640 lines
29 KiB
TeX
640 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{interlude-archer}{%
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\section{Interlude: Archer}\label{interlude-archer}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The kindest mirror is an old friend, the cruellest an old
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foe.''}
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-- Callowan proverb
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\end{quote}
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The smell was, impossibly, just the same as Archer remembered.
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That sweet, high odour that came from too many different herbs being
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hung to dry for even a Named nose to be able to tell them apart. Deeper
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in, Indrani knew, the lingering potion fumes would add a lingering tang
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of sourness: it'd been near impossible to get rid of that even out in
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Refuge, where there was nothing but open air around the Concocter's
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workshop, and a room of stone would fare no better. Gods, it was like
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she'd never left Refuge. It felt like any moment now Alexis might turn
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the corner, covered in twigs and dirt, eyes looking for the fight her
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mouth wouldn't admit she was picking. Like John was just out of her
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sight, with those \emph{stupid} bells and the tasteless tattoos he'd be
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so damned proud of, like Lysander would be getting a fire going for the
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fresh stag he'd caught with the latest beast he'd brought to heel. But
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there was no time for reminiscence, for memories fond and not. The smell
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had only come when the door was yanked open and the Concocter's dour
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face was revealed.
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``Archer,'' the other woman said, general dourness turning into a proper
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frown. ``What do you want?''
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``That any way to talk to an old friend, Cocky?'' Indrani smiled, all
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nice and toothy.
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She hated being called that, always had, but then she'd refused to give
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out so much as a fake name to any of them. Even the Lady, who'd been
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amused enough at the novelty of being refused something she'd never
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pursued the matter. As children the other pupils had made a game of
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picking the Concocter a name and half a hundred must have been thrown
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around, few of them clever and all of them mean. She'd invited it, in
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much everyone else's opinion: Cocky's disposition was what a poet might
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call just fucking awful.
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``Funny,'' the Concocter thinly smiled, even as her purple eyes
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narrowed. ``Stop wasting my time. What do you want, Archer?''
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It was amusing to see the eyes were purple now. When Indrani had left
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Refuge they'd been bright yellow, and last time she'd been at the
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Arsenal they'd been an unnatural shade of green. The hair was still
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black -- had been for a few years, though the more sober colours these
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days would never make up for that memorable month when they'd been
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thirteen and Cocky had thought she could pull off platinum blonde -- but
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it was now straight instead of curly, and long enough to be pulled into
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a thick topknot behind her head. The colour of her skin she'd never
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tinkered with, a pleasant southern tan that could be from anywhere south
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of the Waning Woods, but where other women might paint rouge over their
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lips Cocky had simply turned her own the same shade of purple as her
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eyes. It was one of her more striking appearances, Indrani admitted, if
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far from one of her wildest.
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``I'm here on behalf of the Black Queen,'' Archer replied. ``You fucked
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up, Cocky, and you were even sloppy enough to leave a trail. So now I've
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got questions and you've got answers.''
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Indrani let her smile harden a bit.
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``It's up to you how polite my getting those is going to be,'' Archer
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said.
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``She's no queen of mine,'' Cocky said, rolling her eyes. ``My terms
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were reached with the Grand Alliance. If you want to ask me questions,
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come back tomorrow after making an --''
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Indrani kept it measured: a light jab in the throat had her choking, but
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it wouldn't do lasting harm. The Concocter stumbled backwards and Archer
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elbowed the door aside, her old acquaintance tripping all over her grey
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robes as she tried to retreat. Wasn't this familiar too? Indrani felt a
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surge of grim amusement pass through her. When she'd been young and
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fresh off bondage, fresh into the Lady's care, she'd once done something
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much like this. Only instead she'd beaten the Concocter for the purpose
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of ransacking her stores of anything Indrani might fancy without any
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need to do something like \emph{trading}.
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Cocky had taken it when it happened, she didn't have much of a choice,
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but then that same night Beastmaster and the Silver Huntress had jumped
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Indrani in her cot and savagely beaten her within an inch of her life
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before returning the goods to the Concocter. They'd got paid with
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manticore bait and sedative for Lysander and a full set of tailored
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physical supplement potions for Alexis, both of which were near
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impossible to get from anyone else.
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The Lady had said not a word, no more than she had done when Indrani
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robbed the Concocter. The Ranger did not play favourites.
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``You've got ties with smugglers,'' Indrani said. ``We've got proof, so
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you have not a damned thing to hide behind.''
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Cocky, one hand clutching her throat, backpedalled deeper into her
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rooms. Where Masego's were the amalgam of a workshop, library and
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bedchamber as conceived of by somehow who genuinely saw little
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difference between the three, these were openly a potioneer's brewing
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room with a small nook to sleep in. Between the seven cauldrons, the
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several cabinets of ingredients and the lines crisscrossing the room
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with herbs hung on to dry, it was a miracle a writing desk could fit in
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there, much less the silk panes delimiting the space where Cocky's bed
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and clothes trunk had been stashed. It was all real candles in here, as
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magelight might disrupt more delicate brewing, but enough strange
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humours had seeped into the wax and wick that half the flames seemed to
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burn in blue or green. Those flickering lights played against the
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Concocter's face as she tried to reach for a vial of green liquid in a
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rack, though she froze before she withdrew it.
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Indrani's knife at her throat had seen to that.
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``None of that, now,'' Archer said. ``I told Cat I could get answers out
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of you alive, I'll look like a real tart if we have to call up your
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shade instead.''
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She paused, meeting purple eyes.
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``But the more you try your hand at this the more I'm feeling tartish,
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get me?''
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Cocky scoffed.
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``You haven't asked a thing,'' she said. ``You're just looking to hurt
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something, as usual.''
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``Tell me about your smuggling friends,'' Indrani said, taking back the
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blade.
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``Did you think just because you shoved a few hundred people in a box
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they'd stop wanting things?'' the Concocter snorted. ``A few flake
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addicts from the guards were already looking to get their fix in
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quietly, a few strings were pulled and it got broader and organized. If
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your mistress had any sense, she'd look away and let it go. No one can
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live off only what's brought in on inspected supply wagons.''
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The thing was, Indrani tended to agree. Flake was pretty gentle, as far
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as alchemical drugs went, and the infamous side-effect of your skin
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flaking off in chunks when scratched only happened if you'd been taking
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it regularly for years. Otherwise it was just euphoria in a bottle,
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which might go a long way towards making daily patrols in this boring
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grey hell liveable. It was inevitable that people in the Arsenal would
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want, once in a while, to partake of a little something without it first
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coming across the desk of the likes of the \emph{First Prince of Procer}
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in a list. It was healthy, even. Keeping your head down all your life,
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toeing the line to the letter, it killed something in your soul. On the
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other hand, she could see where Cat was coming from too: people were
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smuggling things into the dimensional fortress where all the god-killing
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weapons and the nasty frontline tricks were being made, and that meant
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\emph{risks}.
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The kind that you just didn't take when it came to Ol' Bones, unless you
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wanted a city or two to die screaming.
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``And when did you get involved with them?'' Archer asked.
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``Well, Indrani, haven't you become just the most devoted hunting hound
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I ever did see,'' Cocky sneered ``How does that work, anyway? Throw the
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Archer a fuck, she brings back a few corpses? I suppose even she can't
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stomach you for long, if she has to pass you off to the H-''
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The Concocter went still as the tip of the longknife hovered a mere
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hair's breadth away from the surface of her left eye, afraid to even
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blink. Anger was good, anger was warmth in the blood and something like
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satisfaction when you finally butchered the thing that'd made it burn in
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you. But anger wasn't going to get her those answers, so Archer made an
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effort to master it. It wasn't true, she knew that, and it wasn't like
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some words from a woman long a stranger would make her doubt it. But to
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have someone speak in such a vile way of ties that were so important to
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her almost felt like a sort of defilement.
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``You don't really need two of those to keep brewing,'' Indrani said.
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``And you don't need either of them to answer my questions. I wouldn't
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forget that if I were you, Cocky. I certainly haven't.''
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``You wouldn't,'' the Concocter said.
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Indrani smiled at her, the knife's tip still as the grave.
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``You know me better than that,'' Archer simply said. ``If I have to
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repeat my question, I'll be taking something as recompense.''
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``Maybe a year ago,'' Cocky said. ``I needed some ingredients that'd get
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me unwanted attention, they needed the kind of clout that comes from
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having a Named in your corner. We scratched each other's back, that was
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it.''
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It would have had to be something truly unpleasant, Indrani knew, for
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the Concocter to not have wanted to put it to ink in requisition form.
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There were very few lines the Grand Alliance was not willing to cross,
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these days. The desire to survive had lowered the standards of what
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people were willing to suffer to exist, or even enable. But Archer was
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not here for Cocky's old tricks, she had greater prey to hunt.
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``You introduced the Wicked Enchanter to them,'' Indrani said. ``Why?''
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Catherine didn't know Cocky the way Archer did, didn't understand that
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for a stranger there really weren't a lot of levers that could be used
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to move a woman like that. So Cat figured that the Bard had found an
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ally here, but Indrani didn't. The Lady had raised all of them to know
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better than to make a deal with any entity you didn't know how to kill.
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``Because he seemed like a man who'd use the service,'' Cocky said,
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rolling her eyes. ``And he might have become useful when-''
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The longknife flicked down, finely slicing through skin from below the
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eye to the bottom of the Concocter's cheek. Blood began to bead before
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the point had returned to hover above the eye, and the other Named
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swallowed a moan of pain.
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``Lie to me again and it'll be the eye,'' Archer coldly said. ``We
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called up his shade, Cocky, and we dug into things. We know a lot more
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than you think.''
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``Fine, it was a favour called in,'' the Concocter hissed out.
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``Happy?''
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Indrani's face tightened in dismay. Had she really struck a deal with
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the Bard? Gods, one of the Lady's own? They'd been taught better than
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that, than to let themselves be made pawns and pieces in the Game of the
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Gods.
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``Whose favour?''
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``You know who,'' Cocky said. ``The woman holding your leash might
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despise her, but half the heroes have a fond word to say.''
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``The Wandering Bard,'' Indrani quietly said.
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``I heard the Peregrine has her back,'' the Concocter smiled. ``I expect
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he'll speak for me as well, if you try to press this too far. Did you
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think you were the only one who could make friends in high places?''
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Archer's fingers tightened around the hilt of the longknife.
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``You have no idea who you bargained with,'' she tightly said. ``Burning
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Hells, Cocky, what made you think you could bargain with a creature like
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that and end up ahead? We were both taught --''
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The Concocter let out a burst of laughter, and Indrani had to pull back
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the blade or she would have pierced her eye.
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``Oh, Ashen Gods,'' Cocky said. ``Years out of Refuge, even after taking
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up with another band of villains, you still clutch to your blanket like
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a child. That blade you point so proudly at me, it's from the set she
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gave you isn't it? And that scarf, taken from the man who owned you
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while she looked on with \emph{motherly fondness}.''
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``We all hid beneath her wing, before we could fly on our own,'' Indrani
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said. ``There is no shame to be had there.''
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``There's always shame in being a fool,'' the Concocter said. ``She
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wasn't your mother, Indrani. She wasn't any of our mothers, and she was
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barely even our teacher. She never gave a damn, even about you, and well
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all knew you were the favourite. The way you'll shatter like cheap glass
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if you admit that is honestly the most pathetic thing about you.''
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The urge was there to slice her again. Archer had sliced people for
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less, and she was being provoked her beyond what anyone could expect her
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to suffer without steel being bared. But Indrani had not come here to
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spill blood, she had come here for answers. And if she could not master
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herself long enough for get what she'd come from, if red heat and pride
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was all that she could bring forth, then she truly would be pathetic.
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Just a thug, fit for thug's work and nothing else. And the truth was
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that while there might have been a time where that would have been
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enough, when taking and bearing the consequences and doing it again and
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again and again until she died would have satisfied her, it no longer
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was. She had a hearth now, a warm place by it, and sometimes that meant
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bending the neck for a bit. A thirteen the thought of this would have
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disgusted her to the bone, but she was older now. She had learned what
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the world was like, when you were alone.
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Indrani had come to understand why it was the world had fewer wolves
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than dogs.
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``Gasses were used on the librarians in the Miscellaneous Stacks,''
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Archer said. ``They were rendered unconscious but not killed. Your work
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as well?''
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Cocky was, for the first time, visibly taken aback.
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``I, but -- I didn't use those,'' the Concocter said. ``They were a
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private commission from the Highest Assembly and the First Prince, a way
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to quell riots without deaths. But I only made a single batch, and it
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should be in the Repository awaiting shipment. I haven't \emph{attacked}
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anyone, Archer.''
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She wasn't lying, Indrani decided. Not because of any particular
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fondness for the Concocter, but because she very much doubted that Cocky
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had dragged the potions and set them off in the Stacks. She wouldn't
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have the know-how for something that complex, much less the sneaking
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skills. Which meant there was at least one other traitor out there,
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acting knowingly on behalf of the Bard. And it'd been a traitor who'd
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known about a private commission being kept in the Repository, so most
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likely someone who worked in the Workshop and would have known about
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Cocky brewing something meant to ship out.
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``I believe you,'' Archer admitted. ``And will speak to that, along with
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the rest.''
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Something like surprise, and perhaps even gratitude, flickered across
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Cocky's face. Indrani, without wasting a moment, flipped her grip and
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struck her right in the fucking face with her longknife's handle. The
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Concocter's nose broke with a beautiful crunch, cartilage smashed and
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blood spraying. Archer's loosened her grip, after, and flicked her wrist
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as if she was shaking her knuckles.
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``Consider that a reminder,'' Indrani said, ``of lessons you should not
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have forgot.''
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And with that their business was done, she mused. If there was need for
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the location of the Repository crates raided for the gas receptacles,
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someone could be sent for ask. Besides, it was quite possible that the
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Concocter herself did not know. The other woman had reeled back from the
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blow, shouting in pain and holding her broken nose, but after her
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fingers came away red she turned to Indrani with cold eyes. Cocky
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smiled, that one nasty little number she only pulled out when she had
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something cutting to spit out in someone's ear.
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``And there she is,'' the purple-eyed woman said. ``Our old
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\emph{friend} Indrani, bare of the pretences. It's a relief to see you
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acting without those airs you've been putting on. Still looking to just
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make someone bleed and then hiding behind another's cloak when
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consequences come.''
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That stung, more than it should have after the years that'd passed since
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she left Refuge.
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``I'm not the one who's hiding behind the Terms,'' Indrani replied. ``Or
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you'd be bleeding from a lot deeper in for some of the things you've
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said tonight, Cocky.''
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``Whatever happened to rules only mattering to other people, Archer?''
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the Concocter slyly said. ``I thought you were going to be freed,
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unfettered. Nothing but you and the horizon, right?''
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``Which of us is supposed to be clutching the Lady like a blanket
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again?'' Indrani jeered. ``Did it wound your precious little pride when
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she left, Cocky? Did it bite to realize that even with all your little
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potions and secrets in the end you just weren't that \emph{special}?''
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``Even now you're licking her boots,'' the Concocter said, tone
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disgusted.
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``I always knew what she was,'' Indrani replied. ``Who she was. She told
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us from the start. It's your own delusions that scraped you raw.''
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``Knew what she was?'' Cocky shouted. ``You sanctimonious bitch, you
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signed up with the first outfit that took you in. We stayed, Indrani, we
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stayed and she \emph{left}. All these years with her, for her, and
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almost without a word she just left. Because we were pets to her,
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Archer, not people. And when you find something more interesting to do,
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pets get left behind.''
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``Whining,'' Indrani replied, contemptuous. ``The pathetic whining of
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someone who was unwilling to stand on their feet and find their way
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outside the shelter of the Lady's shadow. You were given years as a
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pupil, teachings half the continent would lose a hand for, and now you
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complain because she was not willing to hold your hand until you
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breathed your last.''
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The Concocter snorted.
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``Look at you, talking proudly like you didn't just trade one mistress
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for another,'' she mocked. ``You think it makes you someone, that some
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girl with a crown found you fit to kill for her? You're still fetching
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errands for one of your betters, now you just have some fancy seal
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behind you instead of Ranger's reputation.''
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There was anger there, Indrani found, but any fool could have found
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that. The old hate was familiar too, in its own way, but it was the
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unfamiliar glint that caught Archer by surprise. Envy. And just like
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that, it fell into place.
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``It burns you, doesn't it?'' Archer said. ``That I'm actually
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\emph{happy} now.''
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The Concocter hadn't even flinched this hard when she'd broken the
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woman's nose.
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``I wonder if they'd look at you the same, your Woe, if I told them what
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you're really like,'' Cocky said.
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``They know,'' Indrani replied. ``They've known from the start, and they
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love me anyway. That's the part that really burns you, isn't it?''
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``You were \emph{vile} to us,'' the Concocter snarled. ``To everyone,
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any time you could get away with it. You taunted and bruised and bled us
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for sport, and now you're the Black Queen's enforcer?''
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``We were all like that, Cocky,'' Indrani said. ``And I don't miss it,
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but the lessons of those days kept me alive through worse ones.''
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``I still remember that night you forced Alexis into that sack full of
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beetles and tied it up,'' the purple-eyed villainess said. ``Gods, the
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way she screamed. And the Lady just said-''
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``That's one way to cure a fear,'' Indrani softly finished.
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Casually, she'd said it. Almost amused. There'd been a time where Archer
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had admired that, thought that callousness was something to be
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cultivated instead of exactly what it claimed to be: callouses.
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Roughness born of use, the easiest thing in the world to accrue.
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``No wonder she still wants to kill you,'' Cocky said. ``One look at you
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with your Hierophant and your little queen and she will draw a fucking
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blade, Archer.''
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If she bent her neck now, Indrani thought, there might yet be something
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to repair here. Because they'd all hated each other at times, the
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Concocter was right about that, but it'd also been more complicated than
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that. Because it'd been them and then everyone else, and that wasn't a
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place you could live in for years without loving the people you shared
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it with. There had been warm lights shared along with the dark places.
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But Indrani would have to apologize. To express regret. To \emph{lie}.
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Because the truth of it was that Archer didn't particularly regret who
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she'd been at thirteen. She'd make no excuses for that girl either, but
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Indrani could look that past in the eye without feeling all that
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ashamed.
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Sometimes she figured that Catherine believed her to be, when they
|
|
talked of Refuge. But Hells, Cat had always taken them as better people
|
|
than they were. Sometimes Indrani felt a little bit of shame over that,
|
|
not being the better person her friend thought she was, but those claws
|
|
never dug deep. Mostly because Archer actually liked who she was, for
|
|
the most part. She was comfortable with it, she'd \emph{grown}
|
|
comfortable with it. And that meant if the things she cared about
|
|
changed in ways she might never have imaged they would when she'd been a
|
|
girl, it didn't trouble her. Indrani believed in doing what she wanted,
|
|
most of all, and sometimes that could be a little more complicated than
|
|
just enjoying what was happening at hand.
|
|
|
|
``Refuge is dead,'' Archer said, ``bury it, Cocky, and move on. I
|
|
have.''
|
|
|
|
``You don't get it, do you?'' the Concocter laughed, and it was a bleak
|
|
sound. ``You think it's about your having found a good backer or a
|
|
bedmate, or even just a place in the world. That we hate the way you
|
|
thrive.''
|
|
|
|
``Isn't it?'' Indrani asked.
|
|
|
|
``It's the way you laugh with them, Indrani,'' Cocky quietly said. ``The
|
|
way there's no prick to the barbs. Because you love them and they love
|
|
you.''
|
|
|
|
Hand whipping around she viciously threw down a rack of empty vials,
|
|
glass shattering over the floor, and there was a hate on her face that
|
|
was like pondwater gone still and festering.
|
|
|
|
``We would have loved you too, if you'd let us,'' the Concocter said.
|
|
``If you'd given us what you give them. But you never did. What is it
|
|
that makes them so much \emph{better}, Archer, so much more
|
|
\emph{deserving}?''
|
|
|
|
``I never had to fight them,'' Indrani honestly said.
|
|
|
|
They'd never been competition, the way the others had been in Refuge.
|
|
There'd been jostling, growing pains, but never anything with
|
|
\emph{bite} to it. It'd been a hearth opened to her, not other wolves to
|
|
fight for the same scraps.
|
|
|
|
``That's the thing, Archer,'' the Concocter tiredly said. ``You never
|
|
\emph{had} to fight us either.''
|
|
|
|
That, more than any other thing she had heard that night, gave Indrani
|
|
pause. It had the unpleasant ring of truth to it. The other woman drew
|
|
in on herself, bloody and somehow looking exhausted.
|
|
|
|
``Go,'' she said. ``I have to brew myself something to fix the nose and
|
|
I've seen enough of you for two lifetimes.''
|
|
|
|
Indrani replied with a jerky nod, wiping her blade clean on her coat
|
|
before sheathing it and abruptly turning. It felt like fleeing when she
|
|
left the room, no matter how much she told herself otherwise. The door
|
|
closed shut behind her and Archer let out a shallow breath. She, too,
|
|
felt oddly exhausted. Leaning against the wall for a bit, she wondered
|
|
if would truly leave it all at that. There were more pressing things to
|
|
see to, and she needed to find Cat and pass along the answers, but
|
|
somehow she thought that if she left now that conversation would be over
|
|
for good. Could she live with that? Did she \emph{want} to? Lips
|
|
twisting, she raised a hesitant hand towards the handle.
|
|
|
|
The Arsenal shivered.
|
|
|
|
Indrani's hair rose up all over her body, the sensation of coming danger
|
|
acute, and the hand went down. There was never enough time, was there?
|
|
It was something you had to learn to live with, the give and take of how
|
|
you were willing to spend yourself. The door was slammed open and Cocky
|
|
peered out, some sort of dark poultice shining on her cheek. She caught
|
|
sight of Archer a moment later.
|
|
|
|
``What was that?'' she asked.
|
|
|
|
The Arsenal shivered again, like door being pounded on.
|
|
|
|
``Trouble come a `knocking,'' Indrani drawled.
|
|
|
|
She cocked her head to the side, studying the other villainess.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{What}?'' the Concocter said, sounding irritated.
|
|
|
|
``You're going to end up on a lot of powerful people's shit list your
|
|
role in this, Cat not the least of them,'' Archer said.
|
|
|
|
``And?'' Cocky replied, unimpressed by the prediction.
|
|
|
|
``How would you like to get a head start,'' Indrani said, ``on earning
|
|
your way out of those?''
|
|
|
|
They locked gazes, hazelnut to purple, and a long moment passed. The
|
|
Concocter dipped her head the slightest bit.
|
|
|
|
``I still have a field bag,'' Cocky said. ``Give me a moment to grab
|
|
it.''
|
|
|
|
It wasn't much, Indrani thought. Barely anything at all. But it was
|
|
something, and if she'd learned anything since she'd stumbled across the
|
|
two most important people of her life in Marchford all those years ago,
|
|
it was this: people who didn't plant seeds never got to grow trees.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Indrani wasn't surprised the Arsenal's wards eventually broke, even
|
|
though Cocky expressed her disbelief what must have been a least three
|
|
different times. It didn't matter how tall the walls were or how thick
|
|
the gates when there were traitors behind both. The breach had taken
|
|
place in a set of hallways between the Belfry and the Workshop, so the
|
|
two of them had been close, but by the time they got there the battle
|
|
had moved on. An utterly smashed workshop that'd once belonged to the
|
|
Blind Maker now boasted mostly broken wood and corpses, though fresh
|
|
guards had come in since what must have been the first slaughter. Archer
|
|
found an officer and got asking question, Cocky lingering behind her and
|
|
not bothering to offer potions to the few wounded still around. Indrani
|
|
approved.
|
|
|
|
The brews she carried that'd help were expensive, and best kept for more
|
|
urgent situations.
|
|
|
|
``We were crushed, Lady Archer,'' the Levantine captain in charge told
|
|
her. ``We would have all been slain if the Mirror Knight and his allies
|
|
did not intervene.''
|
|
|
|
``Who did the crushing?'' Indrani asked.
|
|
|
|
``Fae,'' the captain said. ``They were not many, less than thirty, but
|
|
their power\ldots{} it was like nothing I've ever seen.''
|
|
|
|
If the Courts ever remembered the Dominion of Levant's existence it was
|
|
no doubt to even more promptly forget about it, so that didn't mean
|
|
much. There was no point in asking the mustachioed man if it was a
|
|
princess or a count they were dealing with, it wasn't like the fairies
|
|
went around announcing their titles to human rank and file.
|
|
|
|
``Mirror Boy and his band drew them away?'' Indrani pressed.
|
|
|
|
``Some but not all,'' the captain said. ``A band left the rest, heading
|
|
for Belfry. And there are some among my men who say it was not the
|
|
Mirror Knight that had the fae moving.''
|
|
|
|
``Meaning?'' Archer frowned.
|
|
|
|
``They might have been looking for someone, and that is why they let
|
|
themselves be drawn towards the Repository,'' the captain said. ``But it
|
|
was battle, Lady Archer, and that makes for poor recall and wild
|
|
truths.''
|
|
|
|
``Thank you, captain,'' Indrani muttered, and the man saluted.
|
|
|
|
Cocky leaned in closer.
|
|
|
|
``The Repository is where they've been stashing that sword,'' she
|
|
quietly said.
|
|
|
|
``Adjutant's with Looking Glass and his buddies,'' Indrani replied.
|
|
``He'll keep them pointed at the enemy, and the enemy out of the good
|
|
stuff. We're headed for the Belfry.''
|
|
|
|
The Concocter's brow rose.
|
|
|
|
``Worried about your,'' and there she hesitated, ``\ldots{} lover?''
|
|
|
|
``Partner,'' Archer said. ``No, he can look after himself just fine. But
|
|
he keeps some nifty stuff in his rooms, and I don't think it's a
|
|
coincidence that fae headed that way.''
|
|
|
|
``We'll be too late to do much, considering the fae left some time
|
|
ago,'' Cocky pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``We're late as first line of defence, sure,'' Indrani shrugged. ``But
|
|
we're headed out as reinforcements, and for that we're just fine.''
|
|
|
|
Because a running battle against fae in the middle of the Belfry had
|
|
trouble written all over it, which mean Cat would be drawn there like a
|
|
moth to the flame. Probably half drunk and halfway through a terrible
|
|
plan that'd somehow end up working, Indrani fondly thought, or at least
|
|
close enough to working that she could pretend it'd achieved what she'd
|
|
meant it to. They set out quickly, because fashionably later got results
|
|
but actual late was just being sloppy. The gates into the great tower of
|
|
the Belfry were wide open, but wariness wasn't why Indrani's steps
|
|
stuttered. The very stone of the floor had been charred, almost turned
|
|
to glass in that distinctive way that blackflame did. But this was too
|
|
much, she thought, and not wielded well. Even just the shape of the
|
|
burn\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
She strode forward, heedless of the possibility of ambush and even the
|
|
sound of fighting far above. The Night had, by the marks on the floor
|
|
and the slight inclined of melted stone, billowed outwards in an
|
|
explosion. But at the centre of where that explosion had begun, Archer
|
|
could see a charred corpse with a knife stuck in its neck. She knew that
|
|
blade, had seen it used before. \emph{No}, Indrani told herself\emph{.
|
|
It can't be her. She wouldn't have died from a knife.} Cat might not be
|
|
able to pull the regeneration tricks the drow could, or even heal with
|
|
Night, but she could have kept herself from bleeding out long enough to
|
|
kill the Fallen Monk and gotten to a healer. Indrani chose to ignore the
|
|
treacherous whisper in the back of her mind about Night being able to
|
|
hurt Catherine, when she did not properly control it.
|
|
|
|
``Cocky,'' Archer said, voice steady. ``I need you to have a look at
|
|
that corpse.''
|
|
|
|
The other woman grimaced.
|
|
|
|
``Archer, that's probably\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``If it is, I want to know for sure,'' Archer said. ``Cut the body if
|
|
you have to.''
|
|
|
|
The Concocter slowly nodded.
|
|
|
|
``And you?''
|
|
|
|
Indrani reached for the bow on her back, fingers itching for an arrow,
|
|
and looked up at the spire where the sounds of a fight were echoing
|
|
from.
|
|
|
|
``I'm going to make someone bleed,'' the Archer said, and her voice rang
|
|
of steel.
|