585 lines
29 KiB
TeX
585 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-rogue}{%
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\section{Interlude: Rogue}\label{interlude-rogue}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``It takes two hands to clasp in peace, only one fist to strike in
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war.''}
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-- Taghreb saying
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\end{quote}
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Roland had not been forced to dig so deep into his reserves for years
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and had not missed the sensation it brought in the slightest: like
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sandpaper against his insides, his very soul rubbed raw and bloody by
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sore \textbf{Use}.
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The Rogue Sorcerer pointed the dragon oak wand at the latest fae to land
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on the railing, the artefact grown sluggish from being fired repeatedly,
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and swallowed a curse. Another piece of his collection, going up in
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smoke. The red-veined wand trembled, the last of the dragon blood the
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tree's roots had once drunk unleashing its nature in the form of a
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narrow, powerful ray of flame. The Lord of Plentiful Harvest, childlike
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face serene, winked mischievously at him right before the sorcerous
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flame tore right through yet another damned fake made of straw. The bait
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was gone in a wisp of fire a moment later, as Roland dropped the wand
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before the angry embers it burst into could savage his hand.
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If that one had been a fake, then the real Lord must be the tone trying
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to break through -- before the dark-haired man could finish his thought,
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another shape bearing the Lord's appearance unleashed a torrent of
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golden power against the web of crackling Light that Adanna had
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unleashed around the spire, preventing the fae from ignoring them and
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simply flying up. The fae's blow stretched the web back, but as Roland
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mustered a hard smile he already saw how it would end: the web stretched
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but held, and as if made of rubber it shot back the golden power at the
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flabbergasted fae that'd struck with it. The Blessed Artificer it had to
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be said, was abrupt at the best of time and often judgemental.
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She was also \emph{ridiculously brilliant}.
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``It is too soon to smile, mortal.''
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Roland did not bother to look behind him, where the voice of the
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Baroness of Red Hunt was coming from, instead immediately vaulting over
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the footbridge's railing. \emph{Beloved Gods}, he prayed even as a burst
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of some sort of power passed just above him and set every hair on his
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body affright, \emph{for the curse of brag you laid on these creatures,
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I give many thanks.} Hands already digging in his pocket, the
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dark-haired man fished out a small engraved copper ring and shoved it
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onto his finger. The old Arlesite artefact woke eagerly, itching to be
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used even after centuries, and Roland clenched his belly in
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anticipation. Though Pelagian artefacts tended to be remarkably
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long-lasting works, since they'd been made from an understanding of
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sorcery derived from the Gigantes they tended to also\ldots{}
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Stomach lurching as his momentum was forcefully reversed and instead of
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dropping down to the bottom of the Belfry, where going by the sound of
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it Catherine was having a merry old time slaughtering eldritch creatures
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older than the written word, he instead shot upwards. Roland swallowed a
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scream and an emerald-studded bronze bracelet on his left wrist, shaped
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like a snake -- which many in the Free Cities considered a symbol of
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healing and protection -- broke like a cheap bauble. Better the Stygian
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artefact than his spine and most his bones, as would have been the case
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without the harm-gathering bracelet's effect. Gigantes sorceries were
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effective but unfortunately they were also made for, well, Gigantes.
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Living titans who'd barely notice the kind of forces that would snap
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poor old Roland of Beaumarais like a twig. Ligurian sorcery, and its
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Pelagian offspring, as a rule did not usually bother with the protective
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measures for the caster common to any other family of the Talent.
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There was a reason the Jaquinites now held in sway in most of Procer.
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Sadly, though he was going up instead of down the Rogue Sorcerer was not
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unaware that he was still, to used the academic parlance, damned screwed
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if he did not act. There was only death to be found in the air, when
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fighting the Fair Folk. Reluctant as he was to call on such a precious
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resource, Roland reached for the small orb within himself that was the
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sorcery that'd once belonged to the Hateful Druidess. A mere sliver was
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unleashed, in the shape of a burst of wind erupting from his back with
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precise aim that allowed him to stumblingly land back on the footbridge
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between the sides of the Belfry and its central crystal spire. The
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Baroness of Red Hunt, though, had been quicker on the move than he.
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Already she was there, spear of bone raised and the stripes of red going
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down her face grown vivid. That could prove tricky, Roland noted.
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``Crouch,'' Adanna of Smyrna yelled.
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He did, without hesitation, but alas so did the Baroness. Yet the fine
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line of Light that shot over his head did not simply pass beyond the
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fae, instead stutteringly halting over the Baroness and then shooting
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abruptly down onto the fairy's back. Another penitence box, Roland
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realized even as from the point of impact a hundred small lines of Light
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spread out and covered every inch of the Baroness of Red Hunt in a
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shining webbing before locking down. How many of those had the Artificer
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actually brought? She had to be running out by now. Still, this would by
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him at least thirty heartbeats -- though the Light cut both ways,
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protecting as well as imprisoning -- before the penitence box broke and
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the Baroness was freed.
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Adanna herself was in a spot of trouble, Roland saw as he turned. The
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Blessed Artificer used Light much as an enchanter would used sorcery, at
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first glance, but the Rogue Sorcerer knew better. One of the weaknesses
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to the blessings of priests -- and Chosen -- was that they lacked
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staying power. An object could be made to lastingly have the properties
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of Light, like holy water or the famous armour of Callowan knights, but
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Light simply could not be used the way sorcery could be through wards
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and enchantments. Which meant that while Adanna, like him, relied
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heavily on artefacts the abilities of those artefacts were nearly always
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temporary in nature. When the Light ran out, so would they. No trouble,
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when comparing a wand using magic and one using Light.
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A great deal of trouble, however, when comparing the twenty three
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continuous layers of magical defence Roland currently had on his body
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compared to the single fading globe of Light that'd been all that
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separated the Blessed Artificer from the vicious blades and tricks of
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the Fair Folk. The shell vanished, and in the fading glow three
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silhouettes were revealed.
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Adanna of Smyrna, tall and proud in her loose white button-up shirt and
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black vest covered by a long apron in striped shades of grey, golden
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eyes cold behind her spectacles. In her right hand she held a dull sword
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of iron, roiling with Light, and in her left a phial of coloured glass
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glowing like a torch. To one side the Lord of Plentiful Harvest was
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perched on the railing, looking small and childlike in his sweeping
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cloak of straw but with golden power already gathering above him in the
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form of a blade. The other fae perched on the other side was an
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unpleasant surprise, however, for it meant a third lord of the Fair Folk
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had joined their struggle. Wearing green vines as cloth and quiver, the
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green-winged fae looked eerily calm as he shaped a long spear out of
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what looked like young green wood. For a heartbeat, stillness held
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between the three of them.
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Roland's hand went for the doubling of his enchanted coat, fingers
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closing around a small steel knife heavily inscribed with Mavii runes. A
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flick of the wrist spun it into the proper grip even as he went for one
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of his pockets and pressed his thumb on the correct rune for the pocket
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dimension to present him the handle of his second finest casting rod.
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The three-foot long rod felt warm against his palm, and even as he swung
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it forward in an arc began gathering blue flames.
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``Mabethe,'' the Rogue Sorcerer roared in the tongue of the Taghreb.
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\emph{Scatter}, it meant. An imperious incantation for an imperious
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people. Streaks of blue flame thundered down along the arc he'd traced,
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shaped like five great furrows, and the dance began anew. The
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green-winged fae struck with the swiftness of a viper, green spear
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darting forward, but the Blessed Artificer grit her teeth and shattered
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the vial of coloured glass in her grip.
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``Flee from the Light,'' she snarled.
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Bloody shards dripped down, but they revealed a blooming sun of many
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colours -- Roland was forced to close his eyes, lest he go blind, and
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even so the glare was burned into his pupils. The fae screamed, and when
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he found he was able to see again the Lord of Plentiful Harvest was
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seared and howling. The other, though, had merely retreated into the air
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past the railing. And was nocking an arrow, aiming at a still-blinking
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and seemingly unaware Adanna. Had she blinded herself with her own work?
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The Rogue Sorcerer broke into a run. His flames had been blown away by
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the great burst if many-coloured Light, but the ornate casting rod was
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still in his hand. Pulling at one of the dozens of spheres within him
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that had belonged to mages from the Army of Callow, the Rogue fed the
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sorcery through the casting rod and let the artefact shape it.
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Still at a run, he slashed the length of lapis-lazuli and gold at the
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winged bowman. A notch of blue flame was spat out, sizzling in the air
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as it flew towards the fae. The creature disdainfully flew back with a
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beat of wings, adjusting his aim with the bow as he did, but was visibly
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taken aback when the blue flames \emph{followed}. Adanna traced a streak
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of blood along the length of the dull iron sword she held, speaking soft
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words, and in the beat that followed Light bloomed once more: a great
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construct of it, shaped like a massive sword around the small one she
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held. The shine reflected against her spectacles, but the Blessed
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Artificer's hard grin was not to be mistaken for anything but feral as
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she turned towards the recovering Lord of Plentiful Harvest.
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Even as Roland closed the distance between himself and Adanna, the
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green-winged fae shot a greenwood arrow into the seeking blue flames
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with open irritation. There was a strange growth of the wood within the
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blaze, which to the Rogue's disappointment was enough for both fire and
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arrow to peter out. As it was one of his better bread-and-butter spells,
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it was disheartening to see it fail so easily. Still, he'd gotten there
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in time. Adanna carved through a fake fae made of straw, the railing
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beneath it and even a chunk of the footbridge while she was at it, but
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the sword of Light would not dissipate on a single blow. It would last
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for a few more moments, at least, which left the Rogue Sorcerer free
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too\ldots{} The arrow streaked forward, but fresh blue flames devoured
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it even as Roland leapt and his foot landed on the railing.
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The green-winged fae was just out of reach and retreating quicker than
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he could catch up, damnation. He'd been just a little too slow to leap,
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and now-
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``Sweet the sorrow, the heady rue
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That has my hand aching of you.''
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The Exalted Poet's voice sounded like the plucking of a harp, its
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sorcery filling the air. It sunk into the fae effortlessly, seizing him
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whole.
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``\emph{Thank you},'' the Rogue Sorcerer hollered without turning.
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The bowman fae had frozen in apparently transfixing sadness for just a
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few heartbeats, but it was enough for the Rogue Sorcerer to tackle him
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in the air. The fae's garments of green vines boiled angrily as the two
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of them dipped in the air and Roland pressed the casting rod against the
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side of the fairy's neck before pushing through blue flames.
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``Unwise,'' the fae calmly said.
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Well, that'd be nothing new. Even as vines grew wildly and tore the rod
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out of his grasp, putting themselves between the fire and fae, Roland
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smiled for he'd not been holding on to the casting tool. His hand on the
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fairy's shoulder, ignoring the pain of biting vines that broke through
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the Praesi shielding tool he'd obtained at great cost, the Rogue
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Sorcerer rammed his steel knife into his enemy's back. A beat passed.
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``Mine,'' Roland confessed, ``is a most greedy Name.''
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His lot was take and keep and use, though he would never become what he
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had risen to correct. The Rogue Sorcerer would take only from those
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deserving: those who misused their talents, the gifts the Gods had given
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them. And there was another word, for such a thing, one that had become
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part of who Roland of Beaumarais was: \textbf{Confiscate}, his soul
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whispered, and Creation whispered with it. Like a hungry leech, his
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aspect sunk its hooks into the power at the heart of the fae. Ah, a
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Count of Autumn were we? The Count Green Apples, for that was his name,
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struggled and trashed impotently as his very nature was exsanguinated.
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The Rogue Sorcerer might die or go mad, if he took too much of the power
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within him -- especially a power so utterly alien as that of the fae --
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but then that was why he'd brought the knife.
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The runes shone, and blood both human and fae mingled as a the greater
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part of the power of the Count of Green Apples passed into the steel
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knife.
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``What are you?'' the Count gasped.
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The wings faded, swallowed whole. The pair began to fall, still
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intertwined.
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``The sole charlatan among a parade of demigods,'' Roland told the
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noble. ``Smoke and mirrors, my good count. Or rather smoke, mirrors and
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a \emph{knife}.''
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Ripping the runic blade free, the Rogue Sorcerer kicked off from the fae
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and then kicked him again in the face so the creature would drop his
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leg. He still had a hand free, and a small window as they both fell, but
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there was no artefact that would \emph{quite} do the trick. Gritting his
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teeth, Roland shaved another sliver off the Hateful Druidess' power and
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wove a quick wind that tossed the powerless Count of Green Apples into
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the first story of the Belfry over the railing, to impact with great
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fracas against a writing desk. The ground was swiftly hurrying towards
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Roland, and there seemed to be an unfortunate amount of fire down there,
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so he promptly began to \textbf{Use} the knife that'd drank so deep of
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the fae noble. His coat and clothes suddenly shivered, and the hand
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holding the knife was seized by massive pressure as he tried to coax out
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power from within.
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A set of three enchanted black pearls on a string of dried seaweed, an
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Ashuran acquisition, immediately blew up as the power that tried to
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force metamorphosis onto his hand was kept from succeeding -- the
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dark-haired man still cursed profusely as the many tiny shards drove
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through the skin of his ankle. The Rogue Sorcerer succeeded at making
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green wings bloom from his back, focusing through the pain, and
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immediately stopped drawing from the contents of the knife. The pressure
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faded. The knife he kept in hand, as a tool for control, flying
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crookedly back up to the footbridge on fae wings. For lack of knowing
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how to land, Roland instead positioned himself above the bridge and
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ceased using the knife. The wings shattered and he dropped, landing on
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his feet. Yet it felt like he'd forgotten something, the Rogue Sorcerer
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mused as he rose to his full height. It came to him a heartbeat later.
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``\emph{Mautedit},'' Roland swore. ``My casting rod.''
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It would have dropped all the way down and the odds it'd broken in the
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fall weren't low. Still, even if it'd shattered into a few pieces it
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could likely be repaired by Hierophant or the Blind Maker.
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A heartbeat later Night billowed out at the bottom of the Belfry like a
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massive sea of power unleashed, lapping at the walls and the base of the
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spire. Roland let out a whimper. How was it that every time he fought at
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Catherine's side, he ended up losing a priceless and irreplaceable
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artefact? That casting rod had been crafted in Thalassina, which didn't
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even \emph{exist} anymore. Gods, if she'd burned down a slice of the
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Belfry's library while she tangled with the fae they were going to need
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to have words. Cross words, even. It would have to wait, however, as now
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it seemed like the tide might be turning against the fae. The Baroness
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of Red Hunt had been freed of her prison of Light and come to reinforce
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the Lord of Plentiful Harvest -- who was now missing an arm, and
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sporting a furious sneer -- but now that the Exalted Poet had come, the
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Chosen finally had numbers on their side.
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Odd, Roland thought, that Catherine would have sent up one of the Named
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with her but not the other. The Fallen Monk would no more be able to
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withstand existing in the general vicinity of the Black Queen taking a
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fight seriously than the Exalted Poet would have, which was why he'd
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assumed reinforcements had been sent at all. Both fae turned, watching
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him like hawks as the last wisps of his stolen wings dissipated. Yet
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they were not striking, and neither was the pair of Chosen facing them.
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``Unmake your web, witch,'' the Baroness of Red Hunt said.
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Adanna, in her own way a delight, took a moment to realize she was the
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one being addressed and not the Exalted Poet.
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``I think not,'' the Blessed Artificer stiffly said. ``I offer you this
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instead: surrender now and your deaths will be swift.''
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Roland would need to have a conversation with her about how the Grand
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Alliance did not, in fact, endorse the execution captives but he was
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willing to chalk that one up to a lack of practice in heroic banter. The
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Artificer was not young to her Name -- she'd had it for a few years --
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but she had been\ldots{} sheltered. Treasured for her intellect and
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miraculous abilities by the Thalassocracy, she'd been privileged and
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protected to the extent that she had faced neither a villain nor a
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disaster before coming to join the Tenth Crusade. No wonder her first
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taste of war at the Red Flower Vales had seen her shy from the
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frontlines and embrace the concept of the Arsenal wholeheartedly.
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``You need not bleed for this,'' the Lord of Plentiful Harvest told
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them, voice warm and reassuring. ``We seek no death, only to prevent a
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great danger that threatens us all.''
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The hateful sneer from earlier was gone from the childlike face, but
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some ugly glint of it still lingered in the fairy's eyes. Roland trusted
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not these creatures, and his fingers began inching towards another
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artefact from his trove. The polished orb of quartz he'd picked up in
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Dormer, imbued with three Callowan war-spells, was slippery against his
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sweaty palm but Roland cupped it against the side of his pocket and
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managed to seize it without giving away the game.
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``Your fellows downstairs were not so eager to treat with us,'' the
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Exalted Poet said. ``This is petty trickery: Splendid are the eldest
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children of deception.''
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``Your lives were not bargained for,'' the Baroness of Red Hunt said.
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``They will only be lost if you persist in this fool's errand. \emph{Let
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us through}, lest we all pay for the madness of a single man.''
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``Whether or not your intentions are laudable no longer matters,'' the
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Rogue Sorcerer said, fingers tightening around the orb. ``You have
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attacked the Arsenal, and in so doing become a tool of Keter and Gods
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knows who else. For that, there is only one end awaiting you.''
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``The thief speaks at last,'' the Lord of Plentiful Harvest jeered.
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``You'll have no more of us, usurper. Your words are wind, and in the
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end what you stole will take from you.''
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``What splendid diplomats you make,'' the Rogue Sorcerer drily replied,
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fully intending the second meaning. ``Begone, creatures.''
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Will taking hold of one of the sorceries within the orb, Roland let it
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loose with a thought. He cut the side of his hand at the antlered
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baroness, a long streak of chittering lightning lashing out forward.
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Wessen's Fork, as it was called, had been the invention of an ancient
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Wizard of the West of that name. It was a clever piece of work, a bolt
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of lightning that -- ah, and there it was. The Baroness of Red Hunt
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threw her spear of bone at the sorcery, but instead of being shattered
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by the greater power the spell split into two streaks of lightning both
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still headed towards the fae. A heartbeat later Adanna tossed up a disk
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of clay covered in High Tyrian writing, which began to spin and shot out
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a long blade of Light. The two fairies elected to retreat, pushing off
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the railings and dropping below.
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The spear of bone fell into dust and vanished, but Roland wouldn't fall
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for that trick twice: the Baroness would have the thing in hand when she
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next reappeared.
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``They are not attacking anew,'' the Blessed Artificer noted. ``Perhaps
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they are retreating.''
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``That would be a stroke of luck,'' Roland said, implicitly disagreeing.
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``Poet, how fares the fight below?''
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``The Black Queen triumphs,'' the other man shrugged. ``And requires not
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the assistance of my verses in her struggles.''
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``But the Fallen Monk's fists suit her better?'' Adanna said. ``One
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cannot account for taste, I suppose.''
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Roland kept his eyes on the Poet as the Artificer talked, looking for a
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reaction. He found only indifference there, as if the matter did not
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truly concern him. Roland knew little of the Monk, save what Archer had
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mentioned in passing. The man had talents useful against those who used
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Light, and a knack for stepping lightly. As befitting, the Rogue
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Sorcerer supposed, of a villain who'd been able to very publicly murder
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several of the Holies and then escape Laurence de Montfort's pursuit.
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The dark-haired man went through his pocket, finding a slender wand of
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ebony. It was petty work but its sole enchantment, one that spewed out a
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fist-sized blow of kinetic force, tended to be useful in all sorts of
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situations. Roland twirled it absently around his fingers, feeling the
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sorcery within lapping eagerly at his skin.
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``Your aid here is welcome,'' Roland agreeably said. ``For when they
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will return.''
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``If they return,'' the Blessed Artificer insisted.
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``I expect they will, my lady,'' the Exalted Poet said. ``Yet I have
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something of my own prepared that might wound them, a fresh work
|
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inspired by what I glimpsed below.''
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The Rogue Sorcerer joined up with the other two, shoulder brushing past
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the Poet's as he kept half an eye on the empty space around them. But
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only half, for he had not forgotten this band's true purpose.
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``I look forward to witnessing it,'' the Blessed Artificer said.
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``I will endeavour not to disappoint,'' the Poet laughed. ``Yet it might
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be a verse of some potency. Do either of you have any defences I should
|
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beware of hurting?''
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``Yes,'' the Blessed Artificer noted. ``My web is maintained by a-''
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``\emph{Stop},'' Roland ordered, eyes on the Poet. ``Leave it at that,
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Adanna.''
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There lay hidden beautiful diamond spinning top that formed the web of
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Light blocking the fae from going upwards would keep feeding it so long
|
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as the top kept spinning and there was Light within it. It'd been
|
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covered by illusion of his own -- more accurately, of a travelling
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illusionist with some truly unpleasant habits Roland had briefly
|
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encountered -- and had been stashed away in a nook within the spire to
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their side, where it should be beyond harm for now.
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``If he does not know, he cannot avoid disrupting it,'' the Blessed
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Artificer lectured him.
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``I do not know what I have done to earn your mistrust, Lord Sorcerer,
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but I can only apologize for it,'' the Exalted Poet told him, though he
|
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sounded at tad aggrieved.
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``Why aren't the fae attacking, Poet?'' Roland asked.
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``Who can know the minds of the Splendid?'' the Poet replied. ``Perhaps
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they are waiting for us to be distracted, or even striking at the Black
|
|
Queen's back.''
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|
\emph{Then why can't I hear any noise coming from downstairs?} the Rogue
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Sorcerer thought. Not a single noise at all, not since there'd been that
|
|
massive wave of Night.
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|
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|
``What did Queen Catherine say when she sent you up and not the Monk?''
|
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Roland asked.
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|
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|
``She simply ordered us so, and we obeyed,'' the man laughed. ``Who
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|
dares argue with a such a woman?''
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|
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|
That laugh had come just a little too quickly, the Rogue Sorcerer
|
|
decided. And Catherine was commanding, true, but in no way above
|
|
explaining her reasonings when asked. If anything Roland had noticed she
|
|
tended to think better of the people who \emph{did} ask, if the
|
|
situation allowed for it and the tone was not confrontational.
|
|
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|
``Of course,'' Roland said, smile tugging at his lips. ``I would have
|
|
done the same.''
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|
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|
His fingers tightened against the ebony wand. He could not prove it, but
|
|
his instincts were screaming. Theirs was a band of possible traitors,
|
|
Catherine had made clear to him, and Roland fancied he'd just sniffed
|
|
one of them out. It was the silence below that worried him. The Black
|
|
Queen at war was many things, but \emph{quiet} was not usually one of
|
|
them.
|
|
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|
``It has been a long day,'' the Rogue Sorcerer apologized. ``The web is
|
|
maintained by an artefact I hid under illusion, Poet, I'll allow you to
|
|
glimpse through it.''
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|
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|
He gestured, calling on one of the spheres within him, and crafted an
|
|
illusion of a little box of glittering gold in the middle of the
|
|
footbridge. One only the Levantine should be able to see. The Exalted
|
|
Poet's eyes flicked to it, which was when Roland casually pressed the
|
|
tip of his wand against the man's throat.
|
|
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|
``Don't move,'' the Rogue Sorcerer mildly said.
|
|
|
|
``This is becoming absurd, Lord Sorcerer,'' the Poet protested.
|
|
|
|
``Roland, put that wand down,'' the Blessed Artificer ordered. ``Your
|
|
suspicions are getting out of hand.''
|
|
|
|
``I do not understand what is moving you to violence,'' the Exalted Poet
|
|
told him. ``And the fae could return at any moment.''
|
|
|
|
``The Count of Green Apples that nearly killed the Artificer,'' the
|
|
dark-haired man said, ``did you get sent before or after he flew up?''
|
|
|
|
Roland was not unfamiliar with clever sorts, women with glib tongues or
|
|
witty men with laughing eyes. Liars of one shade or another, especially
|
|
Named, were used to being able to talk themselves out of anything. That
|
|
could be used. And in this particular case, the burly Levantine might
|
|
have the frame of a warrior but as far as the Rogue Sorcerer knew he
|
|
only had sparse fighting experience under his belt. That was a weakness
|
|
in knowledge, paired with a proficiency and tendency at lying.
|
|
|
|
``After, naturally,'' the Exalted Poet said. ``I assumed I was sent as
|
|
reinforcements.''
|
|
|
|
Except that Catherine would have known that the Count would get here
|
|
long before anybody sent up by the stairs, considering the wings, so
|
|
that decision made no tactical sense. It would have been better for her
|
|
to drag back down the Count of Green Apples with Night while her two
|
|
helpers kept the other fae at bay long enough for her to pull it off.
|
|
|
|
Without hesitation, Roland fired the wand right into the man's throat.
|
|
|
|
The Exalted Poet blew over the railing, toppling down with a surprised
|
|
scream.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Roland},'' the Blessed Artificer screamed.
|
|
|
|
He turned to find she had pointed a short stave of charred wood at him,
|
|
eyes gone grave behind her spectacles.
|
|
|
|
``Two out of three are traitors,'' the Rogue Sorcerer noted, for the
|
|
Poet had covered for the Monk with his words and the conclusion to be
|
|
had was obvious. ``I wonder, will it be three?''
|
|
|
|
``You're the one who just threw an ally to his death, you madman,''
|
|
Adanna retorted. ``Put down the wand, Roland.''
|
|
|
|
``If you are, your game is deep enough I can hardly glimpse it,'' Roland
|
|
admitted. ``But I will not surrender my wand, Artificer.''
|
|
|
|
He would not disarm himself when the enemy was not about to return.
|
|
She'd understand soon enough, anyway.
|
|
|
|
``You leave me no choice, then,'' she grimly replied.
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat later a spear of bone pierced up from under the footbridge,
|
|
tearing through where Roland had woven the illusion of a golden box. The
|
|
bait had been taken. The Baroness of Red Hunt burst through in a storm
|
|
of rubble, red wings bright as Adanna's face fell.
|
|
|
|
``You laid a trap,'' the Blessed Artificer said, catching his eyes.
|
|
|
|
``Nothing,'' the fae shouted. ``It was \emph{nothing}, you useless
|
|
worm.''
|
|
|
|
``That would have been it for the web,'' Roland replied, ignoring the
|
|
creature.
|
|
|
|
The end of the footbridge opposite the spire shivered as a glamour went
|
|
down, revealing the Exalted Poet -- throat visibly bruised -- and the
|
|
Lord of Plentiful Harvest at his side.
|
|
|
|
``It does not have to be this way,'' the Poet rasped. ``They are right,
|
|
Artificer, you already know it. You were shown the truth, weren't you?
|
|
They play with powers beyond their understanding, and they will doom all
|
|
the world.''
|
|
|
|
``Traitor,'' the Blessed Artificer replied in an indignant hiss. ``I
|
|
stand with Above, now and always.''
|
|
|
|
A moment of tense silence passed.
|
|
|
|
``Her wonders will break if she dies, most likely,'' the Exalted Poet
|
|
said, tone reluctant.
|
|
|
|
The fae looked unamused, both of them.
|
|
|
|
``A pinnacle of uselessness,'' the Lord of Plentiful Harvest sighed,
|
|
face displaying a childish moue. ``We knew this already.''
|
|
|
|
``Wrong,'' the Blessed Artificer said. ``You know nothing and less.''
|
|
|
|
``I know this, child: the Black Queen is dead,'' the Baroness told them.
|
|
``Take down your web now, if you do not wish to follow her in this.''
|
|
|
|
Roland's fists clenched. They could not lie \emph{knowingly}, he
|
|
reminded himself. Which still meant there would be no reinforcements. It
|
|
would be a hard fight, even with the fae lord crippled and the Poet's
|
|
throat hurt.
|
|
|
|
``I'll take the Lord of Plentiful Harvest and another,'' the Rogue
|
|
Sorcerer mused. ``Do you want the Poet or the Baroness?''
|
|
|
|
A wreath of blinding Light came to life around the charred stave in the
|
|
Blessed Artificer's hand, crackling like lightning and growing into a
|
|
great spear.
|
|
|
|
``I'll take both,'' Adanna of Smyrna snarled.
|
|
|
|
Well, who was he to argue with a lady?
|