592 lines
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592 lines
29 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-21-line}{%
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\chapter{Line}\label{chapter-21-line}}
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\epigraph{``Turn back, Emperor, for if you venture further west the sole
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stretch of land you'll have of me will be six feet long and three feet
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deep.''}{King Jehan the Wise, before the famous Battle of the Sparrows}
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I tapped the side of my pipe, seeding flame, and drew in a long breath
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of wakeleaf.
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It was a good gambit, I decided as the Arsenal shuddered again.
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Shuddered like a wall taking trebuchet fire, like a gate being touched
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by the ram: someone, something was trying to force its way in. An
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obvious outside threat would draw in the Mirror Knight and his lot like
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a moth to the flame, and in the ensuing chaos a move could be made
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against either Archer or the Kingfisher Prince. Hells, if the mess got
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big enough a ruthless schemer like the Intercessor might just be
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intending to tie up all her loose ends through casualties. My choices in
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giving answer were limited, each an opportunity I could not easily
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discard. Fighting at the Mirror Knight's side now might earn trust I'd
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need down the line, but intercepting enemy action headed for Archer or
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Prince Frederic would pay greater and more immediate dividends. I
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breathed out the smoke and offered a calm glance at the Named assembled
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around me before turning to the side.
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``Sinister Physician,'' I called out.
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The man had closed his book and risen to his feet the moment the first
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shiver went through the stone around us, but aside from a small bow to
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me he'd shown no interest in being involved with this situation.
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``My queen,'' the villain replied, turning and indifferent gaze on me.
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``How my I serve?''
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``Head out to the Knot and prepare to receive wounded,'' I ordered.
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``Set up a temporary infirmary. You have my full backing to requisition
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whatever you might need.''
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A glint of interest appeared at that, though not particularly deep.
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Still, unpleasant as the man was he'd be able to handle this without
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trouble. The Knot was the centre of the Arsenal, a mess of winding
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hallways, but it would have the benefits of being accessible no matter
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where the enemy struck from and being some distance from the fighting
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itself: it struck me as the best location to set up our healers.
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``It shall be done,'' the Sinister Physician said. ``If I might take my
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leave?''
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``Do,'' I replied. ``As for the rest of you, we'll be headed
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elsewhere.''
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\emph{So, should I see to the front door or the back}? I mused. Either
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way I'd be taking a risk. Hells, given who I was up against it might be
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that there was simply no good decision to be made here. Perhaps instead
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of thinking in terms of avoiding mistakes, I should be thinking in term
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of picking the mistake whose consequences I could deal with more ably.
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No, that was still playing the Bard's game. Getting stuck in a story,
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digging in my heels. A defensive mindset would inevitably lead to my
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loss when facing an opponent whose understanding of the terrain was
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superior to my own. I'd already sent out Archer and the Kingfisher
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Prince, I must now trust in their skills. Where could I \emph{attack}?
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``A defence must be organized,'' the Blessed Artificer seriously said.
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``Catherine?'' Roland asked, eyes meeting mine.
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He'd always been a sharp one. He must suspect by now we were fighting on
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more than one front and that I'd gathered this band of five as much to
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make sure it wasn't out of my sight as to make us of it. \emph{Which
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means heading into a fight wouldn't necessarily be the best move,} I
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thought, but then breathed in sharply. Not, I corrected myself, it
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absolutely would be the best move. Sure, as a fighting band we'd be
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highly dysfunctional at best: both the Exalted Poet and the Fallen Monk
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would be better against people than the sort of things we were likely to
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face, and the Blessed Artificer wasn't a frontline Named. Furthermore,
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while the Rogue Sorcerer and I were both forces to reckon with, neither
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of us were in the habit of being in the thick of it these days. We'd
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grown used to relying on martial Names to take the frontline. But that
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only mattered if the objective of the fight was victory, which it
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wouldn't be here.
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If any of these people had served or were serving as agents of the
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Intercessor, given the stories we had unfolding they were likely to be
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\emph{very} difficult to kill even when by common sense they should be
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thrice-dead and buried. Creation would nudge things to help them might
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survive, so that in the last act of the play they could be unmasked by
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the triumphant heroes. The quickest way to ferret out an answer, I
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thought, would actually be taking this bunch into a fight far beyond
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what such a purposefully shoddy band of five would be able to handle.
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Good, I mused as I breathed in wakleaf and smiled, that meant I could
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attack and defend with the same stroke. I spat out the smoke, Roland
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batting it away so it wouldn't linger near his face.
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``This is a distraction,'' I said. ``We need to intercept the enemy
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before they get what they came for. Roland, which would you believe the
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most likely target for destruction among our potential war assets?''
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He grimaced.
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``Either the Severance or that one theoretical exercise,'' the Rogue
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Sorcerer said after a beat. ``I'll add that the former is significantly
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better defended.''
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So either the weapon that might possibly end the Dead King or the first
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steps of Quartered Seasons. The aspect I'd taken out of the Saint of
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Swords' corpse and which had since been forged into a sword was unique,
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and thus would be irreplaceable if lost. The other was technically
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recoverable, since while losing Masego's set up here in the Arsenal
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would set us back some months the truly important part was the surveying
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artefacts we'd seeded across several realms. It'd be a pain to
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re-establish connections with those again, but hardly impossible. Of
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those two tools it was my opinion that only Quartered Seasons' ultimate
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results would feasibly be able to harm the Intercessor, but that didn't
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necessarily meant that was what she'd be going for. The Dead King had
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implied, back at the conference in Salia, that some aspect of the
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Intercessor's plans hinged on the corpse of Judgement the Procerans had
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dredged up being used.
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I'd worked on Hasenbach enough that I knew she'd not pull that trigger
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without having no other option left, so I had to wonder if that was the
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Bard's game: peeling away every other alternative, until that was left
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was oblivion's approach and a finger on the trigger.
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``The sword is in the Repository,'' I said. ``The other is\ldots{}''
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``Belfry,'' Roland said.
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Masego's quarters in that part of the Arsenal, then. He'd never quite
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understood why anyone would separate their life from their work, as he
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saw little difference between the two.
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``And for those of us slower to catch on,'' the Fallen Monk cheerfully
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said, ``might an explanation be provided?''
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The Exalted Poet cleared his throat in support.
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``Please,'' he politely added.
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``Isn't it obvious?'' the Blessed Artificer sighed. ``They believe
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someone's making a grab for the most dangerous projects in the Arsenal:
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the Severity and the Hierophant's own private research.''
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Wait, had she called the sword the Severity? From what Roland had said,
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I'd thought it was the Severance. Didn't matter, I decided. Especially
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not given what she was trying to pull here.
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``That research is secret by the order of more crowns than any of you
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can afford to defy,'' I mildly said. ``Do have a care about those loose
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lips, Artificer.''
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``Light ever cleanses,'' the Blessed Artificer replied, uncowed. ``Those
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who have nothing to hide have nothing to fear.''
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``I must have been unclear,'' I patiently said, ``if you ever talk of
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that subject again, within the hour I'll have an order signed by every
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high officer of the Grand Alliance to have you executed without trial or
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appeal. You have absolutely no idea what you're trifling with, and your
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ignorant swaggering is a potential existential threat to this continent.
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Congratulations, Blessed Artificer. There aren't a lot of people alive
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who've had \emph{apocalypse} counted as a possible consequence of their
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blind arrogance.''
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Adanna of Smyrna reared back like I'd slapped her across the face, which
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to be fair I essentially had. I did not regret it, for I had rather
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limited patience for unearned self-importance these days. Especially
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from heroes.
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``I,'' she said, ``I didn't-''
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``Think?'' I coolly replied. ``Consider this matter with a thimble's
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worth of commons sense? Evidently not.''
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Harsh as I might have been right now, there had been ways to handle this
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other than sneaking around investigating and then trying to force my
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hand by talking about it publicly. If she'd brought her concerns to the
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White Knight earlier, or Hells even to the First Prince, then this could
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all have been dealt with by the mechanisms we'd put in place for that
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very purpose. Instead she'd blundered onwards, heroine to the bone, and
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become yet another ingredient in the poisonous brew the Bard was trying
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to pour down my throat. My gaze swept across the rest of the gathered
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Named.
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``I expect I won't have to repeat myself,'' I added.
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``Already forgotten,'' the Fallen Monk said, raising his wineskin.
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``My Chantant is lacking at the best of times,'' the Exalted Poet said.
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Roland said nothing, only inclining his head. He didn't know the
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specifics of what Masego was looking into, since there was no need to,
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but he'd been made aware since the beginning that if Hierophant required
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time to spend on Quartered Seasons instead of other duties he was always
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to be granted that request.
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``Good,'' I said. ``Now, let's get moving. The moment we've ascertained
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where the breach will happen, we'll-''
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\emph{There are limits, Bard}, I thought even as the Arsenal shuddered
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once more and then a massive cracking noise sounded as the wards were
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broken through, \emph{to having a nasty sense of humour.} My senses
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weren't anywhere sharp enough to tell me where the breach had taken
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place, but then I was far from the Crows and surrounded by wards.
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Someone who'd helped put those up, though, would have a better idea.
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``Roland?'' I asked.
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``West,'' the Rogue Sorcerer replied. ``Near the Belfry and the
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Workshop.''
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Opposite of where we were, unfortunately.
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``Then to the Belfry we go,'' I ordered. ``Prepare yourselves, my
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friends. This could get interesting.''
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---
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I let Roland see to the Artificer's rustled feathers while we moved, the
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two of them taking the lead as we sped trough the halls as quickly as we
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could. I wove Night through my leg to numb the pain so I wouldn't slow
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us down too much, but even so I had to stay in the back with the Fallen
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Monk and the Exalted Poet. I didn't mind, since it was as good an
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occasion as any to get them talking.
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``So I heard you killed one of the Holies,'' I told the Monk. ``In a
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pretty grisly way, too.''
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The villain laughed. There'd been no deep emotional reaction to the
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mention, not on his face anyway, and his weight made it more difficult
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to gauge his body language. Especially in such thick robes when it was a
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man I did not know well.
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``You refer to my first, though not my last,'' he fondly said, Arlesite
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accent thickening slightly. ``I got my hands on three before the Saint
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of Swords began popping up around the region and I had to flee. I
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slipped into the Dominion through the Brocelian Forest, and I'd made it
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as far as Levante when the war up north erupted.''
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Ah, I thought. So that how he'd survived as a villain west of the
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Whitecaps contemporary to the Saint and the Grey Pilgrim. I knew for a
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fact the House of Light in Procer had records on both, he might just
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have been keeping an eye out for them from the start.
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``I heard rumours,'' the Exalted Poet said, a little too casually to be
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casual, ``that around this time, several lodges of Lanterns disappeared
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after venturing into the Brocelian.''
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The Fallen Monk smiled, friendly as a beloved brother, but there was
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something about him\ldots{} there was nothing comical about his weight
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then, his size and lumbering demeanour. It was like looking at a
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predator that'd gotten large and slow by devouring, feeding again and
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again until it weighed him down.
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``Does the Book of All Things not preach that the righteous must answer
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kindness with kindness and wickedness with wroth?'' the Monk pleasantly
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said.
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The Poet stiffened.
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``That is blasphemy,'' he hissed.
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``To quote the Book of All Things?'' the Monk chuckled. ``What
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interesting practices the Dominion keeps to, if that is indeed true.''
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It was always nice, I thought, when Named made friends. If only it
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weren't so fucking rare.
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``Can't cast stones, I suppose,'' I noted, ``I was proclaimed an
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abomination for a few years, and Arch-heretic of the East for a tad
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shorter. What did they do to piss you off, anyway?''
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``They called themselves holy,'' the Fallen Monk said. ``That was, all
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things considered, more than enough.''
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``A Proceran priest is still a Proceran, after all,'' the Exalted Poet
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conceded.
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In a sense, was ragging on the Principate not the foundation of
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international diplomacy? It'd yet to fail me, anyway, not even with
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actual Procerans.
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``Can't argue with that,'' I snorted. ``Mind you, Hasenbach seems to be
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cleaning house there.''
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She'd named some kind of spy lay brother her Lord Inquisitor with the
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coup attempt as a pretext then used him to rip out the fangs of the
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House in the Principate, the way the Jacks told it. She'd even done it
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carefully enough they'd had to just lie back and take it, which was
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damned impressive given the pull the House of Light still had in Procer
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even after their leaders got caught backing a coup.
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``A cleaned pigsty does not become a temple for the cleaning,'' the
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Fallen Monk shrugged. ``Though I suppose peeling some jewels off the
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pigs is laudable work.''
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\emph{Godsdamn}, I thought, reluctantly impressed. This one would get
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along splendidly with the House Insurgent if they ever got introduced.
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``Lanterns know better,'' the Exalted Poet proudly said. ``They have a
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single lodge in Levante, and it does not involve itself with politics.''
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\emph{And if you believe that, there's a house in Hannoven I'd like to
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sell you}, I thought. The Lanterns had kept themselves from being
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squeezed under any ruler's thumb since the founding of Levant, and that
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wasn't the sort of thing that could be done by keeping your hands
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entirely clean.
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``Right,'' I said, keeping my skepticism off my face, ``you lived there,
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didn't you? As one of the Hidden Poets.''
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The man looked surprised at even this bare bone knowledge of him, though
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perhaps I should not be surprised by that in turn. We had never met in
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person until today, and as both a recent addition to our roster and one
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without impressive martial skills he'd warranted precious little
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attention from me.
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``That is true,'' he said. ``Though I am one of them no longer, as I
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have left the Old Palace and taken up paying work.''
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``I heard of the Hidden Poets claiming an entire street's worth of
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brothels for their use a full day and night, when I was there,'' the
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Fallen Monk slyly said. ``Though no doubt that was mere vile calumny.''
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``No,'' the Exalted Poet assured him, ``it is quite true. It happens
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every spring, as part of the Feast of Many Sighs.''
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Why was it that all these southern nations seemed to have those
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delightful customs involving a lot of beautiful naked people, when all
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that Callow could measure up against them was harvest festivals where
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everyone got drunk and made poor decisions? It was a little unfair, in
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my opinion. Anyhow, the Monk had been trying to tease by relying on a
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cultural need for discretion in such affairs that was very Proceran in
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the first place. Levantines, though, were remarkably forthright about
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sex even by my own Callowan standards.
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``So what is it that moved you to leave the Old Palace?'' I asked.
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``Sounds like a pleasant enough life.''
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``It would have been shameful to remain there as Bestowed,'' the Exalted
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Poet said, ``given the call to war by the Holy Seljun. Besides, I have
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been thinking of composing an anthem of my own.''
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Bold, that. If I grasped what he'd said correctly, he was referring to
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the Anthem of Smoke: the founding epic of the Dominion of Levant, verses
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recounting the legendary hero-led rebellion that'd thrown out Procer and
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created the nation that still stood today. Mhm. This little chat had
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done nothing to move me towards believing those two were or were not
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pawns of the Intercessor, unfortunately. The Fallen Monk's fairly open
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hatred of the Proceran House of Light didn't necessarily make him an
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ally, since it wouldn't be impossible to use the Dead King as a way to
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break it without breaking Calernia itself along with it. If you had the
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right ally, anyway. Obviously he wasn't shy about getting a little blood
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on his hands or even killing to make a point, but then he wasn't one of
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Hanno's. My lot rarely had clean hands to show.
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As for the Poet, he remained opaque to me. The Dominion's distinct
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fondness for honour and debts meant their Named had obvious levers for
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the Intercessor to use, but he did not seem quite as stuck in that rut
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as most of his countrymen: he'd backed down instead of dug in, when I'd
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pushed against the Mirror Knight's band right after its unexpected
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arrival. In a sense that only made him harder to read, though, and
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considering how straightforward Dominion Named tended to be that had me
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warier of him than not. I knew myself to be a fair hand at assessing
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people, it was a skill that'd saved my life more than a few times, but I
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had too little to go on here. For both of them. Until I got a finger on
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the pulse of what it was that drove, distrust was the order of the day.
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Nothing new in that, sadly enough.
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The Belfry was one of the more unusual parts of the Arsenal, in the
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sense that its existence was only possible because of the peculiarities
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of this place. In one sense it was exactly what it'd been named after: a
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belfry tower as could be seen in most temples of the House of Light, if
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a particularly large one. There could be no such thing as a view of
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outside in the Arsenal, though, as there \emph{was} no outside. The
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pocket dimension this place was built in was very precisely tailored to
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what had been needed, as anything more would have been a waste of
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resources. To put it simply, the entire facility had been carved out
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from the interior of single stolen Arcadian mountain, using existing
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caves that were now the Knot as the start. It accounted for strange,
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sprawling and yet stratified lay of the Arsenal, which had been designed
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in a way that would have been absurd in a place not surrounded by stone
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on all sides.
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We'd reached the broadly square base of the Belfry a while back, and
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been greeted by the first sight of the Arsenal I'd really consider to be
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worthy of story: where in a temple's belfry there would have been an
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empty hollow for the rope and bell, instead hung a long sculpted
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stalactite of what might once have been stone but was now quite
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different. The material had grown translucent from the sorcery poured
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into it, almost like a sort of crystal, and it offered a gentle glow
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that I recognized from some of the magelights in the rest of the
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Arsenal. Fourteen floors of a great library swept upwards around the
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former stalactite, which now hung more like a chandelier than anything
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else. It was the single greatest repository of books in this Arsenal,
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but the lay of the stacks also filled with writing desks and research
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nooks and even places to sleep. A few discreet hallways on different
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levels even led into personal quarters carved outwards from the Belfry,
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one of them Masego's. The stone railings on every floor parted to allow
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for a stone path leading into the crystalline hanging hear, which itself
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had been hollowed out and could serve as both stairs upwards and way
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across.
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The truly beautiful part, though, was the lights and sights echoing
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within the translucent stone. They were not from here, as it happened.
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Though the Belfry's tallest heights reached the summit of the mountain
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the Arsenal had been carved in, there would simply have been nothing to
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see outside the windows. Just an endless void which had been described
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to me as desolately empty yet somehow oppressive, like a ceiling too
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close to one's face. It was the kind of thing that chipped away at one's
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sanity if looked at long enough, regardless, so the `windows' at the
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highest ring of the Belfry instead showed something entirely different:
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they were great silver scrying mirrors looking instead at the beautiful
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vistas of Arcadia and the Twilight Ways, at the seas and sky of
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Creation. There were smaller mirrors on lower levels showing such sights
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as well, all of them angled so that what they held within might echo in
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the central stalactite.
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It was genuinely wondrous to behold, and I'd cast more than a few looks
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to the side in fascination even as we went up the first floor and onto
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the second. Masego's quarters would be on the thirteenth floor, and they
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where the enemy was most likely to strike, so I'd been prepared for the
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long hike up. My steps slowed before we could even come close to the
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third floor, however, same as Roland's in front of us. I cocked my head
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to the side, strengthening my senses with Night. The entire Arsenal was
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walled in by wards and had been raised in a pocket dimensions created
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and maintained by sorcery, which permeated the air and made sensing
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anything but the ambient power a difficult task, but the both of us had
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recognized a twinkle of what was coming up behind us.
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``Enemies,'' Roland said. ``It seems we arrived first.''
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``Fae,'' I added. ``And if I can feel them from this far out, in this
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place? They're titled.''
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Not a weak title, either, which meant this was going to get rough. My
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otherworldly senses were too muddled by the surroundings for me to be
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able to put a finger on exactly what manner of fae was headed our way,
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but there could be no \emph{good} answer to that sort of question.
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``We should make our stand at the stairs leading up from the first
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floor,'' the Exalted Poet suggested, sounding rather enthusiastic.
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``Hold the line there.''
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``It'd be pointless,'' I grunted.
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Roland nodded in agreement. I wasn't sure if he'd tangled with fae
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before, but at the very least he'd been in a few scraps with the Tyrant
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of Helike and his bloody gargoyles. The lessons to learn were not
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|
entirely dissimilar.
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``Ah,'' the Blessed Artificer breathed out, quick to catch on. ``They
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fly, the stories say.''
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Everyone's eye's turn to the empty space between the central crystalline
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structure and the railings. If they could go right up flying where we
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could only go on foot, they'd make it to Masego's quarters long before
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we did. Assuming they knew where those were, and that was truly where
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they were headed for. Wasn't a risk I could afford to take, regardless.
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``Rogue Sorcerer,'' I said. ``Head in there, find a good vantage and try
|
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to keep them from going straight up. I'm leaving-''
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|
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|
The Blessed Artificer? Not a fighter, but potentially bearing useful
|
|
tools to clear out a swarm of lesser fae. Dangerous for the same reason,
|
|
though. The Fallen Monk would be next to useless save as a bodyguard --
|
|
and couldn't be trusted for that anyway -- while I knew much too little
|
|
about the Exalted Poet's combat abilities. He had the Gift, though, and
|
|
unless you were cooking up a ritual putting all your mages in the same
|
|
basket was typically a bad idea.
|
|
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|
``- the Blessed Artificer with you,'' I said.
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|
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|
She was the most likely to be able to crack open the wards Hierophant
|
|
would put around his quarters, if she was the traitor. Roland already
|
|
knew I'd gathered potential traitors here, so he'd know to both keep her
|
|
at hand and keep an eye out for a knife in the back.
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|
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|
``Understood,'' the Rogue Sorcerer replied, catching my gaze and dipping
|
|
his head.
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|
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|
I did enjoy working with Roland, no two ways about it.
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|
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|
``I will do what must be done,'' the Blessed Artificer grimly said.
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|
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|
Fair enough, I thought, so long as that didn't involve a knife slipped
|
|
between mine or the Rogue Sorcerer's ribs.
|
|
|
|
``And the three of us, Black Queen?'' the Fallen Monk asked me, a
|
|
theatrical gesture extending the question to include the Poet.
|
|
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|
``You two should run down to the entrance as quick as you can, we'll
|
|
contain what we can there,'' I said.
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|
|
|
``You will not be coming with us?'' the Exalted Poet asked.
|
|
|
|
``I'll be taking another way down,'' I said. ``Get moving, would you?
|
|
There's no time to waste.''
|
|
|
|
Though I could tell neither of them were convinced, they didn't manage
|
|
to talk themselves into asking about it either. Keeping a good distance
|
|
from each other, as if making a point of it, they doubled back at a run
|
|
towards the stairs we'd taken up to get here. As for me, I waved off
|
|
Roland and the Artificer and went fishing for my pipe again. I'd not
|
|
finished the wakeleaf from earlier and it had gone quite cold, but a
|
|
touch of blackflame saw to that. I limped my way to the railings and
|
|
propped up my staff against them, leaning forward as I pulled at my
|
|
pipe. A stream of smoke left my lips as I waited, patient, for the
|
|
enemy's first blow. Unlike what I assumed to be the rest of this little
|
|
band, I was familiar with fighting the Courts. Though Winter and Summer
|
|
had preferred very different tactics, they'd had a few in common. There
|
|
were, I imagined, only so many ways to make use of similar assets.
|
|
|
|
Which was I was not surprised when, before either the Named I'd sent
|
|
down could make it down to the entrance, a winged silhouette shot out of
|
|
the floor below and began to ascend the gap at a breakneck pace. A
|
|
titled vanguard, hard enough to take a few hits from a powerful foe but
|
|
not so powerful it'd be a great loss if their heads got caved in early.
|
|
Classic fae, that.
|
|
|
|
``Not a prince or a duke,'' I mused, gauging the amount of power wafting
|
|
out of the humanoid shape. ``A count or a baron?''
|
|
|
|
Hard to tell, but I'd be more inclined to bet on baron. Regardless, it
|
|
was time to act. I snatched up my staff and used it to deftly pull
|
|
myself atop the railing, calling on Night and beginning to weave it even
|
|
as I estimated the right angle. I leapt down, pitch-black power
|
|
beginning to erupt from the top of my yew staff and hurtled down towards
|
|
the fae heading up. It could see it -- no, her. Decked in dark brown
|
|
armour styled like a coat of branches, translucent wings batting as her
|
|
long golden hair flowed behind her, the fae offered me a mocking smile
|
|
even as she veered off to the side and avoided me entirely. Leaving me,
|
|
without a word or care, to fall towards the ground.
|
|
|
|
``Mistake,'' I noted around the mouth of my pipe.
|
|
|
|
Taking my staff up by both hands I snapped it forward like a fishing rod
|
|
, and so the rope of Night I had woven snapped forward as well,
|
|
snatching the fae passing me by the neck and smashing her down.
|
|
|
|
``How dare-''
|
|
|
|
The golden-haired fae passed me as I continued to fall down in a descent
|
|
barely slowed, mouth open to scream in anger, but I took a hand off my
|
|
staff and pulled at the Night-rope. It tightened around her throat and I
|
|
dragged her close even as my teeth clenched around my pipe, then gripped
|
|
her throat and forced her further beneath me. Using my staff as support
|
|
I shot a painful jolt of Night into her body, disrupting her wings, and
|
|
used her twitch of pain to flip her around. We kept falling, but I was
|
|
now above her back and holding a makeshift rein of Night to guide our
|
|
descent.
|
|
|
|
``- am the-'' the fae forced out before I tightened the rope again.
|
|
|
|
I eye the rapidly approaching ground beneath us, counting in my head how
|
|
long we had before impact and disrupting her wings with further jolts of
|
|
Night another two times as we dropped. Only when we were a mere count of
|
|
two from the ground did I allow her wings to form again, and our descent
|
|
to slow as I impacted her back from the gathered momentum and she
|
|
swivelled down and forward a bit before stabilizing. We were a mere six
|
|
feet above the ground, and in the hallway in front of us what looked
|
|
like a raiding party of fae were fast approaching. Best to finish this
|
|
before they got close.
|
|
|
|
I laid a hand on the Night leash and poured further power into it,
|
|
turning rope to flame, and with a twist of will sent it to eagerly
|
|
devour the fae's throat. The neck turned to ash in an instant, the head
|
|
plopping down unmoored and the wings winking out. The corpse dropped
|
|
below and as the Mantle of Woe fluttered around me I adjusted my fall,
|
|
landing on my feet a heartbeat after the corpse did -- the head hit the
|
|
ground a moment later with a wet sound, rolling half a foot towards me
|
|
by happenstance. I brought to a halt with my boot, taking a last inhale
|
|
of wakeleaf before all that was left was ash, and with my foot angled
|
|
the fae's head so that I could empty my pipe into the silently screaming
|
|
mouth.
|
|
|
|
I put it away after, smoothed my cloak and turned a winning smile into
|
|
the incoming fairies even as the Fallen Monk and the Exalted Poet
|
|
emerged from the stairs to my right.
|
|
|
|
I blew out the smoke, let it wreath my face as the fae emerged form the
|
|
shadows of the hall.
|
|
|
|
``Good evening,'' I said. ``I can't help but notice you've taken
|
|
something of a wrong turn. Do you need some help in finding the way
|
|
out?''
|
|
|
|
\emph{I'll take that as a no}, I decided as a raging thunderstorm
|
|
erupted in answer.
|