbing is allowed when a hero is
|
|
the one doing it,'' Masego replied, sounding surprised. ``Surely that is
|
|
not invalidated simply because it was a \emph{heroine} instead.''
|
|
|
|
His tone implied a degree of appalment at the discrimination involved,
|
|
which had me breathing in sharply so I would not laugh.
|
|
|
|
``That's not,'' the Rogue Sorcerer began, ``I mean -- you ought
|
|
to\ldots{} we can discuss this later, Hierophant.''
|
|
|
|
I suppressed my grin. Masego's occasional bouts of well-meaning
|
|
earnestness had always been near impossible to ward against, in my
|
|
experience. The humour faded, though, when I considered what was still
|
|
ahead.
|
|
|
|
``So,'' I said, eyes on Masego, ``I hear from Roland we've got a bit of
|
|
a situation on our hands.''
|
|
|
|
Hierophant's face brightened.
|
|
|
|
``Oh,'' he said. ``That reminds me: I have been asked by the Hunted
|
|
Magician to arrange an audience with you at your earliest convenience.''
|
|
|
|
I did not groan, because I was a grown woman -- sadly enough, as grown
|
|
as I'd ever get -- and a queen and I'd not yet found a way to pawn this
|
|
off to anyone else.
|
|
|
|
``Lovely,'' I muttered.
|
|
|
|
``The Blessed Artificer also requests such an audience,'' Roland said,
|
|
coming up behind me. ``She wants to lodge a complaint under the Terms.''
|
|
|
|
My brow rose.
|
|
|
|
``What about?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
The Rogue Sorcerer looked meaningfully at Masego, who looked
|
|
unimpressed.
|
|
|
|
``The device blinded me,'' he said. ``I will not apologize for breaking
|
|
it.''
|
|
|
|
The device had \emph{what}? If some fucking heroine thought she could
|
|
take a swing at Masego and that I'd then make him apologize for it just
|
|
to keep the peace, then someone was in need of a rude awakening. My
|
|
friend might not be the deftest of hands when it came to avoiding giving
|
|
offence, but on the other hand I'd almost never seen him resort to
|
|
violence without dire provocation himself.
|
|
|
|
``Who did what now?'' I asked, lips thinning.
|
|
|
|
``I'll not get into it without her being there,'' Roland said. ``There
|
|
is little point. Something to discuss when we are not standing in the
|
|
middle of the translocation area, yes?''
|
|
|
|
Fair enough, I silently conceded. I wasn't like we were in anyone's way,
|
|
but I should settle in my guards and take up quarters of my own instead
|
|
of standing around. Besides, considering the treasury of Callow had
|
|
pitched in to pay for building this place I was rather due a tour of
|
|
this Arsenal. I would have preferred to visit when the Named here
|
|
weren't at each other's throats, but if wishes were horses than beggars
|
|
would ride.
|
|
|
|
``You have me there,'' I easily said. ``Which of you fine gentlemen
|
|
volunteers to-''
|
|
|
|
A silver rectangle opened behind us, though more than ten feet to the
|
|
left of where own door out of the Threshold had stood.
|
|
|
|
``Roland,'' I said. ``Was anyone else supposed to come today?''
|
|
|
|
By the shortcut, too, if I was correct.
|
|
|
|
``No that I know of,'' the Rogue Sorcerer grimly replied.
|
|
|
|
``To the stairs,'' I barked at my guards.
|
|
|
|
We'd only barley begun to withdraw when a silhouette came out. My staff
|
|
rose, until I caught sight of the perfectly polished shield the figure
|
|
bore. The Mirror Knight gathered his bearings, then started in surprise
|
|
when he caught sight of me. I ought to have been the one surprised,
|
|
really: after all, he was meant to be in Cleves right now.
|
|
|
|
So what the Hells was he doing \emph{here}?
|