615 lines
28 KiB
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615 lines
28 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-16-divine}{%
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\section{Chapter 16: Divine}\label{chapter-16-divine}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Biting the hand that feeds you is another way to feed.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Vindictive II
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\end{quote}
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There were seventeen different repositories of books in the Arsenal.
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It was a frankly absurd amount and that number didn't even account the
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private collections some scholars, priests, mages and sundry Named had
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brought with them. The amount of knowledge held within these walls could
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be staggering to think about. There were a few places on Calernia where
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there might be greater collections, like the Tower in Ater or the House
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of Ink and Parchment in Delos, but those were fewer than five and even
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those would not draw from so many places and scholarly traditions as the
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Arsenal had. Several of the libraries were restricted to individuals
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assigned to official Grand Alliance projects and some held knowledge
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dangerous enough only a handful of people would ever be allowed to enter
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them, but we were not headed into the depths of this maze of a hidden
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fortress: the miscellaneous stacks were, in fact, a repository even
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guards had access to.
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``People around here call them the Stacks of This and That,'' Archer
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told me.
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She'd fallen into to my right and Adjutant to my left as the three of us
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abandoned the eating hall and headed towards where the Doddering Sage
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was most likely to be at this hour.
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``So it's the dumping grounds for everything that doesn't fit into
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another repository,'' I said.
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And wasn't either potentially useful or dangerous, I didn't add. Those
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books our people were most careful about leaving lying around.
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``Might have started out this way, but it's a different beast now,''
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Archer said. ``It's one of the largest rooms in the Arsenal and it's
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filled with little alcoves. Now there's half a hundred little secret
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nooks where people can sit with a cup of something, hide for a secret
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talk or a fuck or even just a quiet nap.''
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``Wouldn't the custodians put an end to that?'' I said, eyebrow cocked.
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While I found it oddly charming that even in a place as alien as the
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Arsenal people were finding ways to claw back a piece of normality from
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the world, at the end of the day the stacks had an actual purpose.
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``I expect there aren't enough of them to make a proper attempt,''
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Adjutant said. ``There's been two written requests to increase the
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people assigned to these stacks, since they frequently get their people
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temporarily poached for other work.''
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I'd probably seen one of those requests and simply put it out of my mind
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within moments of reading it, I silently admitted to myself. Throwing
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more coin and people at something like the miscellaneous stacks wouldn't
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have even warranted a second look when there were only so many of either
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those to go around and so many more important matters requiring them.
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``It doesn't seem to be causing trouble,'' I finally said.
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I was willing to let sleeping dogs lie, if the only consequence of
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letting this go on was the existence a few discreet places for people to
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wind down. Gods knew even Hasenbach's financial wizardry had its limits,
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and I wasn't going to be sending more coin this way if I could avoid it.
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The Arsenal cost near as much as one of the war fronts to maintain,
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which was a damned burden on the treasury even if it was a necessary
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one. The three of us kept a brisk pace as we passed through the central
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nest of winding hallways that was the Knot, the occasional pack of
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scholars in coloured robes falling silent as we passed by. A few
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recognized Indrani and greeted her, either through actual greetings or
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hastily taking a turn leading away from her, but to my amusement Hakram
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drew the eye more than I. I wasn't wearing the Mantle of Woe and my face
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was not well-known here, while he was a towering orc in
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attention-catching blackened plate.
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We headed down through a set of broad stairs towards the part of the
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Arsenal known as the Stump. Named for its stout build, low ceilings and
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the fact that it was where the leftovers of more important places ended
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up, it reminded me of the old Proceran keeps sometimes found up north.
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Except the stone here was new and utterly bare, like it'd been conjured
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up out of thin air, and there was a\ldots{} scent in the air. Almost
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like metal, but not quite. It was everywhere in the Arsenal, I thought,
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but stronger here than anywhere else. It smelled of work done through
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sorcery, and the taste of it had seeped into every breath I took. We
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took a right on a crossroads where the other path would have, as the
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carving on the wall indicated, led us to the Repository.
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``You've met the Doddering Sage before,'' I said, breaking the silence.
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I glanced at Archer and found the trace of a frown on her brow.
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``Met is a strong word,'' Indrani shrugged. ``It wasn't one of his good
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days.''
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``He grows\ldots{} confused, as I understand it,'' I said.
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``He's an interesting fellow,'' she replied, ``but his conversation
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loops back around after a bit. He does not realize. Sharp, though, when
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he's there. Or so Zeze says, anyway. He must have been quite something
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in his prime.''
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Or he was a skilled liar and thought it in his interest for others to
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believe him as past said prime, I thought. Though Indrani could be
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frightfully perceptive at times, she was not flawless in her judgements.
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None of us were.
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``Anything I should worry of?'' I asked.
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She considered that for a moment.
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``I can't place his accent,'' Indrani said. ``More like he doesn't have
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one, and he speaks at least four languages.''
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Maybe not Proceran, then. Most Named tended to be polyglots, but in that
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regard both heroes and villains from the Principate tended to be
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lacking. It wasn't a reflection of any inherent inferiority but rather
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of the fact that most of them tended to be regional and might genuinely
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never meet someone who didn't speak their native tongue throughout their
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entire life. Then again the old man \emph{was} a sage, even if a
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doddering one, and that implied a certain knack for the scholarly.
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Something to keep in mind, anyway. A walk down a stunted little corridor
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brought us to broad open doors, and a carving in the wall spelling out
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Miscellaneous Works Repository in three languages: Chantant, Lower
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Miezan and Ceseo. There was a bureau buried under an avalanche of books
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just pas the doors, and a harried-looking young man behind it who was
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frowning at an open volume by magelight. Someone had written
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\emph{department of this and that} in chalk on the side, as well as the
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even cheekier \emph{ring if you need a custodian, we would like one as
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well} I noted with a suppressed smile. We entered and as Archer took the
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initiative to go speak to the young man I took a moment to study our
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surroundings.
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After the description of this being dumping grounds for every other
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library, I'd expected some sort of rampant chaos with but it wasn't
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anything like that. The magelight globes hanging from the low ceiling
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shone instead down on cramped but neat paths of shelves filled to the
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brim with books of all shapes and sizes, Chalk slates haphazardly
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distributing revealing some arcane library reference symbols and broad
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themes to swaths of the collection to which I saw no rhyme not reason:
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\emph{history of fish, probably untrue} sat side by side with
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\emph{Arlesite romance} and both were across an entire stack filled with
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\emph{travel journal, but metaphorical}. There was not a single lit
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flame within here, but magelights in glass globes had been tied to tongs
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of leather in a way that made it so they could both be worn and used as
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a handheld lantern. The impressive part, though, was the size of this
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place.
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It was larger than the throne room in Laure, at the very least, and
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every spare inch seemed to be used by either stacks or wagon-sized
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wicker baskets filled with books not yet classed\emph{. I could hide an
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entire company of legionaries in here}, I thought, \emph{and not a soul
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would notice until the goblins got bored.} While I'd been lost in my
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contemplations, Archer had apparently gotten what she needed from the
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young man at the bureau -- who was now, I noticed, staring at me with
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fear and awe while trying very hard to pretend he'd gone back to reading
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his book. I winked at him, then turned to Indrani.
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``So?'' I asked.
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``He's in there,'' Archer said. ``Though Gods only know where. Last
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sighting was apparently near the `fluorescent, neither flora nor fauna'
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stacks.''
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``Stacks,'' I repeated. ``As in, we have \emph{multiple} of those?''
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``It's important to look on the bright side of life, Catherine,''
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Indrani grinned at me, then winked. ``You know, `cause fluorescent
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means-''
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``You are the worst person I know,'' I informed her in disgust.
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Ugh, puns. At least when the sappers made one of those, something
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usually exploded not long after. That was as close as redeeming such
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atrocity against the laws of Gods and men could be had. It was a true
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shame the Sisters weren't willing to allow that in the holy book, but
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I'd just have to keep suggesting it. Maybe some sort of appendix, I
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mused.
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``But I don't expect we'll have too hard a time finding him,'' I
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continued, ``will we, Adjutant?''
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``That's about as clever as her pun,'' Hakram told me. ``You just didn't
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wink afterwards, so it was less glaringly terrible.''
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We both ignored Indrani's outraged noises.
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``Everybody's a fucking critic these days,'' I muttered. ``\emph{Fine}.
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My lord Adjutant, kindly use your aspect to \emph{search} for the
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Doddering Sage until we have \emph{obtained his presence}.''
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``Well, since you asked so nicely,'' Adjutant gravelled, sounding
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amused.
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I found I was swallowing a grin. Gods, how was it that I'd missed those
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assholes so much? Without any more need for verbally jostling, Adjutant
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called on one of three crystallized manifestations of his Name.
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\textbf{Find} was Adjutant's most subtle aspect, and in truth one of the
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most nuanced I'd ever heard of: much like with Hakram himself, the
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apparent simplicity hid remarkable depth. While it could be used to
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significantly accelerate searched for anything material, whether living
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or not, it had more abstract uses as well. They tied into the way the
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aspect itself functioned, in my opinion. For example, after we hit the
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first crossroads Hakram closed his eyes and called on his aspect again
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before taking a swift left. This was not the act of finding information
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from a book where we knew it was or picking out a woman from a crowd: he
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was, in effect, going on nothing. And still he'd get us to the Doddering
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Sage, I had no worry whatsoever about that.
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Masego had theorized -- and Akua seemed to think it a reasonable
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inference -- that what Adjutant was doing was a phenomenon known among
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diabolists as \emph{tapering}. It was apparently common among the most
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intelligent of devils, when they grew ancient enough. It was an
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inherently inhuman degree of perception born from the fact that such
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devils could notice and remember ever detail in a way that humans could
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not and call on a sheer amount of experience physically unattainable by
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mortals. It allowed those creatures to adapt to wildly different
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surroundings, people and situations with seeming flawlessness by taking
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in everything around them and then refining the possibilities to what
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was the most likely truth. Tapering the noise until all that was left
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was the true tune. It was why an incubus could take over a Praesi
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seraglio just as easily as it could break apart a Stygian line-match.
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The devil had a degree of perception that could not be matched by
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humans, and it was helped along by decades if not centuries of learning
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about the ins and outs of human nature. It was the opinion of those two
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that Hakram's aspect essentially allowed him to tap into a similar state
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for a small amount of time.
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Vivienne, on the other hand, had noted she'd seen similar behaviour from
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the Bumbling Conjurer: providence's golden son, whose every debacle
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turned out to be a masterstroke until he ran into a villain so far
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beyond him providence was buried along with him. I was actually inclined
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to side with her on this. To my eye, \textbf{Find} looked a lot like
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discount providence put together for one of Below's: luck put together
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from the possible, but only ever a story's sort of luck. It could get us
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closer to what we needed, or what was already within our grasp, but it
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was not a panacea for all our ills and relying on it for answers was
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putting our lives into the hands of fickle, fickle luck. Regardless of
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who had the truth of it, though, in practice Adjutant guided us through
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twists and turns until we were deep within the maze.
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Twice we passed hidden nooks, one occupied by a snoring priest on an
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armchair and the other by an impressive collection of bottles from I
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confiscated what looked liked genuine Harrow brandy in the name of the
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throne of Callow, until Hakram's steps slowed. I cocked my head to the
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side, taking a whiff of the air. Was that what I thought it was? Huh. I
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took the lead in turning the corner, stumbling onto my first sight of
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the Doddering Sage. The old man looked haggard, I thought, taking in the
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rumpled grey robes and ratty cloth shies, but somehow there was a sense
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of power to it. A mane of shoulder-length grey hair mixed with would
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have been a long and luxurious beard, were it not unkempt. The Doddering
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Sage licked wet red lips and narrowed his amber brown eyes as he caught
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sight of me in turn, leaning back into a ratty brown armchair. In his
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hands was the source of the smell I'd caught: a polished little wooden
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pipe filled with freshly-lit wakeleaf.
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``It's not for you, Constance,'' the Doddering Sage told me. ``You're
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much too young, and this is a fool's vice besides.''
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``\emph{Shit},'' Archer muttered. ``Not a good day.''
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I stepped forward, ignoring the comment, and came to lean against the
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stacks at his side.
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``Tell me about it,'' I sighed, reached for the pipe I carried in my
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tunic. ``I get headaches if I don't smoke at least once, nowadays.''
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The Doddering Sage watched me produce a small packet of my own wakeleaf
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-- Hanno's gift, still with me -- and stuff my own pipe before passing a
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palm over it to light it with a touch of black flame.
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``Dragonbone,'' the old man said, eyes narrowing further. ``Expensive.
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Rare. \emph{Dangerous}. You are not Constance.''
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I breathed in, swallowing the smoke and spat it back out.
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``I'm not,'' I said. ``I'm the Black Queen, and you have answers for
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me.''
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``Do I?'' the Doddering Sage said. ``How good of me.''
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He brusquely snorted, then pulled at his own pipe. I could only watch in
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envy as he blew a smoke ring, then further showed off by blowing a
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smaller ring into it.
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``Damn, but that \emph{is} impressive,'' I admitted.
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``I have a few years of practice on you, Foundling Queen,'' the old man
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smiled, face wreathed in the lasts wisps of his smoke. ``You come to me
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for my eyes, I take it.''
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``Do I?'' I asked.
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When completely out of my depth, I was in no way above smiling
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meaningfully and saying something mildly cryptic. A truly ridiculous
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amount of people were almost \emph{eager} to fall for that.
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``That boy of yours, the one with the deadly earnestness, he'll be a
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terror one day,'' the Sage said, ``but he's a few years short still.
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That's why an old sack of bones like me are brought in even when there
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are all these swaggering youths. I can look, yes I can. But you'll not
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hurt Constance, will you? Promise me.''
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His lip trembled in sudden emotion, and something in me clenched. He
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looked fragile, in that moment, though the truth of his fragility was
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hidden from him. Pity welled up, but I pushed it down. \emph{You could
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be playing me}, I thought. \emph{And so I'll offer kindness where I can,
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but never without keeping a knife in hand.}
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``I won't,'' I said. ``I promise.''
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``Good,'' he muttered. ``Good. You do remind me of him, you know.
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Robert. He was kind, but he was not \emph{soft}.''
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I said nothing, for there was nothing to say.
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``\textbf{Perceive},'' the Doddering Sage said, and Creation shivered.
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I watched him, and saw his eyes had turned pure white -- he looked
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blind, but only a fool would have made that mistake. I felt something
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skittering across my soul, like a spider against glass, and the old man
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exhaled.
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``Twinned,'' he said. ``Incipient. You make your own Role, and the Name
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walks hand in hand with another. I cannot see them, there is\ldots{}
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refusal.''
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I shivered, fingers clenching around my pipe, and did not believe this
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for a moment to be the mad ramblings of an old man. Not when my very
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soul was shivering along with the rest of me, lost and reaching. The
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Doddering Sage turned towards me abruptly, so quick I thought his head
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might snap.
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``More?'' he said, sounding surprised. ``You\ldots{} \emph{how}? It
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isn't yours, where did you take it?''
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``What?'' I said, leaning forward. ``What did I take?''
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``A rival?'' he muttered. ``A thief? A \emph{successor}? You keep
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stories within you that neither your ear nor eye ever knew. Shapes and
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beats and the sound of the knife kissing flesh.''
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My pipe tumbled across the floor, though I did not remember dropping it
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-- or catching the Sage's robes, fists tightening around them as I
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pulled him closer.
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``Focus,'' I ordered, voice ringing with power. ``The stories, where do
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they come from?''
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My hand was shaking, and the answer was on the tip of my tongue. I knew
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this, I'd had it since/
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/and my eyes were blinking. I pushed down the surge of rage that seize
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hold of me at the way I just couldn't seem to remember what I wanted. I
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would be mistress of my own mind, even if I had to rip out the parts
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that misbehaved.
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``Sage,'' I said, ``\emph{tell me}.''
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``Reflection,'' he whispered, sounding awed. ``No, an echo. You stole
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from her echo, and now it's in your head. How did you not break?''
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I released his robes, stumbling back. Oh. \emph{Oh}. And at last I
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remembered, what it was that Masego and I had done in the depths of
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Arcadia, when we'd harvested the echoes left behind by things that would
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become gods. He'd learned dark secrets from that, deep magics. And I
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had/ \emph{no you fucking don't, it's my mind and I there is only one
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ruler here.} I wrenched the world back from the blankness, wrestled it
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back into submission. I was kneeling, gasping, and Adjutant's worried
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hand was on my shoulder. But it didn't matter, even as I convulsed and
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threw up at the feet of the Doddering Sage.
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``Cat,'' Hakram quietly asked, ``can you hear me?''
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``Yes,'' I laughed. ``Yes, I can hear you. And I remember now, what it
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is I got from the Intercessor.''
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The shape of a thousand stories, the tune of the song if not the words.
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An instinct, one that'd sharpened something already existing into a
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blade capable of upending old monsters and empires. I wiped my mouth and
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an apology to the Sage was halfway to my lips when I realized his eyes
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were closed and he was, seemingly, sleeping. Unearthing what had been
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waiting in the back of my head had knocked him out, looked like. I rose
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to my feet, slowly, and allowed Hakram to tuck my cleaned pipe back into
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my tunic as I leaned against his arm.
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``Catherine,'' Indrani quietly said, ``what the Hells was that?''
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``I forced myself to remember something my mind didn't know how to cope
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with,'' I said. ``But it was worth it. I know what's in the back of my
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head, and now that I know it can't be used against me.''
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The Augur had told us that the Bard saw in stories, saw all the stories,
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and that when dealing with Named she was nigh untouchable. But she could
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be beaten, because the more we knew of her the less power she held over
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us. And one of these days I would find a set of shackles even her smug
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immortal ass couldn't slither her way out of. The first step to that was
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realizing I'd stolen part of her and made it my own: that was on less
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surprise for her to pull on me when the time came. With surprising
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gentleness, Indrani reached out and took my face in hand. She withdrew
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after touching under my nose, fingers coming away flecked with blood.
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``Don't think too hard, Cat,'' she said, sounding worried. ``You're not
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made of Winter anymore: some things you won't get back up from.''
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``The more I bleed now,'' I replied, ``the less I'll bleed when the
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knives really come out.''
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Still, I winced as I wiped away the blood beneath my nostrils. I had the
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most horrible headache. A glance at the Doddering Sage told me he was
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still out, so there'd be no more to learn here.
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``Find out who the Constance he was talking about is,'' I quietly told
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Hakram. ``If she's still alive, see to it she doesn't want for anything.
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If she's not, see to her descendants.''
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I owed the man, for this, and I'd pay my debt in full. He'd have a warm
|
|
place to stay in after the war, be it in Callow or at Cardinal. That
|
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much I could repay, for what I'd learned today and what it had cost him
|
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to tell me.
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|
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``I'll see to it,'' Adjutant promised.
|
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``I hate to be that girl,'' Archer said, ``but we're in the shit now,
|
|
aren't we? You said we were here for a revelation, but there wasn't
|
|
anything about this that helps us figure out what's going on here.''
|
|
|
|
I pushed off of Hakram and took my staff from the stacks where I'd left
|
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it propped up against, rolling my shoulder to loosen it. She wasn't
|
|
wrong about that, though she wasn't exactly right either. I found the
|
|
bottle of Harrow brandy I'd liberated from oppression earlier pressed
|
|
into my hand, uncorked, and Indrani gave me a steady look.
|
|
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|
``Your breath still smells like, you know,'' she told me, not unkindly.
|
|
|
|
Ah. That. Fair enough. I took a long swallow from the bottle, then
|
|
another until the taste of vomit was quite gone and a pleasant warmth
|
|
was beginning to settle into by belly.
|
|
|
|
``Good stuff,'' I muttered, passing it back. ``Right, so us being the
|
|
shit. True enough, `Drani, but the actually told us exactly what we
|
|
needed to know before we dipped into my little\ldots{} gift.''
|
|
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|
``He told us things about your Name,'' Archer skeptically said. ``Which
|
|
I've been curious about, true, but it doesn't get us out of this mess.''
|
|
|
|
``Sure it does,'' I said, ``if you consider that, should we have
|
|
followed the story as it was offered to us, we'd be learning this
|
|
\emph{quite} late. This is our revelation, Archer. We can go back from
|
|
it.''
|
|
|
|
Hakram cleared his throat.
|
|
|
|
``You're doing that thing again,'' he told me, ``where you talk to
|
|
yourself in your head and then expect us to keep up.''
|
|
|
|
``You usually do, though,'' I muttered. ``Fine, hear me out then. The
|
|
three of us are bold investigators for truth and justice-''
|
|
|
|
``Hungering Gods,'' Hakram swore under his breath.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Yes},'' Indrani jeered, ``and let them kneel before us, begging
|
|
abjectly for mercy we will always deny!''
|
|
|
|
``I'm not going to touch that,'' I decided, ``so, by going down that
|
|
road we bite into a story. One that got set out for us to bite because
|
|
we're a bad fit for it, so we'll fail.''
|
|
|
|
``And we are a bad fit for it, because?'' Hakram asked.
|
|
|
|
``Indrani,'' I said, ``how many people have you killed this year?''
|
|
|
|
The ochre-skinned Named hummed.
|
|
|
|
``Define people,'' she finally asked.
|
|
|
|
``Because that,'' I told him.
|
|
|
|
``So we are avoiding this story,'' Adjutant said.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I said, ``if I had something else to slap down instead I might,
|
|
mind you, but I've got nothing. But that doesn't mean we can't cheat.
|
|
The thing is, Hakram, that is a functional story. If we were a band of
|
|
heroes, we could ride it to the finish.''
|
|
|
|
``Now you're just making it too easy,'' Indrani reproached.
|
|
|
|
``For the trap to work,'' Adjutant slowly said, ``the story has to
|
|
be\ldots{} functional for lack of a better term. It is simply us who
|
|
would not function with it.''
|
|
|
|
``Yeah,'' I said, ``which is why we went directly for the Doddering
|
|
Sage. He was my guess for the guy who, when it looks like we're about to
|
|
lose for good, reveals a truth to us and allows us to turn it all
|
|
around.''
|
|
|
|
``As heroes are wont to,'' the orc nodded.
|
|
|
|
``Hate to break it to you, Cat, but he didn't say shit about
|
|
conspiracies,'' Archer pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' I agreed. ``He talked, instead, about my Name. Which means
|
|
someone's trying to fuck with my Name, or maybe the one `twinned' to
|
|
it.''
|
|
|
|
A poetic way to talk about a nemesis, but it fit. For every villain with
|
|
Destroy, there was a hero with Protect. That was the way the Game of the
|
|
Gods was played, and I'd be no exception. I cleared my throat.
|
|
|
|
``Without sounding arrogant-''
|
|
|
|
``That'd be a first,'' Indrani mused.
|
|
|
|
I flipped her off.
|
|
|
|
``- at least part of this is meant as a swing at me as well as a broader
|
|
attack on the Truce and Terms,'' I said. ``And that rather narrows down
|
|
who it is we might be fighting against.''
|
|
|
|
``If you cannot name the swordsman, name the sword,'' Archer snorted.
|
|
``Fair. Only so many people who'd come swinging at you this way. So
|
|
we're in a scrap with the Wandering Bard, are we?''
|
|
|
|
``She's come out of the woodworks at last,'' I grunted in agreement.
|
|
``And she took her sweet time before she did, `Drani, so this isn't
|
|
going to be some sloppy half-baked attempt. She's come for blood, and at
|
|
the moment she's \emph{winning}.''
|
|
|
|
``The Truce and the Terms are holding,'' Adjutant said. ``And you have
|
|
learned valuable information.''
|
|
|
|
Yeah, I had. Which I would have taken for a victory, if I'd not just
|
|
learned that part of the instincts that'd driven me to this decision had
|
|
been ripped out of the old monster I was now facing. Which meant I was
|
|
about to get taken for a ride, because she'd known about that and until
|
|
now I hadn't.
|
|
|
|
``The Sage is unconscious,'' Archer suddenly said.
|
|
|
|
``But obviously alive, and not a hero besides,'' Hakram said. ``If
|
|
stirring conflict is the purpose, that is a weak hand.''
|
|
|
|
``Shut up,'' I said, ``both of you. Use your Name.''
|
|
|
|
I called on Night instead, sharpening my senses to the very limit of
|
|
what I could bear, and that was when I heard it: hissing sounds. Like a
|
|
gas being released. At least ten, probably more.
|
|
|
|
``There is something in the air,'' Adjutant growled.
|
|
|
|
``And I don't hear anyone out there moving,'' Archer said.
|
|
|
|
Was everyone else out there dead? It might simply be a curse or a deep
|
|
sleep instead, I mused, though death would likely be easier to arrange.
|
|
I could not afford to take a moment and ponder how many innocents had
|
|
likely just been snuffed out as part of a scheme, not when there were
|
|
more lives on the line, so I tucked that away cleanly.
|
|
|
|
``The Concocter would be capable of making a brew that can do this,'' I
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
``I've known her to work with gases, sometimes,'' Indrani hesitantly
|
|
agreed. ``But she wouldn't, Cat.''
|
|
|
|
``It doesn't need to be her plan,'' I murmured, ``just her work. It
|
|
being used will be quite enough, when heroes stumble into this.''
|
|
|
|
Because that'd be the logical move, wouldn't it? If someone was trying
|
|
to start a fight between Named in the Arsenal, what better way to have a
|
|
pack of heroes stumble unto me and two of the Woe surrounded by corpses
|
|
and an unconscious Named. Hells, it was going to be the Mirror Knight
|
|
and his band wasn't it? That was the reason that little fucker was here
|
|
at all: so that the Intercessor would have someone capable of rallying
|
|
the heroic side of the Arsenal but having no interest in talking this
|
|
out with me instead of drawing a sword. Any moment now he and the worst
|
|
possible combination of Named the Bard could muster were going to come
|
|
in, and I needed to think how I could wiggle out of this mess. The
|
|
moment the Mirror Knight and the Black Queen came face to face, I
|
|
decided, this was no longer recoverable. It'd become a conflict between
|
|
the two of us, and people would have to take sides: even if I won and
|
|
showed restraint, there was a decent chance the Truce and Terms would
|
|
collapse in the aftermath of this debacle.
|
|
|
|
I needed someone to distract the Named coming, and then I needed to
|
|
start tugging at the other threads of this story until it all came
|
|
tumbling down and the Intercessor had nothing left to work with.
|
|
|
|
``People just came in,'' Archer murmured, then paused as she pricked her
|
|
ear. ``Five, two in armour.''
|
|
|
|
``Hakram,'' I said, ``I need you to do something for me.''
|
|
|
|
The orc looked at me, then sharply nodded.
|
|
|
|
``It was my plot,'' he agreed. ``Will you have already arrested me, or
|
|
are we fighting?''
|
|
|
|
I clenched my fist, then slugged him in the side of the face.
|
|
|
|
``The day I throw any of you under the wheels like that is the day I
|
|
slit my own throat,'' I hissed. ``\emph{You}, Adjutant, are
|
|
investigating this on the behalf of the Black Queen. You're going to
|
|
them for help, because you caught sight of two people running. Do what
|
|
you can from the inside.''
|
|
|
|
He took a step back, staggered more by the words than the hit.
|
|
|
|
``Archer and I are going to make a run for it,'' I said. ``Make it look
|
|
good.''
|
|
|
|
If the Intercessor wanted to make me the villain of this fucking story,
|
|
then she ought to have been more careful what she wished for.
|