618 lines
28 KiB
TeX
618 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-27-nigh}{%
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\section{Chapter 27: Nigh}\label{chapter-27-nigh}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``When using tigers you don't have enough time to gloat, when
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using rats you risk awkwardly running out of gloat before the end: true
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equilibrium is found in a pit of humble man-eating tapirs, beasts that
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have never once failed me.''}
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-- Dread Empress Atrocious, later devoured by man-eating tapirs
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\end{quote}
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I woke up with a stiff back and an aching leg.
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I'd courted as much by sleeping in a chair instead of a bed, but I'd not
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had it in me to retire to my rooms. Groaning as I shook off the last
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pangs of sleep and felt out the throbbing side of my leg -- today wasn't
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going to be one of the goods days, I could already sense it -- I pulled
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back my hand to settle my messily loose hair some. The pale glow of the
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magelights in the healing ward's private room was hard on the eyes,
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somehow harsh and cold compared to the way the light of day felt. The
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Arsenal was not growing on me: the endless bare hallways and the dusty
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air had me more restless than even the Everdark had back in the day.
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Below the earth, moving through caves and tunnels, it'd still felt like
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my feet were on the ground. Here, though, it all felt fake. Unnatural.
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Swallowing a yawn and stretching, I finally made myself look at the man
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lying on the bed by chair. Hakram's upper body was bare and I could see
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his hairless and muscled chest rise and fall as he breathed, the steady
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rhythm ensured by the sorcery woven over his mouth and nose. A ball of
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spelled air, made thicker and almost translucent by the nature of the
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spell, was ensuring that he would keep breathing steadily even should
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his body fail as it already had several times. Gods, my heart still
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clenched every time I looked at him. I could not see the leg and the
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chunk of hip -- including bone -- he'd lost, as they were under the
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blanket, but there was no hiding his carved-up flank and the stump of
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his arm. The priests, the mages and even Masego were all in agreement:
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there could be no healing most of this.
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In time flesh would grow back over the bared ribs and the stumps would
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cease to be purplish scabs, but there could be no question of attaching
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another limp even if we managed to get another one from an orc or even
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grow something through sorcery. Wounds inflicted by the Severance could
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be fully mended by neither sorcery nor Light. I'd already asked
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Hierophant to begin work on prosthetics, but the cuts through bone at
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the hip and leg were\ldots{} Hakram's fighting days were likely over.
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After months of bedrest and the finest prosthetics the Arsenal could
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create, he might be able to walk around without help. Might. But he
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would no longer be fit for battle, that much couldn't be denied. I did
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not realize I was worrying my lip with my teeth as I looked at him until
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the door was cracked open and I released it.
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My lips were dry, and my teeth sharp, so I tasted a fleck of blood
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against the roof of my mouth as I turned to see who'd intruded.
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``Cat?'' Archer quietly asked as she poked her face in. ``Ah, good,
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you're awake.''
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She opened the door further with her foot and came in with a wooden
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tray. The smell from the pastries on it, some sort of Proceran pasties
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filled with cheese and herbs, wafted in.
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``Breakfast,'' she announced.
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``Thanks,'' I wanly smiled, waving her in.
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I noticed a steaming mug besides the pastries, filled with something
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liquid and dark. Indrani crossed the room, letting the door close behind
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her, and passed me the tray even as she sat down in one of the seats by
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mine. The moment my hands were occupied supporting it she pre-emptively
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stole one of the pastries, which had my lips twitching, and I settled
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the tray on my knees with a nod of thanks. I sniffed at the mug and my
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brow rose when I recognized the distinct scent of the herbs Masego used
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to give me for pain back in the day.
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``Cocky had a few,'' Indrani shrugged in answer when I glanced at her.
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How like her, I fondly thought, to mention that in a transparent attempt
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to draw attention from the gesture of bringing the mug. Or from having
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remembered this precise recipe even years later. It was rare for her to
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bother with little things like this, usually when someone brought me a
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meal it was -- the thought soured me, and I breathed out shallowly. I
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made myself take a bite from one of the remaining pastries, the crust
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falling apart in my mouth and the warm cheese drowning out the taste of
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the herbs. It was tasty enough, and filling, so I tore through two
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before stopping to breathe.
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``Thanks,'' I told Archer. ``Didn't realize how hungry I'd gotten. What
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time is it?''
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``An hour before Morning Bell,'' she replied.
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Past dawn, then. This would make it the longest night of sleep from the
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four I'd had since the culmination of the Bard's plots in the Arsenal.
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Indrani had not, I noted, bothered to wipe away the mess of crumbs she'd
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made eating her own pastry. Hiding a slightly crusty smile at the sight,
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I sipped at the brew. The taste was as dubious as I remembered, but it'd
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do wonders for my leg without needing to draw on Night.
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``You don't usually wake me, much less bring me breakfast,'' I leadingly
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said.
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``I did in the Everdark, sometimes,'' she defended.
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``Like we didn't make Akua cook whenever we could,'' I snorted.
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Indrani was a much better cook than either Akua or me, in truth, but she
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was also in no way above taking a nap and letting someone else handle it
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after a long day of marching.
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``Making the only known poisoner among us handle the stew,'' Archer
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dryly said. ``Yeah, that sounds about right for our little Everdark
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walkabout.''
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I snorted. That whole affair had been an exercise in recklessness, it
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was true, for all that in the end it'd turned out mostly well. I did not
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immediately answer, instead enjoying the silence as I sipped at my mug.
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She'd probably come for a reason, but I was in no hurry to press her for
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it.
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``Sometimes I wonder how it would have been down there, if he'd come
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along like he wanted to,'' Indrani said, eyes going to our unconscious
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friend.
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Not even Masego could tell us when he'd wake. There wasn't exactly a
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known precedent to call on for demonic taint followed by a cut of the
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Severance.
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``We would have been better off,'' I said. ``And Callow would have
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fallen to pieces.''
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She hummed, not exactly in agreement but not disagreeing either.
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``Always thought you were much rougher on Vivienne and the Hellhound
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than him, for that mess we found in Iserre,'' Indrani suddenly said.
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``He had just as big a hand in it, but his chewing out was had in
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private.''
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``Juniper and Vivienne had titles, he didn't,'' I replied. ``I wouldn't
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have been quite to brutal with those two if not for their blunders in
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`welcoming' me, either. Couldn't afford not to, after those.''
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``You also like him most,'' Indrani frankly said.
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I jolted in genuine surprise, looking askance at her.
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``It's fine,'' she waved. ``I'm not getting all jealous on you, Cat. And
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it's not like you really play favourites in the Woe. Hakram's been with
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you from start, the longest of any of us, so you two have always been
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the closest in some ways.''
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I didn't bother to argue that I didn't sleep with Hakram, since we both
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knew that was a different thing. Her nebulous but inarguably existing
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partnership with Masego involved not a speck of bedplay, as far as I
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knew, but that in no way took away from the importance of it to both
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involved.
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``Sometimes I think I might be afraid of becoming Black, if we make it
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all through the next decade,'' I admitted.
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She didn't immediately speak, and I appreciated the moment to gather my
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thoughts as I drank.
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``The rest of you wandering off to see to your own lives, the way the
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Calamities did with him,'' I said. ``I never had to worry about that
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with Hakram. I knew he'd stick with me into Cardinal and the Accords.''
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It was never something we'd outright discussed, but more than once
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common plans had been drawn for things that the two of us would be able
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to do when the city was raised, together. It seemed faraway now,
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watching him breathe on that bed. I snorted.
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``He wants to make cisterns up in the mountains, you know,'' I said.
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``With canals that'd lead the water down to the city since water's going
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to be an issue if it gets too large.''
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``Wouldn't that be something to see,'' Indrani softly said.
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``Nonsense it what it is,'' I smilingly said. ``We should drain one the
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lakes up there and gate it down instead, much more practical.''
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How many times had we had that debate? Must have been at least a dozen,
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I knew all the arguments for and against by rote. It'd gotten stale,
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retreading the same grounds, but I'd still give a queen's ransom to
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tread them once more with him right now. I breathed out, looking away.
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``You know you're going to have to leave him behind, don't you?''
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Indrani gently said.
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I turned so quickly I almost dropped the tray.
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``Excuse me?'' I flatly said.
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``He's in no state to be transported,'' Archer said, not cowed by my
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glare in the slightest. ``And even if he was, the Arsenal is the best
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place for him to recover. He can be fitted for the prosthetics here as
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they're being made, and there's not a place with more or more kinds of
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healers on the continent. If you take him with you Cat, it won't be for
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\emph{his} benefit. It'll be for yours.''
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``I can't just let him rot here,'' I hissed.
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``Masego will be attending him,'' Indrani said.
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``Masego will \emph{remember} to attend him in between more important
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things,'' I bit out.
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A moment of silence passed, Archer saying nothing.
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``I didn't mean that,'' I finally said.
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It was doing a disservice to him. Masego was sometimes forgetful, but
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never when it came to taking care of one of us.
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``I know,'' Indrani said. ``Like you know you won't be able to stay here
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by his bedside forever. There's still a war on outside, and it needs
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you.''
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``Some days I wonder,'' I darkly said. ``We managed to chase off the
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Intercessor, `Drani, but what else do we have to show for this? Entire
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sections of the Arsenal trashed or tainted, a pile of dead soldiers and
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Named, a fucking knot of politics to entangle that just got even more
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knotted. The Mirror Knight has the fucking sword, and he's not going to
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give that back even if asked nicely.''
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``You drove back a creature that gives even the Hidden Horror the
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shivers,'' Archer said. ``If there \emph{wasn't} a pack of ruins on fire
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left behind, Cat, I'd be a lot more worried.''
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I took my mug in hand and reached to set aside the tray, swallowing a
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hiss at the way the move pulled at my leg, but Indrani leaned over and
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set it on the ground instead. I gestured in thanks, which she airily
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dismissed.
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``And Mirror Knight trying to play politics won't amount to shit,''
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Archer continued. ``Most Dominion people can't stand him, and it's not
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like him having a real cutty sword is going to impress Hasenbach or
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Malanza. And if both those two tell him to sit down and shut up, I don't
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care whose daughter he's fucking: there's no one in Procer who's going
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to argue.''
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``It's a sword made to kill the Dead King, Indrani,'' I said. ``And we
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only have one of those. That gives him clout, whether I like it our
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not.''
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``Balls to that,'' Archer said. ``I don't care how many Mirror Knights
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we throw at Keter, it's not going to get shit done. You think it's the
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first time the Original Abomination got some scrappy hero with powerful
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aspects and a fancy sword knocking at his gate? He'll snap that boy over
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his fucking knee, Cat. The Saint might have pulled it off, `cause she
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was hard and canny and gone feral in the Heavens way, but the
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\emph{Mirror Knight}? He's just some asshole. Not the worst I've seen,
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and sure he tries, but when it comes down to it he's still just some
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jackass with a sword.''
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``If he was just that, I'd have gotten him under control by now,'' I
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said.
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``Way you told it to me, you treated him like Black and the Empress
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treated you back in the day,'' Indrani said. ``That wasn't going to
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work.''
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``It usually does,'' I said through gritted teeth.
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And Christophe de Pavanie wasn't an idiot: I'd shown him how I did
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things, and then explained \emph{why} they needed to be done that way.
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I'd even thought it was working, for all that I was wary of him and
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probably not hiding it entirely. I still had no real idea what had set
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him off at the end, though there was no denying I'd botched my handling
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of his little tantrum.
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``Yeah, but you're the Black Queen,'' Archer said. ``If you're being
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nice to him, it's probably a plot. If you're being mean to him, it's
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probably a plot. If you're not being anything to him, \emph{it's
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probably a plot}. There's a reason it's Shiny Boots in charge of the
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heroes and not you, Catherine. Most of them still think you're out to
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get them.''
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She might be right, but I wasn't convinced. Still, there was no denying
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I was in a position where trying to keep forcing the matter would do a
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lot more harm than good. For now all that I could do was let sleeping
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dogs lie -- and keep an eye on the dogs, just in case.
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``Shiny Boots will be coming soon, at least,'' I grunted. ``By midday
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tomorrow.''
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``The Painted Knife and her band the day after,'' Indrani said, ``then
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Vivienne and Hasenbach the day after. It's going to get lively around
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here.''
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I didn't answer, resuming sipping at my brew as I watched Hakram from
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the corner of my eye. Silence stretched out again, almost peaceful.
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``I want to be here when he wakes up,'' I said. ``I can't help but feel
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that is the least of the least I could do, `Drani.''
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``The conference won't be done in a day,'' Archer replied.
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But it wouldn't last forever either, I knew. And if it ended and Hakram
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had not yet woken up\ldots{} Gods, how was it a harder decision to leave
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him behind than to send soldiers into battles where I knew many of them
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would die?
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``Yeah,'' I finally said. ``It won't be done in a day.''
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It was the coward's way out, but I still hoped it was a decision I
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simply wouldn't have to make. My mug was nearly empty now, so I drank
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down the last of the bitter brew and set it aside.
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``So why is it that you came to wake me, anyway?'' I asked.
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``Prince Pretty is about and kicking, the Physician finally cut him
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loose,'' Indrani said. ``He was looking to speak to you when you have a
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moment.''
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I groaned and began to rise to my feet.
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``Might as well,'' I said, reaching for my staff. ``I feel like I need
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to stretch my legs a bit.''
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``That's the spirit,'' Archer grinned. ``I'll keep watch on Hakram, you
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go and breathe some slightly more fresh air.''
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---
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I washed myself and changed clothes first. With a washbasin and a cloth,
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not a bath: the Arsenal had no source of water, which meant it had to be
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brought in from Creation by barrels. The practical limits to doing that
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meant it was permanently rationed, and though I could have probably
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flouted the rule I saw no real reason to. I dragged out a leather
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hunting doublet -- which I'd never actually used for hunting -- and
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loose black trousers I could tuck into my boots, pulling my wet hair
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into a braid and loosening my cloak around my neck. It wasn't exactly
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court clothes, or queenly ones, but I had a limited patience for both
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and the only way I'd ever put on full Proceran royal dress was if they
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dressed up my corpse. Cordelia somehow managed to make it seem natural,
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but I had a deep and instinctual distrust for anything involving that
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many ribbons and knots.
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I'd asked attendants to find out where Prince Frederic was before going
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into my quarters, so by the time I left them the answer was awaiting me.
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It also had me raising an eyebrow, since I'd expected any conversation
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between us would be taken care of in a private audience room or either
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our quarters. Instead the Prince of Brus was currently breaking his fast
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in the meal hall where I'd found Archer on the day of my arrival. Except
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she'd used it when it was empty, while around this time there were bound
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to be more than a few full tables. Well, at least my hair would dry a
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tad on the way there. I'd somewhat learned my way around the Arsenal,
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what with all the traipsing about I'd done here, so to get to the hall I
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needed no guide.
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It was a quick enough walk -- the architects who'd designed the place
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had clearly known the Alcazar would be hosting the people who paid them,
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and so positioned it very conveniently -- and I got through it briskly,
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the herbal brew having finally kicked in enough I could put a bit of a
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spring to my limp without swallowing a wince every time. The meal hall
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was a little over half-full, as I'd expected, offering up the sight men
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and women from their twenties to their dotage in three colours of robes.
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I would have expected some degree of clannishness but even those who
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most stuck to their own kind, the white-robed priests, had but a few
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islands of pale while most were spread out. The mages and the scholars,
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in red and bronze, were seated seemingly without thought to affiliation.
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The closest thing there were to clans were actually the tables with
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Named, which everyone else avoided. In the back, near the corner, the
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Blade of Mercy and the Blessed Artificer were quietly speaking as they
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ate together. Closer to me I saw the Kingfisher Prince laughing at
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something Roland had said, the Harrowed Witch looking at them warily but
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also seemingly a little charmed. More than a few gazes turned my way
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when I limped in, a hush falling over the room. I said nothing, only
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making my way to Prince Frederic's table and clapping Roland's shoulder
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in thanks when he made some room for me to sit by his side.
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``Your Majesty,'' the Harrowed Witch greeted me.
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``Good morning,'' I said, then nodded at the others. ``And to the both
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of you as well.''
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``Better yet for the pleasure of your company, Queen Catherine,''
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Frederic Goethal smiled.
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``Yes,'' the Rogue Sorcerer drily said. ``That.''
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My gaze flicked to the side of the Kingfisher Prince's pale neck, where
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a thin red line went around with an even neatness that was somehow
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pleasing to the eye. Hells, if I'd not known better I would have
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believed it a tattoo. A rather tasteful one, at that.
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``This is highly unfair,'' I complained. ``How does the scar make you
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\emph{prettier}? Mine just make me look like I got mauled.''
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I got treated to the sight of Frederic Goethal's eyes going wide in
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surprise, and the Prince of Brus politely coughed into his fist as
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Roland loudly choked. I glanced at the Witch, cocking an eyebrow and she
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reluctantly offered me a nod of agreement. \emph{See? It's not just me.}
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``I thank you for the compliment, Your Majesty,'' the Kingfisher Prince
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got out.
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``Catherine,'' Roland muttered, aghast. ``You can't just hit on a prince
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of the blood in the middle of the meal hall.''
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``I'm just stating the truth,'' I protested. ``Look at Aspasie, she's
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not disagreeing is she?''
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``I have finished my meal,'' the Harrowed Witch hastily said, ``and so
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take my leave, with your permission.''
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Before said permission could either be offered or denied, she just as
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hastily bowed and made her escape. A cannier tactician than I'd
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expected, that one.
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``Look what you did,'' Roland reproached.
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``War makes beasts of us all,'' I solemnly said.
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This time it was the Prince of Brus that choked, but in amusement. After
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mastering himself he poured me a cup of what looked like warm milk --
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with honey and something else in, maybe cloves going by the smell? --
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and offered it, which had my eyes sharpening. This was a rather informal
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setting, but he'd still poured for me. To an Alamans, which this one was
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for all that he'd spent the last few years being the darling of the
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Lycaonese, that implied either intimacy or the sort of admission of
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lower status that a prince of Procer would not, strictly speaking, need
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to offer me. Over the years First Princes had often tried to pass
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kingship of Callow was a rank of nobility below their own office, making
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it equivalent to that of the lesser western royalty instead.
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Cordelia Hasenbach had never tried that with me: even back when she'd
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called me Your Grace instead of Your Majesty, it'd been with the
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implication that a \emph{proper} queen of Callow would have warranted
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the latter appellation.
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``Thank you,'' I slowly said, cocking my head to the side.
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It was a statement, what he'd just done, and he'd chosen to do it in
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front of more than half a hundred people. Including several Named. The
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sole Named among Proceran royalty had just implied intimacy and trust in
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me in a subtle but very public way, which would not be something without
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consequence. I drank from the cup, and though it was too sweet for my
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tastes forced myself to swallow. Frederic Goethal had been raised to the
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Ebb and Flow during an era that Procerans still called the Great War, so
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I did not doubt he knew exactly what he'd just done. It explained why we
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were meeting here, even. It also left me feeling somewhat indebted to
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him, even if I'd not sought out the gesture, which I doubted was a
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coincidence.
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``How is the Adjutant, if I might ask?'' Roland quietly said.
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I told him, and the conversation drifted towards that and other idle
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talk about the state of the Arsenal -- there would need to be a hard
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|
look taken at the tainted parts of it before the First Prince could step
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foot here -- that lasted until my cup and their plates ran empty. The
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Rogue Sorcerer skillfully took his leave after that, which left me alone
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with the Prince of Brus.
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|
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|
``I must confess to a degree of restlessness, now that I've been allowed
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to escape the infirmary,'' the Kingfisher Prince idly said.
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|
``I can sympathize,'' I said.
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I'd spent a lot of my early years as the Squire going from one healing
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ward to another.
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``Then perhaps you might care to escort me to that fighting pit in the
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Frolic, Your Majesty,'' Prince Frederic suggested. ``If I do not
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exercise my arm at least a little I might just go mad.''
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|
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|
Mhm. A genuine request, or just an excuse for the two of us to be able
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|
to talk in a more private setting? Either way I had little reason to
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|
refuse.
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|
``I could use the walk,'' I agreed.
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|
---
|
|
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|
It'd been idle but pleasant talk all the way to the Frolic, which was
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|
empty at this time of the day.
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|
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|
Mind you it was an amusingly fresh experience to pass by a brothel with
|
|
a genuine Proceran prince, an establishment he couldn't possibly have
|
|
missed even if he was too polite to comment on it. The fighting pit was
|
|
just as deserted at the rest of this area, rafters empty and sand
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|
untouched, although by the looks of the pair of practice swords left at
|
|
the edge of the stands a servant must have come through at some point. I
|
|
cocked an eyebrow at the fact that there were two swords there: unless
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|
the Kingfisher Prince had ceased using a shield, that meant he expected
|
|
to be exercising his arm against someone. Unhurried, the fair-haired man
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went down the stairs and undid the straps keeping the dull swords in
|
|
place.
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|
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|
``The First Prince will be arriving tomorrow, along with your Lady
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|
Dartwick,'' Frederic Goethal told me. ``Word was sent to me overnight.''
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|
Quicker than we'd thought. They'd get here the same day as the White
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|
Knight, then.
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|
``Good to know,'' I cautiously replied. ``We have much to talk about.''
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|
The pale-skinned man took up one of the swords, testing its weight first
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|
by holing the grip and then by a succession of swift swings.
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|
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|
``You and I do as well, Your Majesty,'' Frederic Goethal seriously said.
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|
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|
He tossed me the sword, which I'd half expected. It'd been well thrown
|
|
so I snatched it out of the air easily. The balance was a little off for
|
|
me -- I preferred a heavier pommel and a longer blade -- but I was out
|
|
of practice anyway. It'd hardly make a difference.
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|
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|
``It's been some time since I used one of those,'' I warned him.
|
|
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|
``So I've heard,'' the Prince of Brus said, eyeing me openly, ``yet the
|
|
instincts will still be there, and you have the fitness for it.''
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|
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|
I might not have been entirely opposed to being looked up and down by
|
|
Frederic Goethal in different circumstances, but it hadn't been that
|
|
kind of look: he'd been gauging callouses and muscles, not how well I
|
|
might fill my clothes.
|
|
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|
``Swords and a chat, huh,'' I said. ``Fair enough. I can work with
|
|
that.''
|
|
|
|
I made my way down the stairs, leaning on my staff, and after dulling my
|
|
bad leg with a quick touch of Night leapt down and landed on the sands
|
|
in a crouch, Mantle of Woe billowing around me. Prince Frederic's boots
|
|
touched the pit floor a moment later with catlike grace. His loose white
|
|
long-sleeved shirt -- with those puffy Alamans sleeves -- and silken
|
|
trousers would have made him seem like some lordling who'd stumbled into
|
|
the wrong place by accident, if not for the comfortable way he held his
|
|
dulled blade. Idly I spun my own sword to loosen my wrist, considering
|
|
how best to approach. He'd weigh more, and be quicker on his feet, but
|
|
that'd been true of a lot of my opponents over the years. It was hard to
|
|
decide how best to attack when I still only had vague notions of how
|
|
skilled he might be.
|
|
|
|
``So the swords are bare, but what is it we're meant to be talking
|
|
about?'' I probed.
|
|
|
|
``We have trouble brewing,'' the Prince of Brus said, ``of a most
|
|
inconvenient kind.''
|
|
|
|
Ever light on his feet he approached, and I tested his guard with a
|
|
flick of the blade he allowed to touch his but otherwise ignored. The
|
|
fair-haired man began to circle me rightwards, which I reciprocated in
|
|
the opposite way.
|
|
|
|
``You'll have to elaborate,'' I said. ``It's been one of those months.''
|
|
|
|
The prince darted forward, sword going to the side in what I realized
|
|
too late to have been a feint, but when he struck at a sharp angle that
|
|
would have hit my swordholding wrist he found instead that a hard blow
|
|
of my staff forced him to withdraw.
|
|
|
|
``How unsporting,'' Frederic Goethal boyishly grinned.
|
|
|
|
``I don't recall agreeing to swords only,'' I nonchalantly replied.
|
|
|
|
He laughed and we began circling each other again.
|
|
|
|
``I have decided not to press charges against the Red Axe under the
|
|
Terms,'' the Kingfisher Prince said, and my eyes narrowed, ``though I am
|
|
not unaware that ultimately means little.''
|
|
|
|
``There was no need for that little piece of theatre in the meal hall,
|
|
if you meant to throw in with the Mirror Knight,'' I noted.
|
|
|
|
``It is a personal decision, not a political one,'' he admitted. ``I
|
|
have known hatred, how it can twist you. The Red Axe was done great
|
|
wrongs, and the depth of the hatred born of them makes anything I have
|
|
partaken of a pittance. I do not forgive or forget her attack, but
|
|
neither would I see her slain on my behalf.''
|
|
|
|
I slid a step to the side, sweeping low with my staff and baiting the
|
|
attack I'd expected to follow. He was too quick on his feet to resist
|
|
such an opening, dancing around my sweep and darting a strike out at my
|
|
shoulder. Grip shifting, I grabbed the edge of my cloak with my freed
|
|
fingers and swept the strike into the cloth, nearly ripping the blade
|
|
out of his grasp. Yet nimbly he went, retreating out of my range before
|
|
I could try to hem him in. The tricky bastard.
|
|
|
|
``It won't change that she killed the Wicked Enchanter,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``Or that she tried to open my throat, lack of complaint or not,''
|
|
Frederic of Brus acknowledged. ``Unfortunately, the latter of these
|
|
might turn out to be the most trouble. Though I am of the Chosen, I am
|
|
also a prince of the blood and the anointed ruler of Brus. The First
|
|
Prince is of the opinion, and to my regret I cannot disagree, that my
|
|
attempted killer must stand trial under Proceran law.''
|
|
|
|
``By any reasonable measure she'll get the-'' I almost said headsman's
|
|
axe, but it would have been both ghastly and a pun, ``- noose for the
|
|
Enchanter, which would allow us to sidestep that issue outright.''
|
|
|
|
It wasn't that I couldn't see where Cordelia was coming from, really.
|
|
One of the heroes had just stuck a sword in the neck of one of her
|
|
empire's ruling nobility, if she \emph{didn't} act then she was
|
|
legitimizing the right of heroes to pull shit like this in years to
|
|
come. On the other hand, coming from the side of the Truce and Terms, we
|
|
were going to see more than a few desertions if turned out that we were
|
|
all subject to Proceran laws. People just didn't trust the Principate
|
|
that much, and given what the Sisters had shown me of the plotting in
|
|
Cleves it wasn't without reason. The unspoken conflict of authority
|
|
between the officers of the Terms and the crowned heads of the Grand
|
|
Alliance had been from open conflict so far, with great care, but this
|
|
seemed like just the kind of mess to make it into a very spoken conflict
|
|
instead.
|
|
|
|
``If the situation in the Arsenal had unfolded differently, that might
|
|
have been an elegant solution,'' the Kingfisher Prince aknowledged.
|
|
``Unfortunately, the Mirror Knight now wields the Severance and he has
|
|
ties to the Langevins of Cleves. Whose loyalties have waned even as
|
|
their ambitions waxed.''
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Brus raised his sword high, blue eyes cool.
|
|
|
|
``If Chosen striking at royalty is left unpunished,'' Prince Frederic
|
|
gravely said, ``we believe that my neck might just have healed from the
|
|
first blow struck in the Principate's next civil war.''
|