627 lines
28 KiB
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627 lines
28 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-19-spectral}{%
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\section{Chapter 19: Spectral}\label{chapter-19-spectral}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``I'm afraid that that old saying about resting when you're dead
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has proved overly optimistic, my good fellows.''}
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-- Dread Empress Malevolent III
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\end{quote}
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Having a dead body splayed on a table in an otherwise nice room was
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oddly nostalgic, I'd admit. It made me miss my sappers, who back in the
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old days had brought me the corpses of my enemies much like cats brought
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home chewed-up birds. It'd been too long since I'd sat down with Robber
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and Pickler in person, though in truth I might be able to see them
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before too long: if we went on the offensive in Hainaut to take back its
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capital and secure the shores, I'd want them both as part of the
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attacking army. There wasn't anyone quite like them when it came to
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getting the job done.
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``The spirit still has ties to the body,'' the Harrowed Witch told us.
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``I can summon it back for a time, Your Majesty, if that is your wish.''
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The villainess looked nervous around me, as she'd been ever since I'd
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made it clear I could see through the enchantments she used to hide. I
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couldn't, actually, but the Crows could and I was not above the
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occasional lie to obscure the true scope of my abilities. Brown-eyed,
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brown-haired and rather drab in both clothes and conversation the other
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woman had a slight hunch in her shoulders that never quite went away --
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like she was expecting someone to slap her hard in the back at any
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moment. As I understood it the brother she'd murdered and now haunted
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her could not directly touch her, but as his strength waxed and waned
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the wraith was capable of speaking to her and sometimes even throw small
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objects.
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Archer was inexplicably fond of this one, though I supposed Aspasie
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might be an acquired taste. Indrani herself was lounging on the edge of
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the sofa, having stolen the last of my bottle along with the nice little
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snacks the servants had put out during my absence. Admittedly the Wicked
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Enchanter's corpse had taken up the table where the plate had been
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waiting, but that was no excuse to just steal the whole thing and begin
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tearing through them.
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``Is it actually the soul you call back?'' I asked, genuinely curious.
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In theory, necromancy was capable of doing that. In practice
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necromancers tended to prefer setting up wards to prevent the souls from
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passing on or even outright binding the soul to the body before killing
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the individual -- as Masego had once done for me, before First Liesse --
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since calling back a soul gone past the veil of death was tricky at the
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best of times. The only mages I'd ever heard of regularly doing such a
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thing were the Twilight Sages of the drow, who wee long gone and their
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knowledge destroyed. The Sisters had seen to that, and thoroughly.
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``The priests say it isn't,'' the Harrowed Witch hedged. ``That it's
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just some spirit called up from the death and the echo of the mind.''
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Said priests had declared me an abomination in a Salian conclave after
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I'd tricked a resurrection out of the Hashmallim, so I was inclined to
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take their assertions with a grain of salt. Though calling back a soul
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was hardly resurrection the House of Light in the west had always
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jealously guarded what it saw as the sole domain of the Heavens, and
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thus theirs. Proceran mages having been squeezed out of the healing
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trade was proof enough of that.
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``And what do you believe?'' I asked.
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``Even if they're right,'' she shrugged, ``there's not much difference,
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is there? Whether the spirit's fresh or old, it's still got the same
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stuffing.''
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``Praesi believe it's the soul,'' Archer told me. ``And that the
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imperfect memory is because you can't drag one back without damaging it
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some, not unless the formula is perfect in a way no one's managed.''
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Yeah, well, just as the Proceran priesthood had a vested interest in
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claiming this to be spirit-work it could be said that the Praesi had an
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interested in claiming the opposite. The Wasteland was fond of claiming
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its ways would make you as a god, if you were good enough at them. And
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if someone could master life and death, while it might not make you a
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God shouldn't it make you at least the lesser kind?
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``So long as I get my own questions answered, that one we can leave to
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the Wasteland and the priests,'' I said. ``Do it, Witch.''
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``By your will, Black Queen,'' the villainess bowed.
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She knelt by the Wicked Enchanter's corpse and laid hands on his face,
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peeling open the sightless eyes and prying open his mouth. Two fingers
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she pressed against the black and swollen tongue, whispering urgently in
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the mage tongue, and the same again on the ear of the left side and then
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the right.
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``Three black pearls were granted unto me by the spirits of the land,
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and I bestow upon you their use this hour,'' the Harrowed Witch said,
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her Chantant fluid and beautiful and ringing of something that was not
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Chantant at all. ``One that you may hear, and in death obey. One that
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you may speak, as I bid you now. One that you may know once more,
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heedful and waking. I know the secrets of the sleeping stones and I have
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heard the echoes that outlived the word: I am mistress among the lost,
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and I command you to \emph{return}.''
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The last word reverberated with power, with will, and though it was
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neither aspect nor Speaking it was the culmination of a skilled witch's
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craft: the weight of it was not to be trifled with. A burst of cold wind
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passed through the parlour even as the Wicked Enchanter's corpse took a
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ragged gasp, as if the corpse had somehow sucked in the air, the
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brown-haired witch laid a hand atop the corpses' brow. The shadows in
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the well-lit room somehow seemed longer to me, and deeper in their
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darkness.
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``I have him,'' she said, brow furrowed in concentration. ``Ask your
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questions, and swiftly: he struggles against the call.''
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I cast a look at Indrani, who seemed only mildly interested by all of
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this. Not her first time up close to such a thing, I imagined. Well,
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might as well get this over with.
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``Are you the Wicked Enchanter?'' I asked.
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``I am,'' the corpse rasped.
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He twitched, as if trying to say more but being prevented by the Witch's
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firm grasp.
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``Have you ever spoken with, or been spoken at by, a woman named
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Marguerite of Baillons?''
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``I have not,'' the corpse rasped.
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I frowned. Had the Wandering Bard changed face and name once more? No,
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perhaps my mistake had been of a different sort.
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``Have you ever spoken with, or been spoken at by, the Wandering Bard?''
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I asked.
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``Yes,'' the corpse rasped.
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My veins thrummed with something that was neither fear nor excitement,
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for though I was not cowed by the notion of tangling with the
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Intercessor neither was I looked forward to it. I already had too many
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deadly enemies. And yet I would not deny that I was also relieved. Until
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that single word, it'd been possible that I was just putting up my own
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fears on a blank slate. Now I knew my enemy, and the war could begin in
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earnest.
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``What did she tell you?''
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``She warned me that I had been noticed,'' the Wicked Enchanter's shade
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told us. ``And that my joys in the wilds would come to an end.''
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As I recalled, the dead villain had been the one to seek out the Grand
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Alliance and not the other way around, though there'd been some rumours
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of his existence in the far south.
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``And this convinced you to seek out the Truce and Terms?'' I pressed.
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``Eventually. I brought my court to another three villages first.''
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So there it was, I mused. There was a story, back home, about one of the
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petty kings that'd ruled in Callow before the Albans united the realm.
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An old man, said in some tales to have ruled over Liesse and others in
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Dormer, but all agreed he'd been as harsh a tyrant as they come. But his
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knights had stayed loyal, and kept him from knives in the back, and for
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subtler threats he had bargained with a wizard. For great favours he'd
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won an enchanted amulet that would glow when in the presence of poisons,
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and so for many years the tyrant had ruled safely in his castle. Until
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one day a clever cook, whose kin had been killed on the tyrant's whim,
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arranged for a particular plate to be served: grilled mushrooms, the
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savoury kind growing in stone shadows known as the `False Wings'.
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The tyrant ate, for the amulet had not glowed, and then drank of his
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favourite mead as he every meal. The mushrooms, the False Wings, were
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not a poison. Neither was the mead. Yet mixed together, as they were in
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the tyrant's belly, they became a deadly mixture. The story went that
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the tyrant did not die of the poison, actually, but went so mad from the
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pain eating his insides he'd thrown himself off the highest tower of his
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keep.
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The Wicked Enchanter was not, by himself, poison for the Truce and
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Terms. Scum, there was no denying that, but even scum was worth
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marshalling when the King of Death was on the march. The Truce being
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extended to the likes of him was the price of being able to pull in
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villains not quite so vile, who otherwise might wonder exactly where the
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line was drawn and elicit to instead remain in hiding -- or, worse, make
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troubles at our back. \emph{And it's necessary for what is to come}, I
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thought. The Liesse Accords must apply to everyone, even the worst of
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us, and if their predecessor-treaty had been used as a way to execute
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villains many of Below's would see them as a tool of heroic control and
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nothing more. Yet the Wicked Enchanter would have been tolerated, if he
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lent his Name and skills to the war against Keter.
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He only became poison when the Red Axe was added to the meal: a heroine
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born of his very depredations, fated by her Role to slay him. And when
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she'd fulfilled that role, well\ldots{} There would be time to consider
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the full breadth of that blow later, I told myself. First there was one
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last piece of information that I must extract from the dead. While it
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was possible the Bard would have relied on mere chance to have the two
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fated foes encounter each other, and chance did tend towards a certain
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theatrical certainty when it came to Named, the way the killing had been
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described to me smacked of it being arranged. It'd taken place in the
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Knot, the central halls of the Arsenal, when they were filled with
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people and other Named were not too far -- yet not so close that they
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might be able to intervene.
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The Intercessor had boots on the ground, like as not, and I wanted to
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know who was filling them.
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``When you encountered the Red Axe,'' I said, ``where were you headed?''
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``To the Repository.''
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My brow rose.
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``Why?'' I asked him.
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``A supply convoy had come the day before,'' the corpse rasped. ``The
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red orchid I paid for would be stashed in the usual crate.''
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``I can't hold much longer,'' the Harrowed Witch hoarsely said.
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I nodded in acknowledgement. Smuggling, huh. I supposed I shouldn't be
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surprised: this place might be a wonder, but in the end people were
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people. I'd see to it this leak was plugged and whoever was involved got
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the noose, but what had been mentioned was not familiar to me. Red
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orchid, was it? I cast a curious look at Archer, whose own brow rose.
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``Drug,'' she told me. ``Hard stuff, expensive and from the Free Cities.
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Hard to kick when the hooks are in, too.''
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Probably illegal in Procer, I mused. An addiction -- particularly one to
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a substance even Indrani seemed wary of -- was an obvious lever for the
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Bard to use, I thought, but there would have been need for another Named
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to arrange the practical aspects of it. Possible well in advance, I
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thought, which was a disquieting notion.
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``How did you hear about smuggler?'' I asked the corpse.
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``I was told by the Concocter,'' the shade of the Wicked Enchanter
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rasped.
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And there went the last detail I'd needed to know.
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``Thank you for your service,'' I told the dead thing. ``You will
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receive your dues under the Terms, even from the grave.''
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\emph{And not an inch more}, I thought. I gestured at the brown-haired
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witch, signifying I was done.
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``Kill the girl,'' the corpse hissed. ``\emph{Killkillkillkill}-''
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``I release you,'' the Harrowed Witch gasped. ``Begone.''
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Wind blew out violently, rustling my cloak and pushing back strands of
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my hair, but in its wake the room seemed settled. There'd ben a weight
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in the air, a tension, that had now been released. Sweat beaded the
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villainess brow, and she was panting like she'd just fought for her
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life.
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``What a charmer, that one,'' I nonchalantly said. ``But at least he was
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talkative, thanks to you. You've done me a good turn, Harrowed Witch.''
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``I know to keep my mouth shut, Your Majesty,'' she weakly replied.
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``There is no need to present the stick now that you've dangled the
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carrot.''
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``Archer's already vouched for you,'' I said, ``else I would not have
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asked you at all.''
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Aspasie shot Indrani a surprised look. I sympathized with her there, as
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Archer's actual affections tended to be rather opaque. I tended to blame
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that on the Lady of the Lake, but honesty compelled me to admit it might
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have been in part natural inclination as well. Indrani replied with a
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smile, or at least tried to: she'd stuffed the last snack whole in her
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mouth, so her bulging cheeks rather undid the intended effect until she
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swallowed.
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``I meant what I said,'' I told the witch. ``Consider how you'd like the
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favour repaid and return to me when you are certain.''
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``You're powerful enough to simply compel my service,'' Aspasie said,
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sounding genuinely bewildered. ``Why make this offer when you have
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nothing to gain?''
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\emph{Because if you never reward siding with you, the only rewards to
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be won are in siding against you}, I thought.
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``Forced service is always mediocre,'' I said. ``And I've no patience
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for such things. I'll use you, I won't deny that or pretend we are
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equals, but you will also gain from the use.''
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The Harrowed Witch slowly nodded, looking abashed, and hesitantly rose
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to her feet.
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``I will keep your words in mind, Your Majesty,'' she said. ``And return
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to you with an answer.''
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Archer from the side, finished licking up the last of the mousse on her
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fingers and snatched up my bottle of aragh. She tossed it at the
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brown-eyed witch, though she was too slow and only caught it after it'd
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hit her sternum and dropped into her outstretched hands.
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``\emph{Archer},'' she complained.
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``I know how your head gets after a restless calling,'' Indrani said,
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almost gentle. ``Drink up, or you'll have a pounding headache by the
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time you get to your rooms.''
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``I'll still have one if I drink this,'' the Harrowed Witch said, ``I'll
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simply be drunk as well.''
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``It'll take the edge off, at least,'' Archer snorted. ``You still got
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your fancy herbs?''
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``Julien scattered them,'' she mourned.
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Her brother, I took it. The realization seemingly drove the decision to
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pull at the bottle, though she choked on the Praesi hard liquor and had
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to force herself to gulp it down.
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``What is this, the Dead King's piss?'' the Witch moaned, then had a
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moment of panic when she looked at me. ``Um, I mean, Your Majesty-''
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``Taghreb delicacy,'' I told her amusedly. ``Consider yourself lucky you
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never tried dragon's milk.''
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``I might have something for your head,'' Indrani mused, ``I'll pass by
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your rooms later.''
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``If you're just bringing a hammer again, that ceased being even
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slightly funny after the third time,'' the brown-haired woman
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complained.
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I smothered my chuckle with all the practice of a woman well-acquainted
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with Indrani. It was a dismissal, even if one delivered by Archer
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instead of myself, and the villainess treated it like one. She made her
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courtesies and departed swiftly, my bottle still in hand. I blew out a
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long breath after Archer closed the door behind her.
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``The Concocter, huh,'' I said.
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``She'd a shady, haughty prig,'' Indrani said, ``always has been, but I
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don't think she's your traitor Cat. Hells, what would the Bard have to
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even offer her? She doesn't care about politics, only that she can keep
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making her potions.''
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I wasn't inclined to romanticize the Concocter having joined us without
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prompting, myself. Much like the Beastmaster she'd only come to us
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because Refuge had collapsed after Ranger's disappearance, though her
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concerns had been more direct than Beastmaster's: without a pack of
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Named to trade with, the Waning Woods had lost much of their appeal for
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her. It wasn't like she was going to be hunting for manticore hearts or
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elderwood snake fangs herself. The Arsenal had been what she was after,
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the funding and books and safety of it, and she'd certainly thrived
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there. She'd gone from trading healing poultices in the woods to being
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able to order her pick of ingredients from Mercantis through Proceran
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envoys, and she'd been judged useful enough to be made the informal lead
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of one of the secret projects: Sudden Abjuration might also be under
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Roland, who was higher in the pecking order of the Arsenal, but it was
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ultimately an alchemical pursuit and so her word carried more weight
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than his.
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``She's involved with the smuggling, at least,'' I replied. ``And she
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brought in the Enchanter. I'm not saying she's an ardent partisan of the
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Bard, but do you really think she's above cutting a deal?''
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The Intercessor had been studying human nature since the days where
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Calernia used bronze. She was a very, very skilled temptress when she
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put her mind to it.
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``Dunno,'' Indrani reluctantly admitted. ``The Lady was always keen on
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reminding us that fucking around with your betters was a sure way to get
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burned, and we all learned that lesson some, but the Concocter was
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always clever. She got ahead just by trading, and she used what she had
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to get away with a lot. It's always been her, then everybody else. I
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don't think even Lady Ranger knew her real name.''
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``I have questions for her,'' I said. ``How nicely they'll be asked,
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that depends on her.''
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Indrani put up her hands in appeasement.
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``Don't misunderstand, Cat,'' she said. ``We shared a camp years ago,
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that's all there is to it. If you want to cut off a few fingers to set
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the mood, I'm not protesting. I'm just saying that the Arsenal is a wet
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dream come true for her, so she'd be careful about not mucking it up too
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much.''
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I grunted in acknowledgement. To my understanding having shared the
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tutelage of the Ranger wasn't really the kind of shared history that
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bound people together closely, save perhaps in shared mingled fear and
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admiration of the woman, but I still knew precious little about
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Indrani's years there. She was rather tight-lipped about it, save for a
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few well-worn amusing stories she was always ready to dust off around a
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campfire when the drinks got flowing.
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``Would she say more if you went knocking alone?'' I asked.
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``Would she be less wary if the wasn't the fucking \emph{Black Queen}
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popping up unannounced?'' Indrani said, sounding amused. ``Who knows? It
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might just be one of those unsolvable mysteries of life.''
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I sighed.
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``Fine,'' I said. ``Go ahead, see what you can get out of her. But
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`Drani, I need those answers. If you don't think you can-''
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``I \emph{can},'' Archer assured me.
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I searched her face for a moment, to see if it was stung pride talking,
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but she seemed certain.
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``I'll get harsh if I have to,'' Indrani continued when I did not
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answer. ``Cat, you can trust me with this.''
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But this was important, I almost said. This was the Bard, and I could
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not take risks, and\ldots{} \emph{You were warned by Adjutant that you
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could only take so much on your shoulders without running yourself
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ragged,} Akua's voice echoed, over the broken corpse of a boy and the
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bitter taste of failure. \emph{You did not heed his words.} I couldn't
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handle this alone, guiding every moving part. Hells, having trusted
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allies might genuinely be the single absolute advantage I held over the
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Intercessor. And still it felt like a mistake to let Archer go alone,
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because what if \emph{she} made a mistake? There was trusting someone,
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and then there was trusting them to win. I clenched my fists. \emph{This
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is fear}, I thought. \emph{This fear speaking through my lips, a worm
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slipped into my mind through my ear. And once fear rules, she is the
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mother of defeat.}
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``Go,'' I said. ``And ask about the gas in the Miscellaneous Stacks as
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well. There are others here who could make those, but she would be the
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best hand for the work.''
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``I'll get it out of her,'' Archer promised. ``I know that look, though.
|
|
Where are you headed?''
|
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|
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``A pretty blonde invited me for a drink,'' I told her. ``Figured now as
|
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good a time as any.''
|
|
|
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``You're pulling my leg, you wench,'' she grinned.
|
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``I speak no lie,'' I grinned back. ``If I'm not here, then look for me
|
|
in the rooms of the Prince of Brus.''
|
|
|
|
Now, I'd never actually paid all that much attention to the arcane rules
|
|
governing Proceran wine drinking so I had to wonder: which was it that
|
|
went with asking a stranger to commit what was \emph{technically} a spot
|
|
of treason, a red or a white?
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
``And you say this liquor is called \emph{aragh}?'' Prince Frederic
|
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Goethal said, sounding delighted.
|
|
|
|
I made a mental note to order a raise for the Callowan quartermaster
|
|
here who'd ensured there would be a decent reserve of Legions and Army
|
|
liquors. The Taghreb drink was actually a favourite among even my
|
|
countrymen these days, the taste for it having spread from the former
|
|
Legions officers to the men and women they'd trained.
|
|
|
|
``Indeed,'' I replied. ``I developed a taste for it when I trained at
|
|
the War College. It was quite popular amongst the cadets there.''
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Brus was no longer in armour, having instead traded it for
|
|
a riot of silk in red and blue whose shape and cut somehow evoked wings
|
|
splayed across the Proceran warrior-prince's chest. I availed myself of
|
|
what was being displayed, namely some very nicely muscles on an
|
|
otherwise slender body. The accompanying silken trousers were tight
|
|
enough they made clear the calves under them were iron-hard, which they
|
|
were very clearly meant to. Prince Frederic had been quite surprised by
|
|
my unannounced visit but proved to be an amicable host, leading us to
|
|
the little salon attached to his rooms and dismissing the servants so
|
|
that we might speak alone.
|
|
|
|
``Ah, the famous War College,'' the blond mused. ``I have heard many
|
|
tales of it, most of them I suspect of being splendid lies.''
|
|
|
|
He popped open the bottle and laid down the cork on the table between us
|
|
-- once again a low one between two sofas, the Proceran basics had very
|
|
clearly been used as a standard for decoration across the Arsenal --
|
|
before offering me a smile.
|
|
|
|
``Unless, Your Majesty, it is true that you once defeated an army with
|
|
an exploding goat?''
|
|
|
|
I coughed.
|
|
|
|
``It was only a company, and the goats were part of a greater
|
|
strategy,'' I confessed.
|
|
|
|
``Dear Gods,'' Frederic Goethal mused, ``if I return home with word that
|
|
Special Tribune Robber is not a complete and utter liar, the Morgentor
|
|
itself might well fall over from the shock.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{That little shit}, I thought, not entirely angrily. A quarter of
|
|
the continent away, and still he was finding ways to be a pain in my
|
|
ass.
|
|
|
|
``Tell me he's not doing plays anymore, at least,'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Their all-goblin rendition of `The Election of Blessed Clothor' saw
|
|
several of my courtiers weep openly,'' the Prince of Brus cheerfully
|
|
denied.
|
|
|
|
I noted he did not specify whether the weeping was at the beauty of it
|
|
or the sheer horror. Truly, the man was a skilled diplomat. I gestured
|
|
to offer to pour from the bottle and he conceded, rising instead to
|
|
fetch to very crystal glasses with gold rims. Gods, I hoped those were
|
|
his and not the Arsenal's. If my kingdom's taxes had ended up pitching
|
|
for gold-rimmed glasses, someone on my side had been botching their job.
|
|
I poured him a generous measure, and a smaller one for myself -- I'd
|
|
already had a few, after all. Besides, from what I recalled Proceran
|
|
court etiquette dictated that women should drink daintier cups of strong
|
|
spirits. Larger cups of wine, though, strangely enough. Something about
|
|
men having stronger stomachs but women better palates.
|
|
|
|
``Prince Frederic,'' I began.
|
|
|
|
``Frederic,'' he insisted. ``I've told you before, Your Majesty.''
|
|
|
|
``Catherine, then,'' I replied.
|
|
|
|
It was a false closeness, this, but not one that was particularly
|
|
unpleasant to me. I suspected that if I got to know this man, I might
|
|
actually grow to like him.
|
|
|
|
``It would be my pleasure,'' the Prince of Brus smiled, perfect white
|
|
teeth and stunning eyes taking me aback. ``Might I offer a toast,
|
|
Catherine? To the Grand Alliance!''
|
|
|
|
He raised his cup.
|
|
|
|
``To old enemies, and new friends,'' I replied, touching his glass with
|
|
mine.
|
|
|
|
We both drank, and I noted with approval that he did not choke and his
|
|
eyes did not water. It was always pleasing when a man knew how to hold
|
|
his liquor. Our glasses touched the table, and the Prince of Brus leaned
|
|
back.
|
|
|
|
``I believe,'' he said, ``that I might have interrupted you. I offer
|
|
apology, and willing ear.''
|
|
|
|
I mulled over that a moment, choosing how the subject was to be
|
|
broached,
|
|
|
|
``Are you fond of stories, Frederic?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``A complicated question,'' the Prince of Brus said. ``As a boy I would
|
|
have mocked it, but I have learned better in the years that followed. It
|
|
would be a lie to speak of like or dislike, perhaps. In the end I take
|
|
stories to be much like the finest of paintings: a thousand men and
|
|
women can look at the same and find different sight, yet none of them
|
|
are entirely right or wrong.''
|
|
|
|
``Ah,'' I mused, ``but there lies the power of it all: for a thousand
|
|
men and women, there was something there to be found.''
|
|
|
|
``I have known the right truth to give a man wings, Catherine,''
|
|
Frederic Goethal quietly said. ``I do not deny the power of stories.''
|
|
|
|
``That is comforting to hear,'' I said. ``Now, if I spoke of
|
|
\emph{intercession} to you, would the word mean anything?''
|
|
|
|
The Grand Alliance was aware of the Wandering Bard, the enigmatic Named
|
|
that had not joined the Truce and Terms and could not be trusted -- I
|
|
would have had her known as a foe outright, but the Grey Pilgrim had
|
|
been bitterly opposed. Knowledge of the Intercessor, though, was more
|
|
sparse. I had shared much of what I knew with Cordelia Hasenbach, and in
|
|
turn she had shared the insights of the Augur, but I did not know how
|
|
broadly she had spread that knowledge. Considering Frederic Goethal was
|
|
both a prince of Procer and Named, though, he struck me as likelier to
|
|
be warned than most.
|
|
|
|
``It would,'' the man murmured. ``Agnes Hasenbach is a woman of deep and
|
|
painful wisdom, whose word I will not gainsay.''
|
|
|
|
``Knowing both these things,'' I said, ``do you understand how a ruler
|
|
who is Named might sometimes act according to rules that are not the
|
|
rules of Creation's shallows?''
|
|
|
|
I'd asked Vivienne about Prince Frederic Goethal, about his reputation
|
|
in Procer, before he became Named. He'd garnered some interest from me
|
|
since he was the only southern royal to have marched his armies north
|
|
instead of south. The report had mentioned some things that were
|
|
well-known, like the fact that he was wildly popular among Lycaonese as
|
|
well as northwestern Alamans and apparently considered to be among the
|
|
finest warriors and generals in Procer, as well as more discreet truths.
|
|
He was considered to be one of Cordelia's fiercest loyalists and had
|
|
once proposed to her, but within the Highest Assembly and Proceran
|
|
royalty at large he was considered rather indifferent to politics. He'd
|
|
survived this long dealing with cutthroat princes though, I thought, so
|
|
he wouldn't be slow on the uptake. In the highest reaches of Procer,
|
|
even standing still required a great deal of cunning.
|
|
|
|
``The kind of action,'' Prince Frederic slowly said, ``that an
|
|
unenlightened observer might consider\ldots{} harmful to one's position,
|
|
I imagine. Yet most sensible according to a different set of rules.''
|
|
|
|
Gods, but I did enjoy dealing with intelligent allies. It was always a
|
|
treat not to have to drag people to the right conclusion kicking and
|
|
screaming.
|
|
|
|
``I would not want a request for such an action,'' I said, ``to be taken
|
|
as having another, baser purpose.''
|
|
|
|
``I am not blind to the corpses you have left behind you, Queen
|
|
Catherine,'' the Prince of Brus softly said, ``or to fell deeds done by
|
|
your hands. But I also remember the stench on the fields of Aisne, and
|
|
that men had never needed Below or Tower to make butchery of themselves.
|
|
I also know that if it is the destruction of Procer that you sought, the
|
|
most required of you was not to do a thing at all. We are allies,
|
|
Catherine Foundling. If you need my help, I will do what I can.''
|
|
|
|
I looked at him steadily and tried not to let out that I was actually
|
|
rather impressed with the man. After a moment I cleared my throat.
|
|
|
|
``I'll be direct, then,'' I said. ``I need you to break out the Red Axe
|
|
from where she is currently being held, then protect her from what is
|
|
coming.''
|
|
|
|
``And what is it that is coming?'' the Kingfisher Prince asked, eyes
|
|
gone hard as steel.
|
|
|
|
``I cannot yet name it,'' I said, ``but I know this: were stand atop a
|
|
mound of sharpers, and the death of the Red Axe is how the match is
|
|
struck.''
|