943 lines
43 KiB
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943 lines
43 KiB
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\hypertarget{charlatan-iv}{%
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\section{Charlatan IV}\label{charlatan-iv}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``We like to tell each other devils are the true face of
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wickedness, for it makes evil into a monster we can vanquish. A sword
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cannot settle the banal cruelties decent folk inflict on each other, you
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see, though these do more evil in a day than a flock of devils in a
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year.''}
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-- King Edmund of Callow, the Inkhand
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\end{quote}
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Spring had brought troubles, at first, but what followed was stranger.
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The ice broke and melted, and it was as if the world had been uncorked.
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A hundred things were pouring out onto sleepy little Beaumarais, each
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coming quicker than the last. First the muddy mountain paths found early
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travellers, another pair of mages from the low country, and Olivier was
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barely done settling them in a house when word came that a company of
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riders from Apenun was headed the town's way. Lady Mireille Lassier,
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Alisanne's mother and the ruler of the city, had heard rumours and sent
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some of her men to have a look at the town. It was the same highborn
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officer as last time who led them, Captain Alain, and the man developed
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an interest in the arrangement around the shop that had Olivier wary.
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They were not yet ready, he felt, for such scrutiny. Alisanne was of a
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different opinion.
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``Now is the time to make bargains,'' she told him. ``Your numbers a
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rising but still small, you've proved you are able to settle affairs
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with townsfolk without resorting to unsavoury means and the shop is
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popular with the people of the town. You will never have a finer hand to
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play, Olivier.''
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He could not refuse to speak with the captain, anyhow, so there was
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little choice to be had. The officer asked probing questions but to the
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younger man's surprise he was polite and respectful throughout. A degree
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of surprise must have shown, for Captain Alain amusedly addressed it.
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``Lady Alisanne has taken a shine to you, all agree, and she has been
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part of this from the start,'' he said. ``I would not harbour great
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hopes there were I you, but I'll not act the bull over a matter where
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one of Lady Lassier's daughters has been so involved.''
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Olivier managed not to blush, wondering if the other man knew how much
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of a shine had really been taken, and the implication of marriage he
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chose not to address. He'd never had any illusions there, so there was
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no hope to disappoint. The captain requested to be allowed to visit the
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shop and see some of the enchanted wares that had already begun to sell
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and seemed rather impressed.
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``The wizards we've in Apenun insist only spells can chase away vermin
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properly, not artefacts,'' he told the younger man. ``Many will be
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pleased to hear the truth is otherwise. There is much coin to be had
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there, Master Olivier.''
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Though Alisanne had not been part of the conversation of the visits,
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keeping to at least a thin pretence of not being his accomplice in every
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way, Olivier wasted no time in calling on her as the captain retired for
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the night. Though the febrile energy that'd taken the both of them was
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first spent in a more pleasant way, they spoke at length after. The
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young man admitted to a fear this entire arrangement would be shut down,
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or at least severely curtailed, but Alisanne enthusiastically disagreed.
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``Wizards are dead useful to nobles, Olivier,'' she said. ``The issue is
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that much of the taxes levied on them are levied by the Highest
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Assembly, so neither princesses nor ladies can waive them. That and no
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one is comfortable allowing the old guilds to rise again. There is only
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so much influence to go around, and what they might gain will have to be
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lost by someone.''
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``If we grow too much, shop or not we will be as a guild,'' he pointed
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out.
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``The House of Light already has hooks in you, so you won't seem a
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threat,'' the grey-eyed beauty smiled. ``And you won't want to keep all
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the mages here forever, will you? There's only so much use for them in a
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town the size of Beaumarais, and too many will make the people uneasy.''
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Olivier's brow creased in thought.
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``You would see us turn into a school of sorts,'' he said. ``Teaching
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mages profitable skills then releasing them into the world.''
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``Even that drunk Maxime would have a use, if you go down this path,''
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Alisanne said. ``He knows war, for all his empty bragging, and a few
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wizards so trained would make even a country lord's retinue something to
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reckon with.''
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``The House will object,'' he said.
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``The priests will want the right to dictate where those wizards go, no
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doubt, but too many in the higher ranks will see the use of this,'' she
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denied, shaking her head. ``Magic made to serve the influence of the
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House would be a delicious turn in their eyes, I imagine.''
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Everybody would benefit in the world she painted with her words, Olivier
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thought. Everybody, though perhaps the mages the least of the lot.
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\emph{You have made yourself into the lord of this little town's
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wizards}, Morgaine had accused. And here was now, plotting to barter
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away their hours without consulting even one of them. There'd been just
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enough truth to her words, he thought, for them to sting. Yet the
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thought of simply handing this all over to someone else was an ugly one,
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and perhaps deep down handing it over to Roland made it worse. What had
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his brother done to deserve being given all this? Olivier had thought
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himself beyond those old jealousies, but perhaps he was not. It had been
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one thing, when he had a path of his own, but not Roland was encroaching
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on even that and this was a harder pill to swallow.
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He told Alisanne none of it, for the thoughts shamed him, and instead
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simply held her close.
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Captain Alain left within days, away to report what he had seen to Lady
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Lassier in Apenun but his parting words to Olivier were encouraging. It
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was more than a month before he returned, and in that span yet another
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mage came over the mountain paths. It was more practitioners than
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Olivier could ever recall hearing of being in the same place, save in
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old stories. It was exhausting to organize it all, to keep incidents
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from happening in the first place instead of simply reacting to them,
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but it needed to be done. When Captain Alain returned it was with a
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royal magistrate and a certain Brother Elian, whose name Sister Maude
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went stiff at. Olivier was brought in for a more formal conversation at
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the mayoress' own home, though she was gently evicted for the duration
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of it.
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Brother Elian was one of the greats of the House in Apenun, while the
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royal magistrate was the one who habitually dwelled in the same city.
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This would be, Olivier understood without being told, the moment that
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determined how this would all end. He felt ill-prepared for such a
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trial, but he would not flinch away in the face of the unexpected.
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Though he left convinced he'd doomed them all, the evening brought
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different results. A glowing Alisanne ambushed him with an enthusiasm
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that saw them distracted for some time before telling him she'd just
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spoken with Captain Alain and learned he had, somehow, convinced these
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people that he knew what he was doing and it was a worthy enterprise.
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Both the royal magistrate and Brother Elian had given their blessing to
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the arrangement, though already there was jostling about how the
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services of certain mages might be `leased' and who should get primacy
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over the other. Beaumarais' sudden rise in importance was expected to be
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bringing people and coin to the town, as well, and it would be quietly
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arranged that it would get an appointed magistrate and eventually elect
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its own.
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``Apparently my mother has decided this means I am not entirely bereft
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of political instinct,'' Alisanne wryly told him. ``I have been recalled
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to Apenun, where my fate going forward is to be decided.''
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Olivier had known it was only a matter of time, yet he was startled by
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how grieved he felt at the thought he might never see her again. He'd
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believed himself hardened to the prospect, but perhaps that was simply a
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lie he'd told himself. He would not make a scene, the young man told
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himself. It was beneath them both.
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``I will miss you sorely,'' Olivier quietly said.
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Grey eyes turned to him, confused.
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``It will only be for a month or two,'' Alisanne told him, stroking his
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side. ``I'll be back before you know it.''
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He blinked in surprise.
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``You intend to return?'' he asked, sounding like a fool even to his own
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ear.
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``There's more than sharing your bed that keeps me here, Olivier,'' she
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said, tone cooling. ``Though I had expected even that might mean more to
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you than it seems it does.''
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``You would be giving up a wealthy and exciting life,'' he slowly said.
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Apenun was not a grand city, in the greater scheme of things, but it was
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still as another world from the likes of little Beaumarais nestled in
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the mountains.
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``I'll be wealthy regardless, and you overestimate the excitement there
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is to be had as the seventh child of a noblewoman,'' Alisanne said, eyes
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searching his face.
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She paused.
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``Did you really think I would cast you aside as soon as the call to
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return to Apenun came?'' she asked.
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The answer to that now shamed him, so he did not answer.
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``I have feelings for you,'' Olivier artlessly confessed, ``but I
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harbour no expectation of permanence. It would not be difficult for you
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to find better prospects.''
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``I'm not offering marriage,'' Alisanne frowned. ``But you have been my
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lover for near half a year now, Olivier. It is not a small thing and I'd
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not have it treated as such.''
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``I would not have you feel bound to something you began away from home
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and bereft of company,'' he plainly said.
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``I can decide for myself whether I should feel bound to something,
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Olivier,'' she said, and if her tone earlier had been cool it was now
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frigid. ``I do not need you to settle my own affairs for me.''
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\emph{It is a well-meaning condescension you offer, but condescension
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nonetheless}, Morgaine had accused. Making decisions for others without
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truly understanding them, what they wanted. To see that sentiment
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reflected in Alisanne's grey eyes made it impossible to deny the
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sorcereress' words.
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``I meant no offence,'' Olivier said.
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``You have given it regardless,'' Alisanne evenly said. ``Perhaps it
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would be best for us to be apart for some time, yes?''
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It was not truly a question but he nodded in assent, hastily dressing
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himself from the clothes littering the ground. She looked at him as he
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did, and for a moment hesitation flickered in her eyes.
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``We will speak when I return,'' the grey-eyed beauty said, face
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conflicted.
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She did not stop him when he left, and he did not try to stay.
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---
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It took six months for Alisanne Lassier to return to Beaumarais.
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Six months where Olivier grew increasingly restless, his hours always
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fully used yet somehow never in a way that felt satisfying. Another four
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wizards and witches came over the span, and there were now simply too
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many to host even when spread out between the shop, the family home and
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the house they'd bought at the edge of the town. After consulting with
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Mayoress Suzanne, they'd agreed it would be best if a house was raised
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away from Beaumarais. The townsfolk were growing uncomfortable with the
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amount of practitioners around Beaumarais: too many had come, and too
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quickly. In a twist of irony, the location that was settled on was the
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Knightsgrave. The small valley wasn't too far from the town, it had a
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small river for drinking water and no one used it as grazing grounds
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because of the old legends.
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Eager to avoid old mistakes, Olivier put it to the mages themselves. The
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notion was a popular one -- in some ways the practitioners were just as
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uneasy about the townsfolk as the townsfolk were about them -- though
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there would have to be rotations in who got to sample the comforts of
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the town instead of staying out in the mountains. The greatest matter of
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debate was the shape the lodgings out in the Knightsgrave would take.
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``It should be a tower,'' Morgaine said. ``There are many magical
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reasons why this is preferred dwelling of our kind, and so close to the
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mountains we will not lack for stone.''
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Olivier thought the raising of a mage's tower out in the wilds was a lot
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more likely to bring unease than a hall or cottage would have, but
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Morgaine's suggestion was highly popular and he would not deny these
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people without a good reason. Not after having asked them what they
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wanted. Coin was sparse but a loan was extended by the House of Light
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through Sister Maude, as the priests were eager to demonstrate that it
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was they who were the patrons of this arrangement and not the rulers of
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Apenun. Olivier found his brother began to come around more frequently,
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though never as much as when they'd been younger. The relationship felt
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only half-repaired, but neither of them had the time to spare for more.
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Roland simply had too much to do, too much to learn. He was a student to
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half a dozen practitioners now, not merely their parents and Morgaine.
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They saw him as their future, Olivier realized. Someone who would be
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able to speak for them yet be one of them. Morgaine had not lied on that
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night.
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Before winter the magistrate Apenun had assigned them arrived, along
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with a small retinue. They were put up in the temple until more fitting
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lodgings could be raised. Olivier called on her the evening of their
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arrival, heart split.
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``Did you miss me?'' Magistrate Alisanne Lassier smiled.
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He had, more than words could properly express. They got to work
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together again, and already the old tension hung in the air between
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them. The same way it had before they'd begun. Before they'd quarrelled,
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too. When spring came Olivier took the first good excuse he found to
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return to the road, lest he find himself making an inevitable mistake.
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---
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The road did him good.
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Out there he went, sifting through towns and countryside looking for
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mages who had not yet heard of the refuge that could be found in
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Beaumarais. He obtained contracts for enchantments against vermin, for
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tools that would not rust, for brews that would help childmaking or
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prevent it. And he returned to Beaumarais, often but not for long. There
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the town grew to thrive, the coin poured in by peddlers seeing houses
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raised and shops open. People came to live in Beaumarais who had not
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been born there, or been brought in by kin and wedding, for the first
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time in living memory. Magistrate Alisanne saw to the order of it all
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with bewitching grace, her natural aplomb a fair match for the demands
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of the office. The tower out in the mountains slowly grew and the
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practitioners were drawn towards it. The shop would be how they won
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their coin, how they afforded to live, but the tower would be their
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\emph{home}.
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Olivier stayed on the road, drawing the closest towns and villages into
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the fold of what was being built. Justice need not be sought in Apenun
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now, not when there was a magistrate in Beaumarais. All manners of old
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disputes could be settled at last. Those few he'd taught how to read and
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write remained bound to him by gratitude, and they were all from
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families of importance: the town of his birth was, slowly but surely,
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becoming the heart of the settlements in the Vermillion Valleys. Olivier
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longed for grey eyes and a quiet laugh, but found himself reluctant to
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return to what the two of them had once been. She must have been as
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well, for while they lingered close to one another neither ever reached
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out through that slight, final distance separating them.
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These days he felt reluctant to stay in Beaumarais at all. Out there
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Olivier found he thrived: wherever he went, he found success. He talked
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around peddlers and craftsmen to bring Beaumarais into their routes,
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secured a proper mason's help for the tower. He even picked up a few
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disaffected fantassins ready to turn bandit and convinced them instead
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to turn into a company under contract by half a dozen towns to keep the
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mountain paths \emph{clear} of bandits. Even the House of Light was
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danced with, as Sister Lucie of Grisemanche was recalled in disgrace
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when she was found to have taken payment for healing travellers instead
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of offering it freely as was her duty. It was all \emph{exciting}.
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Something he was good at, something he'd been meant to do. Unlike
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looking over the shoulders of mages in Beaumarais, something they
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resented of him and he disliked doing in the first place.
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By the second year the practitioners had taken to pooling their
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knowledge and a library was being assembled in the more than half-done
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tower, and while Olivier would have loved to read through the books
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there he often felt unwelcome when he visited. The mages who nowadays
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stayed in the Knightsgrave, having raised tents and small huts there,
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had started to think of themselves as a small village of their own. They
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did not like the notion of being beholden to anyone. Morgaine and his
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brother had taken to staying one week there and another in town, and
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eventually given Olivier's frequent absences it became natural for
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Roland to be given the responsibility of seeing to the affairs of the
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valley. It was better this way, Olivier told himself. He closed his eyes
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to Roland being rather well versed in poetry, these days, and spending
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much of his time in Beaumarais calling on Alisanne.
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For three years it all grew. The town, the tower, the profits. Rumour
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had spread that enchanted wares could be bought in the mountains and so
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now a caravan of peddlers came every spring, while the highborn of
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Apenun had their orders conveyed by riders along with the payment.
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Beaumarais had swelled, and these days Mayoress Suzanne and Magistrate
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Alisanne were considered the grandees of the region. Olivier himself was
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known, but not as much. He preferred it that way. There was talk that
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soon a petition to the court of Prince Arsene of Bayeux might be
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arranged, requesting that someone might be raised to formal rule over
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the Vermillion Valleys, and Alisanne's name was the one bandied about.
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The notion found some popularity even away from the town, largely
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because the magistrate herself was popular.
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Winter was ever the season Olivier spent in Beaumarais, and on that
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third year he'd come a month early as he had a few affairs to see to in
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town. It was his habit to call on Alisanne the day he returned, no
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matter the hour, but he was surprised to see his brother leave her house
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well two hours after sundown. Roland looked just as surprised to see
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him, and for a moment Olivier was taken aback by how much taller his
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little brother had become. Roland had grown into a man while he wasn't
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looking: his shoulders had broadened, he had a short beard and even wore
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a knife at his hip. The wonder went away when he remembered where he'd
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just seen his brother leave, and at what hour.
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``Olivier,'' Roland smiled. ``Back so soon, this year?''
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The smile was, he thought, too stiff.
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``Out so late, Roland?'' Olivier replied, and did not bother to smile.
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``There's no call for that face, brother,'' Roland said. ``I was only
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having dinner with a dear friend. We share great hopes for the future of
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Beaumarais.''
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His little brother, still taller than him, began to walk past Olivier
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but paused.
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``Besides, even if I did have other designs are the two of you not
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done?'' Roland asked. ``There would be no call for bruising.''
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Olivier's eyes narrowed.
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``I sometimes dislike the man you're growing into, brother,'' he said.
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``Then perhaps you should have been around more, brother,'' Roland
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replied.
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He walked away and did not turn back. Olivier breathed out, calming
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himself, and only then called on Alisanne. He was ushered in by the
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servants and brought to her small parlour, where she was having a glass
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of wine. Alone, he noticed. There was no second, empty glass. \emph{It
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could have been removed.}
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``Olivier,'' she smiled, waving him in and inviting him to sit. ``Back
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early, this year.''
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``So I've been told,'' he said. ``Twice now.''
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Her brow rose. He bit his tongue. He had no right to feel jealous, he
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reminded himself. They had not been lovers for years now.
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``Your brother is the soul of persistence,'' she said. ``It is somewhat
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flattering.''
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``Is it?'' he quietly asked.
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``None of that now,'' she replied, just as quietly. ``For years I
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thought you might apologize, that we might begin anew. You never did.
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Our friendship is dear to me as well, Olivier, but it is not a friend
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who speaks to me now.''
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``No,'' he admitted. ``It is not. Do not think too badly of me for it.''
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Alisanne kept silent for a long moment.
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``Jealousy is something, at least,'' she said, eyes unreadable.
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She drank from her cup, then rose to pour him one as well. His lips felt
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parched when he drank.
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``I am not involved with your brother,'' Alisanne said. ``Nor have I
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ever been.''
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Relief. Relief, however guiltily it might come.
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``He has, however, been courting me for years,'' she continued. ``And
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tonight he sought my hand in marriage.''
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His fingers clenched around the rim of the cup.
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``Tell me you refused him,'' Olivier prayed.
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``I did not answer,'' Alisanne said. ``Too swift a refusal would have
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been indelicate.''
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He drank deep to hide the way his hand had trembled.
|
|
|
|
``He is not in love with me, Olivier,'' the grey-eyed beauty mused. ``He
|
|
his taken with my looks and thirsts for lordship over these mountains,
|
|
which he fancies wedding me might grant him.''
|
|
|
|
``I did not think him so ambitious,'' he confessed.
|
|
|
|
``Morgaine has been fanning those flames, along with the dream of a
|
|
hidden city for mages,'' Alisanne said. ``Though I'll not blame her too
|
|
much for that: there were already embers there to fan.''
|
|
|
|
``I've let a lot of things grown rotten, haven't I?'' Olivier softly
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
``There's a light in you, on those days you come back from the road,''
|
|
Alisanne said. ``A glow almost. When you've traipsed around like a
|
|
rogue, tricking and helping and trading in knowledge. It was hard to
|
|
grow angry with you, when what you did make you so blatantly happy.''
|
|
|
|
``It has,'' Olivier admitted. ``Yet I regret what I left behind.''
|
|
|
|
She studied him again, silently.
|
|
|
|
``Apologize,'' Alisanne ordered.
|
|
|
|
``I am sorry,'' Olivier said, ``for how it ended between us. And for
|
|
every day since.''
|
|
|
|
``Good,'' she said, and kissed him.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
It was a soft night, after that. Patient and tender, almost like a
|
|
goodbye. They slept in the same bed for the first time in years and
|
|
neither woke until late in the morning. Olivier woke first but waited
|
|
until she did, moving as little as possible to not wake her. Eventually
|
|
her eyes fluttered open, and they stayed nestled together for a long
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
``You're going to leave, aren't you?'' he asked.
|
|
|
|
Alisanne sighed.
|
|
|
|
``Three years is long enough,'' she said. ``Beaumarais is now capable of
|
|
electing its own magistrate.''
|
|
|
|
``And you are growing bored,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``I am,'' Alisanne admitted. ``The tower is nearly done, the affairs
|
|
with the mages quite settled and the rest is\ldots{} middling.''
|
|
|
|
``When do you leave?'' Olivier asked.
|
|
|
|
``In a few days,'' she replied. ``I might return come summer to oversee
|
|
the election, but it is not certain.''
|
|
|
|
He breathed out.
|
|
|
|
``Would you stay, if I asked?''
|
|
|
|
His own question startled him, but embarrassed as he might be to have
|
|
asked he did not regret having done so. Grey eyes met his.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' Alisanne said. ``But it doesn't need to end, Olivier. Come with
|
|
me to Apenun.''
|
|
|
|
``I cannot,'' he replied instantly.
|
|
|
|
``Think about this, actually stop and \emph{think},'' she insisted.
|
|
``You'd go mad, staying here all year, and I'd not stand to be your port
|
|
of anchor when it's too cold and nothing more. But in Apenun, you could
|
|
\emph{thrive}. Already your work here has made you known in some
|
|
circles, opportunities could easily be arranged. I'll find an occupation
|
|
of my own, and we can live as we want to live. Not bound by half a dozen
|
|
uneasy threads, forever defined by your family.''
|
|
|
|
``I can't abandon all we built here, Alisanne,'' he said.
|
|
|
|
``Then don't,'' she said. ``Roland wants it, so let him prove he can
|
|
lead. You'll still have shares of the profits, coin to live comfortably,
|
|
and you can return in a year to see how he's done without you looming
|
|
over him.''
|
|
|
|
And Olivier wanted to object but the truth was that he was already gone
|
|
most of the year, wasn't he? What was it that was lost if he left? The
|
|
more he thought of it, the less he had to say. He did not agree, leaving
|
|
their bed later and burying himself half-heartedly in the shop's
|
|
bookkeeping, but the thought did not leave him. He returned to
|
|
Alisanne's home that night. She knew his answer before he spoke it, as
|
|
she often did.
|
|
|
|
A hundred things would need seeing to before then, but when she left
|
|
he'd leave with her.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Olivier woke up to screaming on the night before their departure.
|
|
|
|
He'd slept at the shop, as he'd been there until late seeing to the last
|
|
details, and he dressed hastily before slipping into the street.
|
|
Beaumarais was ablaze, he saw. Armed men on horses were tossing torches
|
|
onto houses. The militia had come out, but it was a small thing these
|
|
days and Olivier saw several of them were already corpses. The horsemen
|
|
were eerily silent as they went around burning and killing, and it was
|
|
hard to tell how many of them there were. A dozen, two? One of them was
|
|
knocked down by a vivid red fireball, as Maxime Redflame came out of the
|
|
tavern drunkenly bellowing and waving about his arms, and they all
|
|
turned towards the threat. Olivier took advantaged of the distraction to
|
|
sneak past the nearest raider, towards the east of the town.
|
|
|
|
Alisanne's house would be there, along with her small but well-trained
|
|
armed retinue. The House of Light was close as well, and these days
|
|
Sister Maude had help from other priests capable of wielding Light.
|
|
Except that when he got there, the house was strewn with corpses.
|
|
Soldiers and servants, even a young priestess. Olivier frantically
|
|
looked through the butchery, but of Alisanne there was no trace. Or of
|
|
the raiders themselves, though from the way the blood was spilled at
|
|
least some of them must have been killed forcing the house. Had she been
|
|
taken? Livid with fear and rage, Olivier stumbled onto a mess in the
|
|
gardens that looked like it'd been made by someone struggling as they
|
|
were dragged. The were horse tracks leading away from there, away from
|
|
the town. Into the mountains.
|
|
|
|
Olivier followed.
|
|
|
|
The horsemen had not been careful when they left. Only a few had left by
|
|
the path, two or three, and though on a rocky stretch Olivier lost their
|
|
trace he knew well these mountains. This path in particular, which he'd
|
|
first tread as a boy. Once upon a time, it had been a rite of passage
|
|
among the children of Beaumarais to sneak out in the night and steal a
|
|
flower from the valley known as the Knightsgrave. Stomach dropping as
|
|
unwelcome but inevitable suspicions took hold of him, Olivier sped
|
|
through the dark mountain paths. Above him the moon lit his way, and
|
|
vigour like he'd never known before made his stride long and sure and
|
|
tireless. Before long he stood above the stretch of a small valley
|
|
filled with tall grass and red flowers by a mountain spring, though now
|
|
there was more. Tents and huts, close to the shore, and a stout tower
|
|
jutting upwards that was now nearly done.
|
|
|
|
The Knightsgrave was almost empty, Olivier saw.
|
|
|
|
Of the near dozen mages who lived here even in winter there was no
|
|
trace. Two raiders stood silent in the night, their tall form a stark
|
|
contrast to the red flowers around them, while their horses drank from
|
|
the mountain spring. The tower's door was open, and torchlight flickered
|
|
within. Olivier no longer had a boy's body, but he was still spry and
|
|
the raiders were both eerily still and inattentive. Too still, he
|
|
eventually realized. They did not breathe at all. \emph{Undead}, he
|
|
thought\emph{. Merciful Gods, Roland, what have you done?} He snuck past
|
|
the standing corpses, sticking to the tall grass until he was close to
|
|
the tower. He peeked within and found only a single silhouette within.
|
|
Morgaine. Sitting in an armchair, looking down at the fire roaring in
|
|
the firepit.
|
|
|
|
Anger seizing hold of him, Olivier slipped into the tower and crept upon
|
|
the sorceress from behind. There was a small paring knife on a table and
|
|
his fingers closed around the hilt. About to place the blade against the
|
|
throat, he stopped when he got a look at more than Morgaine's side. She
|
|
was burned, heavily. Most of the left half of her torso was a blackened
|
|
ruin and her breathing was laboured. The sorceress' dark eyes fluttered
|
|
open and she caught sight of him. She let out a small, bleak laugh.
|
|
|
|
``You,'' she said. ``Of course it would be you.''
|
|
|
|
``Where is Alisanne?'' he asked.
|
|
|
|
``Upstairs,'' she croaked. ``Gods, the folly. It all went wrong.''
|
|
|
|
``You did this,'' Olivier hissed.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' she denied. ``It was not the plan at all. They were supposed to
|
|
attack as you left. We would drive them away, the girl would\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
Morgaine let out a dry, rasping cough.
|
|
|
|
``The girl would owe us,'' she said. ``Her mother. Roland would be a
|
|
hero, the natural magistrate.''
|
|
|
|
``You raised corpses,'' he accused. ``So that they would serve you.''
|
|
|
|
``We,'' she snorted. ``Me, him. For protection. This place was already a
|
|
grave of knights, we just needed to dig.''
|
|
|
|
``Your \emph{protection} is burning the town,'' Olivier snarled. ``You
|
|
have destroyed everything with your madness.''
|
|
|
|
``You did this,'' Morgaine hissed. ``He went mad when he learned the
|
|
girl would leave with you. That he'd never be lord, that he was just a
|
|
fool. It was all you. My plan would have fixed everything, but he lost
|
|
it. Sent our soldiers for the girl, and when I tried to stop
|
|
him\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
Olivier looked down at the sorceress, burned by her own pupil and pride.
|
|
Even now it was all his fault in her eyes, wasn't it? And maybe it was,
|
|
in a way. Because he'd chosen the thrills of the road and the chase
|
|
rather than stay here and see this through. Because he'd chosen to be
|
|
someone at the expense of being a brother. Maybe he'd had a hand in
|
|
this, if not the one she thought. And the truth he knew, deep down, was
|
|
the same truth he'd known since he was a boy: no one else was going to
|
|
fix this. To try to make it right. It was not his place to pass
|
|
judgement over that dying woman before him, for he was neither a lord
|
|
nor a magistrate, but it still needed to be done. And he'd had a hand in
|
|
this, in the magic that had gone to wicked use here, and so he would
|
|
also have a hand in ending it all.
|
|
|
|
``Too many people have died, Morgaine,'' Olivier said.
|
|
|
|
She tried to raise her hand, lips beginning an incantation, but however
|
|
quick her magic it was not quicker than a knife. It went straight into
|
|
her heart and Morgaine gasped out her last breath with a hissing curse.
|
|
Olivier ripped out the knife, bloodying his hand. It was the first time
|
|
he'd ever killed. The anguish he'd expected to feel from having taken a
|
|
life did not come, even after a long moment passed. He felt tired,
|
|
mostly, and sad that a woman who'd been exceptional in many ways had
|
|
come to die like this. It'd been a bitter flame at the heart of her, and
|
|
it'd ended up eating her from the inside. \emph{We lit it}, Olivier
|
|
reminded himself. Magic hadn't done that, men and women had. With the
|
|
ways they treated each other, with the slow strangling grasp of
|
|
something subtler and deeper than sorcery could ever be.
|
|
|
|
Bloody knife in hand, he looked at the stairs. This might not be the
|
|
last life he took tonight. Even as he went up the stairs, Olivier's mind
|
|
dreamed up what a monster his brother might have turned into. A raving
|
|
and ranting madman, or a warlock wreathed in pale lightning.
|
|
|
|
Instead, what he found was Roland on his knees and weeping.
|
|
|
|
His little brother looked terrified, the look on his face making the
|
|
beard he'd grown and the broadened shoulders look like they belonged on
|
|
someone else's body. Alisanne had been laid down on a cot in a corner,
|
|
her hands folded over her lap with delicate care. She was slumbering too
|
|
deeply for it to be anything but the result of a spell. He could have
|
|
snuck in, Olivier knew. Roland was lost inside himself, he wouldn't have
|
|
heard it. Merciful Heavens, his brother wouldn't have noticed a thing
|
|
until the knife took his life. And it'd be safer, wouldn't it? If
|
|
Roland's magic could defeat even his old teacher's, what could a peddler
|
|
with a paring knife do against it? But that would mean that his brother
|
|
was his enemy. And fool that he was, Olivier could not accept that.
|
|
|
|
He set down the knife on a table and knelt by his brother's side,
|
|
pulling him close. Roland did not fight him, let it happen, but his eyes
|
|
were unseeing. It was only after some soothing that sense returned to
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
``Ollie?'' his brother asked, voice hoarse from the weeping.
|
|
|
|
``I'm here,'' Olivier quietly said.
|
|
|
|
``I-'' Roland said, then his voice broke. ``Gods, what have I-''
|
|
|
|
He violently retched, breaking out of his brother's embrace and throwing
|
|
up on the floor. Looking scared and ashamed, Roland backed away from him
|
|
afterwards.
|
|
|
|
``The magic,'' he said, ``it was worse than wine. I was in a haze, and I
|
|
was so \emph{angry}\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``Your undead attacked the town,'' Olivier said. ``Morgaine is dead.''
|
|
|
|
``Morgaine,'' Roland hissed, ``\emph{Morgaine}. It was her who convinced
|
|
me. Who told me we would never get our dues fairly, that we needed to
|
|
raise the corpses. I never wanted to, you have to believe me.''
|
|
|
|
It began, slowly, to dawn on Olivier. But he did not want to look it in
|
|
the eye, fought it tooth and nail.
|
|
|
|
``Alisanne,'' Roland suddenly said, ``what-''
|
|
|
|
He glanced back and relief touched his face when he found Alisanne was
|
|
asleep on the cot.
|
|
|
|
``She won't wake until the spell is broken,'' Roland said. ``She\ldots{}
|
|
she doesn't need to know. Olivier, you have to help me. I never meant to
|
|
\emph{hurt} anyone.''
|
|
|
|
He was aching behind the eyes with the effort of not seeing it, but he
|
|
was losing the war. It felt inevitable, inexorable.
|
|
|
|
``What do you want me to do, Roland?'' Olivier softly asked.
|
|
|
|
His brother did not notice the soft, steely undertone. Perhaps he would
|
|
have tread more lightly if he had.
|
|
|
|
``Morgaine is dead, or good as,'' Roland said. ``And it was her idea
|
|
from the start. We can tell people\ldots{} Alisanne is the magistrate,
|
|
and she trusts you. If you tell her it was all Morgaine she'll believe
|
|
it.''
|
|
|
|
Dragged up by the hair and forced to look the truth in the eye, Olivier
|
|
saw it plain for the first time: his brother was not a good man. Magic
|
|
had nothing to do with it, or little enough it hardly mattered. The
|
|
older brother stayed silent, trying to fight the revelation but finding
|
|
little to fight it \emph{with}. Roland's eyes went hard when he got no
|
|
reply.
|
|
|
|
``Trying to get rid of me, are you?'' Roland said. ``Now that you have
|
|
all you wanted, time to do away with the mage brother before you buy
|
|
yourself a title. You \emph{owe} me, Olivier. If you hadn't taken her, I
|
|
never would have-''
|
|
|
|
The other man bit down on the sentence, but the hardness in his eyes did
|
|
not waver. \emph{It was never the magic, was it? It was you, Roland. All
|
|
along it was you.}
|
|
|
|
``It's your fault,'' Roland harshly said. ``You know it is.''
|
|
|
|
``I do,'' Olivier quietly replied.
|
|
|
|
And it truly was\emph{.} If Olivier had not left the family home as
|
|
quick as he could, if he'd not left his brother behind, it might not
|
|
have come to this. But he'd avoided the place as much as he could
|
|
because it brought a bitter taste to his mouth. Because he wanted to
|
|
leave it behind. And he had, but he'd also left behind more than the
|
|
house. There were so many ways this could all have been avoided. If he'd
|
|
not taken to the road, if he'd not left so many things half-said, if
|
|
he'd found it in him to not see, deep down, his own brother as a rival.
|
|
He'd left Roland to stew in a cauldron of anger, and so anger was what
|
|
Roland had learned.
|
|
|
|
Too slow to notice, too slow to act.
|
|
|
|
All that was left, now, was to look at a man who had used his magic to
|
|
throw a murderous tantrum when denied what he wanted. And the thought
|
|
disgusted Olivier, because in the end it would be others who paid the
|
|
price for this. When it came out Roland had raised the dead, had been
|
|
responsible for so many deaths, then the House of Light would smash all
|
|
of this to pieces. And their town would be spoken of as an example as to
|
|
why mages could never be trusted, never be listened to, when the lot of
|
|
wizards was next questioned. \emph{Have you heard of the fate of
|
|
Beaumarais, my child}, a thousand Sister Maudes would say, tutting about
|
|
how it was so sad but you just couldn't expect differently of \emph{that
|
|
sort}.
|
|
|
|
``You can't have done this,'' Olivier finally said. ``It would ruin it
|
|
all.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, exactly,'' Roland said, licking his lips.
|
|
|
|
It couldn't be Morgaine, either. She was too well-known, it would be
|
|
almost as damning. The undead were the keystone, for what Proceran mage
|
|
would dare dabble in necromancy? There was a ready-made culprit on the
|
|
other side of the valleys: Praesi warlocks with their wicked arts, who
|
|
had wanted to ruin the good work of reliable Proceran wizards. Olivier
|
|
himself had once falsely claimed that bandits who'd robbed him had been
|
|
in the pay of Praes, the precedent would make it more believable to
|
|
highborn always keeping wary eye on the east.
|
|
|
|
``There is a spell that could make her more suggestible when we wake
|
|
her,'' Roland told him. ``Nothing untoward, just as if she'd had a large
|
|
cup of wine. It would-''
|
|
|
|
``You should not have magic,'' Olivier said, and believed every word.
|
|
|
|
No more than he should have a sword or a lordship, had he been born to
|
|
either. His fingers itched with the truth of it, as if something were
|
|
trying to claw its way out from beneath the skin. Roland cracked a
|
|
scornful smile.
|
|
|
|
``It should have been you, right?'' he said. ``You manage to go a great
|
|
many years without saying it, brother. I'm almost impressed.''
|
|
|
|
``You have abused your power,'' Olivier said slowly, as if testing out
|
|
the words. ``You no longer deserve to hold it.''
|
|
|
|
``I was \emph{born} with it, Ollie,'' Roland hissed. ``There it is, the
|
|
simple truth: I was born with it and you weren't. And you've been trying
|
|
to take things from me all my life to make up for that, but it won't
|
|
ever do anything because the Gods Above already decided which of us
|
|
would matter when they gave the Talent to only one of us. Allow me to
|
|
\emph{demonstrate}-''
|
|
|
|
It was all, in that moment, clear as crystal. Every detail of the world
|
|
around him, from Alisanne's steady breath on the cot to the slight
|
|
coating of dust on the bookshelves to the flush on his brother's cheeks.
|
|
And Olivier knew, with unearthly certainty, that it could be done. He'd
|
|
spent all his life taking knowledge and putting it to use, and wasn't
|
|
the knowledge always the hard part? And so when he saw sorcery flare
|
|
around his brother's hands Olivier brushed his own against them, and
|
|
took the magic. No, not took. He was not a wanton thief, stealing away
|
|
whatever he wished. He had done this because the magic was being
|
|
misused.
|
|
|
|
Confiscated, he thought. He had \textbf{confiscated} the power.
|
|
|
|
The word felt right, like an old friend he'd never met.
|
|
|
|
``What have you done?'' Roland shouted. ``What have you done, Olivier?
|
|
Did you \emph{destroy my magic}?''
|
|
|
|
No, Olivier knew. He hadn't it. He could feel something within him, like
|
|
a bundle of warmth. Or perhaps a spool of wool, one that he might yet
|
|
learn to unspin.
|
|
|
|
``It's over, Roland,'' he said. ``You won't escape the consequences of
|
|
this.''
|
|
|
|
A shout was his answer, and to his surprise his brother charged him.
|
|
Roland was taller and had caught him flatfooted, so Olivier stumbled
|
|
backwards into the table as his brother grabbed him by the hair and
|
|
smashed his head against the wood.
|
|
|
|
``It will come back, if I kill you,'' Roland seethed. ``Won't it?''
|
|
|
|
Olivier felt daze and his hands scrabbled for leverage so that he could
|
|
throw back his brother, but his head was smashed again. Blindly groping,
|
|
his fingers closed around something hard. A knife, he realized. The same
|
|
bloody paring knife he'd killed Morgaine with. And if he struck now,
|
|
while Roland had not noticed\ldots{} And still he balked. Roland
|
|
noticed.
|
|
|
|
``A pushover to the end,'' Roland sneered.
|
|
|
|
He ripped out the knife from Olivier's grip and tossed it behind him.
|
|
The older brother closed his eyes and desperately reached for the bundle
|
|
within him, the Talent, but there was something missing. He could not
|
|
touch it, could not understand \emph{how}. He was thrown down against
|
|
the table again, head rapping against the wood, and his vision swam as
|
|
he felt a hand close around his throat. There was a gasp, and the hand
|
|
trembled as it loosened. Olivier kicked his brother away, gulping air
|
|
desperately, and as his vision came back he found that Roland's mouth
|
|
was open in a silent moan.
|
|
|
|
Alisanne Lassier, standing tall and cold-eyed, stabbed the paring knife
|
|
in his brother's lungs a second time.
|
|
|
|
The death was startlingly quick. A few heartbeats was all it took before
|
|
Roland slumped to the ground, first on his knees and then all the way
|
|
down as the light left his eyes. Olivier found he could not look away,
|
|
and that though Alisanne was speaking he could not seem to hear her
|
|
words. It was as if the whole world had gone still and silent and dark,
|
|
save for the sight of his brother's face in a growing pool of blood.
|
|
Someone was touching him, he realized.
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``- are you all right?'' Alisanne said. ``Did he hurt you?''
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Olivier blinked, as if waking up from a deep sleep.
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``No,'' he said, touching his throat and wincing at the bruising, ``He
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didn't -- I'm all right.''
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``We need to leave this place, Olivier,'' Alisanne told him, tone gentle
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but urgent. ``We don't know if anyone else was helping him.''
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``We can't leave,'' Olivier tiredly replied. ``Not when it's like
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this.''
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She looked askance at him, wary and confused.
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``It can't have been them,'' Olivier said, hesitating. ``It has to be
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me, Allie. It can't have been them, or everyone will pay.''
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``You're not making any sense,'' Alisanne slowly said. ``You're in
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shock, Olivier. We need to \emph{leave}.''
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Lies wouldn't be enough. Magic could, if it was the right kind, and
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|
Olivier had read the books. He knew the principles. Yet that perfect
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|
sphere he could so easily imagine -- so easily he was not certain it was
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imagination at all -- seemed beyond his reach. There was power there,
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|
but he could not use it. Frustration mounted in him. What had been the
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|
point, if he couldn't do any good with this? If he couldn't use his
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|
talent to do anything but subtract from the world? He had to be able to
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|
\textbf{use} it, or so many people would suffer for the madness of so
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few.
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|
The world shivered.
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\emph{Oh}. It couldn't be about him, could it? It couldn't be selfish.
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|
There had to be a purpose. Thinking of what would come to pass, Olivier
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|
reached out for the sphere within himself and gathered the slightest
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|
lick of power. One of the easiest tricks of any mage was the making of
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|
fire, he'd heard. And as Olivier raised his palm a small trail of flame
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|
grew on it, though he snuffed it out even as Alisanne let out a loud
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|
gasp and stepped away.
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|
``You're a mage?'' she asked.
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No, Olivier thought. Not even now that he had magic.
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``I am a charlatan,'' he bitterly smiled.
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|
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|
He reached for the power again, and it came more easily this time. Even
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|
with his eyes closed to concentrate, it took him three times to
|
|
successfully weave the illusion. He watched comprehension dawn in her
|
|
grey eyes, watched the horror rise.
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|
``No,'' Alisanne quietly said. ``No, \emph{please}. Olivier, don't do
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|
this. Don't take his face.''
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|
``Olivier de Beaumarais died,'' he replied. ``Slain along Lady Morgaine
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|
by the Praesi warlock who raised the dead and set them on the town and
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|
tower. He will be buried here.''
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|
Roland's body could fill the grave.
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``Roland de Beaumarais heroically drove back the Praesi but failed to
|
|
kill him, and now pursues him to avenge his brother,'' he continued.
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|
``He wills all his possessions to Alisanne Lassier, to dispose of as she
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|
sees fit, as he will never return to Beaumarais.''
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|
The deception would not hold, were he forced to uphold it around people
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|
who'd known them both. Illusions could only do so much.
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|
``And when authorities seek out Roland to interrogate him?'' Alisanna
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|
asks.
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|
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|
``He will not deign to be found,'' the man who was now Roland de
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|
Beaumarais sadly smiled, ``What do the wishes of men matter, to a rogue
|
|
sorcerer?''
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