692 lines
31 KiB
TeX
692 lines
31 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-73-signs}{%
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\section{Chapter 73: Signs}\label{chapter-73-signs}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{There's nothing impressive about oracles, Chancellor. All that's
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needed to foretell the future is a fool and a tiger pit.''}
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-- Dread Emperor Malignant III
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\end{quote}
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I'd never seen Vivienne in armour before.
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Mind you, she wasn't exactly barded for war and wearing full plate.
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She'd put on a blue riding dress, then accentuated that with a good
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steel breastplate topped by matching spaulders and a loose gorget. She'd
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not bothered with a tasset to cover thighs, preferring only a broad
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belt, and the lack of greaves and gauntlets softened the look. It was a
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good choice, I'd decided. Playing the warrior queen outright would not
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have suited her, but a martial touch that added to her increasingly
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regal manners would toe the line just right. It was a reminder that she
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might not be a soldier, but that she'd ridden out some of the worst
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scraps the Woe had ever been in without being dead weight. Considering
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Vivienne had spent most of her adult life wearing loose leathers and
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treading rooftops without ever developing an interest in fashion that
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I'd noticed, I could only praise whoever it was in her service that'd
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made the suggestion.
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``Too much?'' Vivienne asked, taking off her riding gloves.
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Dry as the tone had been, I suspected that the slight undertone of
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abashment I'd picked up there wasn't just me looking for pearls in a
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pigsty.
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``It suits,'' I replied, shaking my head. ``And I notice you made sure
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you'd be able to fight if you had to.''
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The riding dress wouldn't mess up her footing too much, and she was a
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nimble one even without a Name to heighten the talent. I did not hide my
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approbation. There was no call to ever feel safe north of Salia, no
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matter what we liked to pretend.
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``It's the classic Summerholm cut,'' she told me, sounding amused at my
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ignorance.
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I snorted. Yeah, if there was one city in Callow where there'd it's be a
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fashion staple to be able to fight in your dress it'd be the Gate of the
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East. I probably would have had to learn about this stuff if I'd ever
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held a proper court, with all the attached feasts and festivals and
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formal receptions that involved, but my kingdom had half on fire and on
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permanent war footing from pretty much the moment the crown was set on
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my brow. Mind, you as the daughter of a minor baron who'd held the title
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mostly in name since the Conquest it wasn't like Vivienne would have
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been swimming in new dresses. It'd been a wealthy of upbringing, but
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that wealth had begun dwindling before she was ever born and the noble
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title had, as determined by Tower law after the Conquest, died with her
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father. There was a reason I'd had to raise her back to the formal
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Callowan peerage.
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Black had preferred leaving my people's nobility to wither on the vine
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with their titles intact rather than strip those outright, you see. It
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was less likely to lead to conspiracies, with all those suddenly
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landless knights and barons instead worrying about how they were going
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to pay for the upkeep of those mansions my father had so
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\emph{mercifully} left them to own.
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``The cloak goes with everything,'' I shrugged. ``What more do I need to
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know?''
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``I still remember when you avoided wearing black like the plague,''
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Vivienne smiled. ``How the times have changed.''
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I grimaced, as this was a bit of a sore spot. I'd gotten used to the
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darker colours, in truth, but I did still have the occasional craving
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for a pretty sundress or a tunic in a tone you'd seen on a rainbow
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that'd not been cursed by some fucking warlock. The trouble was that the
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`Black Queen' couldn't be seen wearing those things, it'd take a bite
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into a reputation that'd come in too useful too many times for me to be
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able to justify wearing a dress that'd not been rolled in a barrel of
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soot beforehand.
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``When I retire,'' I told her feelingly, ``I will wear nothing but
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pastels for a year. I solemnly swear.''
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``I'll look forward to the Mirror Knight expounding on how the pink
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dress is really a hint of your many perfidies to come,'' she snickered.
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We shared a moment of quiet amusement at the thought. I'd seen precious
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little of ol' Christophe, as it happened. The White Knight had not been
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softhanded in making it clear that he'd disgraced himself, which had
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seen his popularity dry out some. Even those who would have been
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inclined to still lean his way had been kept away by the neat trick of
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there being no one really willing to argue with the Peregrine when he
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told you to go away. Tariq was proving a finer check on the Mirror
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Knight than I'd anticipated, though I still had to wonder if even the
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Grey Pilgrim was going to be enough to set that man straight. The
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chuckles faded, though, and I did not resume banter. It was Vivs here,
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not an officer or a ally, so I didn't bother with subtlety.
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``Why are you here, Vivienne?'' I bluntly asked.
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``Always a pleasure to see you too, Catherine,'' she replied.
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The way she tucked in that perfectly fine milkmaid's braid told me that,
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once more, she was a little more nervous than her tone and face would
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imply.
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``Don't give me that,'' I dismissed. ``You know well that the only
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reason I could even spare you from your duties in Salia was because we
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need you with some battle honours to your name before you succeed me.
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I'm happy to see you, Vivs, but we're not really in a time and place
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where happy's what takes the day.''
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``I know,'' she admitted with a grimace. ``And the truth is, my reasons
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for coming are thinner than I'd like. I take it this is just going to be
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the two of us?''
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She gestured at the solar around us, situated in the same guildhall that
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Robber had found me hours earlier. Adjutant had accurately deduced that
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I'd want this solar -- nice windows but not too large, sun-facing and
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with room enough inside for multiple desks and chairs -- for my own and
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made warding it with our usual suite of protection a priority. He was
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still arranging the last details for the rest of my new lodgings and
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headquarters, but he'd be on his way soon.
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``Hakram's coming as soon as he can,'' I told her. ``Zeze's got duties
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for a while still, and I left word for Indrani but I've no idea where
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she is in the city.''
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Hunting for undead, I suspected. It was all a little too cat and mouse
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for my own tastes, but Archer had always liked a hunt and Keter's last
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infiltrators made for interesting -- if not overly dangerous to a Named
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-- quarry.
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``I was asking whether you wanted to bring in allied commanders,
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actually,'' Vivienne said, ``but I suppose you answered the question
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regardless.''
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I shrugged. I wasn't going to keep anything from them unless there was a
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call for it but I felt no need to include them into what was, on the
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surface, a purely Callowan matter. Both the Fourth Army and Vivienne
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herself were of my lot, it was to myself they answered first and
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foremost. Being in the room for this conversation was not a courtesy I
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felt I owed them.
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``You were meant to command the troops at the defensive line down
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south,'' I noted. ``If General Abigail did take the Cigelin Sisters-''
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``She did,'' Vivienne confirmed. ``It was a rout. The Tyrant's Own under
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General Pallas baited the dead out of the defences with a feigned
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retreat, and when the battle was engaged the fantassins under her
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command found a way through the hills the dead hadn't. They were struck
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in the sides as well, and their lines collapsed. Some five thousand
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withdrew, and the relief force the Dead King sent decided not to risk
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taking back the Sisters from her.''
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Huh, fancy that. My nervy little general had come through once more. I'd
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expected a victory out of her, but this was more decisive than I'd
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anticipated.
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``Good, then we should be establishing contact soon,'' I grunted.
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``Doesn't explain why you're here and not commanding the Deoraithe and
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levies that we funnelled up to hold the defensive line.''
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The Daoine troops I trusted to handle themselves, but Proceran levies
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had a nasty tendency to run when things got rough. Wasn't some deep
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moral flaw, even if some of my soldiers like to pretend otherwise, but
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more or less what you should expect when you put a spear in a
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shoemaker's hands and told him to fight something like beorn.
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``The Augur believed that if I was not here by the moon's turn, and the
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Fourth with me, then Procer would fall within the year,'' Vivienne
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bluntly said. ``The Astrologer wasn't quite so sure, but she agreed that
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the storm about to come for Hainaut is going to be a horror and the
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signs are largely against us.''
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``The Augur can't see the Dead King,'' I pointed out. ``Or myself, for
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that matter.''
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She could also be outmanoeuvered, as Black had proved during his
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ill-advised Proceran campaign. Her long-term predictions tended to be
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vague and her shot-term ones only mattered when they got where they
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needed to be in time for them to be useful.
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``The First Prince saw fit to reveal that the Augur been working with
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the Forgetful Librarian to find a way around her blind spots,'' Vivienne
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said. ``It's a process of elimination, or at least Hasenbach hinted as
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much. Every time I'm not here before the whiteout, after it the Hainaut
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front collapses.''
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I frowned.
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``The whiteout?''
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``All our prophets encountered something similar,'' Vivienne said.
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``Trying to peer into what happens during the coming battle here is
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somehow blinding for oracles. They've theorized it's because there are
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too many entities involved who resist or outright muddle foretelling.''
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Huh. I supposed we had gathered a significant amount of Named, which
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would pretty much twist Fate into a knot. On top of that there were
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Choirs involved -- at least Mercy, possibly Judgement if it triumphed
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over the Hierarch at a critical moment -- here on the Dead King and my
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own's ability to screw with predictions. That was a lot of moving parts
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for a mortal oracle, maybe more than they would be able to physically
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comprehend all at once.
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``The Astrologer insists that the stars indicate the Gigantes will be
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critical in what is to come,'' Vivienne added, ``but that one might be
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muddled. She's also sure they'll be crucial to something in Twilight's
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Pass, and there's barely any of them there.''
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I cocked an eyebrow.
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``I wasn't aware there were any at all,'' I said.
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``Hasenbach wrangled further concessions out of them through the
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Dominion,'' Vivienne said. ``She had to first get the Highest Assembly
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to vote a formal apology to the Titanomachy for the Humbling of Titans,
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though, which cost her some support in the south. Among her prizes is
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that the Gigantes sent a group to fortify the Morgentor, with an eye to
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doing the same to the rest of the fortresses in the pass.''
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Well worth some Arlesite grumbling, in my opinion, but then I wasn't the
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one that had to keep the shitshow known as the Highest Assembly in a
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semblance of functioning order. Somehow I suspected that if we'd not
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cooperated to let that same Assembly try the Red Axe for attempted
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regicide Hasenbach would have had a harder time getting that vote
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passed. It was easier to get princes to bend their proud necks when
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you'd proved you were willing to cross Named to protect their lives.
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``We do have Gigantes in the city,'' I said, ``mind you, at the moment
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they should-''
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The air shuddered, and for a moment it was as if all the world had gone
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still. As if I was a fly caught in amber, as if all the empty spaces of
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Creation had chillingly filled. And when that power released me, as
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primordially indifferent as the wave that could guide the sailor ashore
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or drown him, I found myself gasping as I leaned against the table.
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Vivienne was looking at me in a panic, already on her feet.
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``Cat, are you all right?'' she asked, taking my arm and supporting me.
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I closed my eyes, focusing on breathing in and out. The urge to empty my
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stomach passed.
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``I'm fine,'' I got out.
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``You're not \emph{fine},'' Vivienne bit back angrily.
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I gently pushed her away, still leaning against the table slightly.
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``I'm not being stubborn, it passed,'' I said. ``And it won't happen
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again.''
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Blue-grey eyes examined me, as if looking for a lie.
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``You didn't feel that?'' I asked her.
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Slowly she shook her hand.
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``Feel what?''
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``I'm guessing,'' I sighed, ``that was my first taste of what Gigantes
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spellsinging feels like for someone\ldots{} attuned to the parts of
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Creation I am.''
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``Bad?'' Vivienne quietly asked.
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``What the Witch of the Woods does is a pale imitation,'' I ruefully
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said. ``They tap into something larger, Vivienne. It was like standing
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next to Sve Noc if they were losing their temper, but less\ldots{}
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targeted.''
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Masego has once called the godhead a trick of perspective, as the
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Hierophant's eyes had always seen further than those of other men. I'd
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once \emph{been} such a trick, when I had scavenged my way to rule over
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Winter, but it'd been blind flailing. It was not without reason that the
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Dead King had described my apotheosis as `accidental' when we'd first
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met in Keter. These days I could touch those deeper rules on occasion,
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as I had at the Second Battle of Lauzon's Hollow, but my understanding
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was limited and the use was rough on me. What the Gigantes had just done
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-- and it must be them, for no one else in the city should be capable of
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this -- had\ldots{} ridden such rules, for lack of a better term. Like a
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ship on the tide, using the sea without mastering it. It was not they
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way I did it at all, but that I had the capacity in the first place must
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have been enough to make me\ldots{} sensitive.
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Hierophant would have been as well, I figured, but no one else in
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Hainaut.
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``I'll be ready next time,'' I told Vivienne. ``It was the surprise that
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left me vulnerable.''
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Like a sucker punch in the gut, though they'd probably not meant it to
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be.
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``Perhaps they could be prevailed upon to give warning, next time,'' she
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mildly said.
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``Yeah, I'll ask the White Knight to pass the request along,'' I softly
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laughed. ``Shit, it's been a while since something took me this badly by
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surprise.''
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An overdue reminder, perhaps. It was a big world, and I'd not seen all
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there was to see in even my little corner of it. We resumed the
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conversation until Hakram joined us, but there really wasn't much to add
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to what she'd already said. Vivienne had come to the capital with the
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Fourth largely on the word of the Augur and the Astrologer, and though
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she had freshers news than we about the going-ons in the south she
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truthfully didn't have much to add. She was just as lost as we were,
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only now in addition to our uncertainties about the defence of Hainaut
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there was a hanging sword above our head to remind us that oracles were
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pretty sure if we lost here the entire war was lost. Lovely.
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At least we had Vivienne with us, so even at the bottom of this freshly
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dug pit things were looking up.
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---
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There was need for a war council, as there so often was these days, but
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we went about it briskly. General Bagram, a large and aging orc who'd
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been the right hand of Juniper's mother for decades before becoming a
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general in his own right under the Army of Callow, was added to that
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ever-expanding roster of people with a seat at the table along with my
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designated heiress, Lady Vivienne Dartwick. Discussions were without
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frills, as we all felt the invisible noose of Keter's advance tightening
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around our necks, and there were few arguments. Given the very real
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possibility that we were going to lose either the gates or the walls at
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some point, Princess Beatrice gave formal permission to my sappers to
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prepare the streets to repel invasion. Pickler was still busy replacing
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the Ivory Gates, but no doubt she'd be delighted when informed.
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Quartering was revised to accommodate the addition of the Fourth Army,
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which had blessedly come with an overfill of supplies that'd allow us to
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avoid rationing before the first supply wagons arrived through the Ways.
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I'd been right twofold, as it turned out: it'd been the Gigantes that
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had startled me, and the gate they'd helped the Blessed Artificer make
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was already technically finished. It was recommended it still go unused
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until dark, though, as apparently the parts where they had \emph{melted}
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the veil between the Twilight Ways and Creation were still `cooling
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off'. Fucking Hells, the more I learned about Ligurian sorcery the more
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it fucking terrified me. And Triumphant had gone toe to toe with those
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people at their peak? Gods, what an utter monster that one must have
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been.
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By sundown we all left the palace that Beatrice Volignac seemed so
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deeply happy to have reclaimed, most of the practicalities of our
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defence hammered out into a working shape. It was the Pilgrim and the
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White Knight who reached out to me afterwards, though, to arrange a
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formal council of Named as well.
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``It can be considered a given that every Revenant in the principality,
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including the Scourges, is now headed our way,'' Tariq said. ``We need
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to prepare accordingly.''
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``Agreed,'' I said. ``We need to divide our people into bands. And more
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importantly-''
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``Your insistence that a band of five needs to be sent after the bridge
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immediately,'' Hanno frowned. ``Yes, I was told of it.''
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``A heroic band of five,'' I said. ``Given the steep odds and how it'll
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be impossible to really prepare, it's the only setup with a chance of
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getting it done. And if Tariq told you about that, then he told you I'd
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like for you to lead it.''
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It'd be a loss, because the White Knight took to most Revenants like a
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sickle to wheat, but I had doubts about any band led by a lesser hero
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succeeding. The Grey Pilgrim might make it as well, maybe, but Tariq
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always shone most when he was in a supporting role and that would muddle
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things up some.
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``To clarify,'' the White Knight mildly said, ``on the eve of a battle
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prophesized to be decisive for this entire war, you request that I
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\emph{leave}.''
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``Yes,'' I bluntly said, ``and the Witch as well, you'll need her.''
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A light touch on my arm interrupted me, and I turned to find Vivienne
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cocking an eyebrow.
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``I will leave the three of you to your conversation,'' she easily said,
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``but if I might make a suggestion?''
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She gestured at our surroundings, namely the now dead gardens leading up
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to the front gates of the Volignac family palace.
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``There are perhaps more appropriate venues for you all to talk,''
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Vivienne finished.
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``Common sense,'' Tariq ruefully murmured. ``Such a rare, precious
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thing. My thanks, Lady Dartwick.''
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``I still feel the urge to take to rooftops on moonlit nights,'' she
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replied, ``so do not bestow upon me a surfeit of honours, Peregrine.
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Lord White, Catherine, a pleasant evening to you.''
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Hanno returned the courtesy, while I cocked an eyebrow at her. She had a
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deft hand with heroes, as she'd just reminded me. I sometimes forgot
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she'd been part of William's band, back in the day, and had been a
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decent fit there from what little I knew. Heroes tended to be split
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between those who considered her a fallen heroine, just punished by
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Above in the form of losing her Name, or those who essentially
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considered her a retired heroine who'd embraced other duties. Tariq
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tended to lean that way, though I'd never quite been able to pin down
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Hanno on the subject.
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``I'll see you later,'' I told her. ``It's been too long.''
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``Agreed,'' she feelingly replied. ``I'll try to see if I can rustle up
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Indrani from whatever winesink she'll have stumbled into by now.''
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``Don't bribe her with my liquor cabinet this time,'' I warned, ``it's
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impossible to get the good stuff this far out, and\ldots{}''
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I suddenly coughed, feeling the distinctly amused gazes of two of the
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most prominent heroes of the age as I argued with the heiress to Callow
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about the fate of my booze stash.
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``Carry on,'' I said, vainly trying to claw back a bit of gravitas.
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It, er, might take a while. Vivienne took her leave and I went for a
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walk through a garden of dead things with the Pilgrim and the Knight. To
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my surprise, I found the sight oddly troubling. I'd thought myself well
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acquainted with death, for how could I not be? I'd waded through it on
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too many battlefields to count, and thrice I'd come close to staying in
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those cold arms forever. I'd deal it out and suffered it, used it as a
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tool and flinched from it. If my throne had been set upon a foundation
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of anything, death was it. And still, limping through the garden, some
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part of me was dismayed. It was all dead. Ever tree gone grey, ever
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flower wilted every blade of grass frayed. Black earth had gone fallow,
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covered by dead leaves and insects forever still. This wasn't the coming
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|
of winter or even some black tragedy. Intent had done this. Thorough,
|
|
patient intent to kill every living thing there was to kill.
|
|
|
|
There was bare, graven beauty to the garden that felt like a knot in my
|
|
throat. Was this the world the Dead King wanted? A field of grey from
|
|
shore to shore, so utterly barren that even the sea grew lifeless
|
|
lapping at it. I forced myself to set aside the thought. Stroking the
|
|
thought of failure instead of tending to the needs of the moment was as
|
|
good a way to see them turn true as any.
|
|
|
|
``It has to be you,'' I said, standing in the shade of a leafless tree.
|
|
|
|
``I am not certain we need to send a band at all,'' the White Knight
|
|
calmly replied. ``It would strip the defence of much-needed strength,
|
|
and there will be time enough to attend the bridge after victory is
|
|
secured here.''
|
|
|
|
``If victory is secured here,'' I pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``In this, I believe the Black Queen to be correct,'' the Grey Pilgrim
|
|
said. ``We should not bet the fate of all Calernia on our ability to win
|
|
in battle against the hordes of Keter. It would be dangerously
|
|
irresponsible.''
|
|
|
|
I nodded in appreciation at the old man's words. Not that he was
|
|
speaking them for my sake -- Tariq had never been shy about disagreeing
|
|
with me on anything at all, to my occasional displeasure.
|
|
|
|
``It weakens our ability to win that battle to send Named away,'' Hanno
|
|
flatly said. ``In particular fighters as apt as Queen Catherine seems
|
|
intent on assigning, in all humility.''
|
|
|
|
``Smashing that bridge isn't going to be a pleasant autumn stroll,
|
|
White,'' I said. ``I mentioned you and the Witch of the Woods because
|
|
the job needs a captain and the power to collapse a bridge. To add
|
|
survivability, I'd throw in the Forsworn Healer and pack the rest of the
|
|
five with one set of muscles and a specialized killer.''
|
|
|
|
The kind that'd be able to kill something that couldn't be killed
|
|
conventionally, like the Painted Knife or the Rogue Sorcerer.
|
|
|
|
``There I must disagree,'' Tariq said. ``Not with the necessity of
|
|
power, but with the White Knight's presence being required. His role
|
|
would be better suited to a situation like the approaching battle.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Fuck}, I silently thought. Part of me wanted to get snippy that
|
|
the Heavens got to have two people around for this talk, but honesty
|
|
compelled me to admit that there really wasn't anyone else who would
|
|
have made a difference. Hanno took advice from many parts, but it was my
|
|
understanding that people who could make him actually reconsider a
|
|
decision were few. The Pilgrim was as close to a peer as I'd be able to
|
|
rustle up in Hainaut.
|
|
|
|
``You genuinely believe in the wisdom of thinning our forces before a
|
|
major engagement?'' Hanno asked Tariq, frowning.
|
|
|
|
``Empty prayers birth no miracles,'' the Grey Pilgrim replied.
|
|
|
|
I cocked my head to the side. Huh. Yeah, that was solid namelore even if
|
|
he was coming at it from the other way. He meant, I gathered, that for a
|
|
prayer to be answered it would need to be sincere. In this case, that
|
|
meant sending Named even when it would be costly. Black would have
|
|
phrased it more along the lines of Creation being a machine that gave
|
|
out according to what you gave it, while I myself preferred to think of
|
|
it in terms of weight: you couldn't topple a wall with a pebble. If you
|
|
wanted a trebuchet stone, you needed to use a trebuchet in the first
|
|
place.
|
|
|
|
``That only reinforces that we \emph{do} need to send him,'' I insisted.
|
|
``We can't half-ass this, it'll backfire on us.''
|
|
|
|
``This isn't a ritual field and we're not bleeding prisoners to make a
|
|
tower fly, Your Majesty,'' the Pilgrim flatly replied. ``There is no
|
|
need to open our own throats to make this work.''
|
|
|
|
I bit out the very unflattering answer I had on the tip of my tongue, as
|
|
I was pretty sure he knew the Kharsum words for both mother and goat.
|
|
|
|
``I remain unconvinced this should be attempted at all,'' the White
|
|
Knight said, frown deepening, ``but when the two of you are in agreement
|
|
you are rarely incorrect. I'll concede to sending a band, and a heroic
|
|
one.''
|
|
|
|
That was a start.
|
|
|
|
``I appreciate that,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``But I am horrendously wrong, and you must now tell me why,'' Hanno
|
|
drily replied, and I remembered why I liked him in the first place.
|
|
|
|
``I wouldn't go quite that far,'' I said, since the truthteller couldn't
|
|
read me. ``Look, I've seen you ride this horse before. Picking out traps
|
|
with the Fortunate Fool, picking fights specifically because they put
|
|
you at a disadvantage.''
|
|
|
|
``Heroes placed in situations where it is possible but unlikely for them
|
|
to triumph buck the odds more than they should,'' Hanno agreed. ``It is
|
|
the way of stories, and stories have power.''
|
|
|
|
``But that's the thing,'' I said, ``in those stories, you don't send
|
|
some nobody to kill the dragon and win the princess' hand. Sure the guy
|
|
\emph{seems} like a nobody, but we know he's not because the story is
|
|
about him. He's really a prince, or a knight, or fated in some way.''
|
|
|
|
``Your argument is that we must look for a specific manner of fate,
|
|
then?'' Hanno curiously asked,
|
|
|
|
``No,'' the Grey Pilgrim quietly said. ``It is that the dragon's lair is
|
|
full of skeletons whose mishap was being\ldots{} insufficiently fated,
|
|
yes?''
|
|
|
|
``Weight,'' I said. ``See, the bridge looks wide open right now: all
|
|
armies are accounted for and far, we know where it's being built and
|
|
where most of the Scourges are. But it won't actually be open.''
|
|
|
|
They were both looking at me like was belabouring something very
|
|
obvious, which I supposed for heroes I was. Villain lairs were always
|
|
trapped and vicious, while heroes didn't really \emph{have} those.
|
|
|
|
``So there's going to be a fight,'' I continued. ``Which you figure you
|
|
can win sending some solid heroes while keeping here our finest. That's
|
|
a mistake, though, because that bridge is something that could lose us
|
|
this entire war. It's the reason we began this campaign in the first
|
|
place.''
|
|
|
|
Hanno's eyes narrowed.
|
|
|
|
``Weight,'' he repeated. ``You imply that if we do not send shoulders
|
|
capable of bearing the burden of this entire campaign, all they will be
|
|
is\ldots{} skeletons in a dragon lair.''
|
|
|
|
``I do,'' I said. ``And that means it has to be you. Because pretty much
|
|
the only other person in your camp with that kind of pull on the war is
|
|
the Grey Pilgrim, and no offence Tariq but-''
|
|
|
|
``No, I agree I would be ill-suited to the task,'' the Pilgrim murmured.
|
|
``Perhaps if Laurence was still with us it would have been different,
|
|
two of us ancients with three younger, but as things stand the forces
|
|
within the band would not be in harmony.''
|
|
|
|
``So you agree,'' I pressed.
|
|
|
|
``I don't,'' Tariq replied. ``You see this weight as a scale that must
|
|
evened, when instead it should be seen as a crucible to help the rise of
|
|
another great character. We should be discussing who among the servants
|
|
of Above in the city could benefit from this opportunity, not
|
|
entertaining sending away the White Knight before a pivotal point of a
|
|
crusade.''
|
|
|
|
Godsdamned heroes. There was a point where optimism became delusion, and
|
|
thinking every test was some sort of ladder was well past it. Sometimes
|
|
you just \emph{failed}, because you hadn't been prepared enough and
|
|
you'd underestimated the foe.
|
|
|
|
``This isn't a fucking crusade, Tariq,'' I said, exasperated. ``I know
|
|
it's more comfortable for you to think about it that way, but my side of
|
|
the fence is here too and \emph{we count}. The role of a White Knight
|
|
isn't the same it would be in-''
|
|
|
|
``Enough,'' Hanno said. ``I understand the need for a swift decision,
|
|
but I will not let myself be strongarmed before considering this
|
|
properly.''
|
|
|
|
``We can't afford to wait long,'' I bluntly said.
|
|
|
|
``The discussion can be resumed tomorrow, after our council of Named,''
|
|
the White Knight said. ``I will sleep on this, at the very least, and
|
|
consult with others I trust.''
|
|
|
|
Not what I'd wanted to hear, but I could already see that pushing any
|
|
further now would just burn goodwill for no gain. I suppressed a wince,
|
|
looking back on how I'd gotten drawn into an argument about `the role of
|
|
a White Knight' with the Pilgrim while said White Knight was right in
|
|
front of me. Hanno was remarkably even-keeled, but that probably hadn't
|
|
done me any favours. It'd been a mistake, too, since the man I actually
|
|
needed to convince hadn't been the one I was arguing with. I snuck a
|
|
look at Tariq. Had that been on purpose? Getting my thoughts out so the
|
|
White Knight could see them splayed out without having been drawn into
|
|
the thick of it.
|
|
|
|
``By all means,'' I said. ``We can continue this when everyone's
|
|
rested.''
|
|
|
|
``A good evening to you, then,'' Hanno said, inclining his head,
|
|
|
|
I returned it, and he bade a significantly less formal goodbye to the
|
|
Pilgrim. Who stayed behind, as I'd hoped he would. The two of us
|
|
continued the walk towards the opposite end of the garden, his slow gait
|
|
and my limp evenly matched. Neither of us pretended this was about
|
|
anything but continuing the conversation that'd just abruptly ended.
|
|
|
|
``He is in a pivotal moment of his journey as one of the Bestowed, Queen
|
|
Catherine,'' Tariq said. ``Sending him away from the battle could have
|
|
deleterious effects.''
|
|
|
|
``Or it could be exactly what he needs, Pilgrim,'' I replied. ``We don't
|
|
\emph{know}, either way.''
|
|
|
|
``His own leanings-''
|
|
|
|
``Are a consequence of his character, not some arcane working of fate,''
|
|
I bluntly interrupted. ``If he had some instinct niggling at him that
|
|
this was a mistake I'd reconsider, but he argued based on logic. He
|
|
thinks his place is here in the thick of it, herding heroes, so that's
|
|
where he figures he should be.''
|
|
|
|
``Because that \emph{is} his place,'' Tariq just as bluntly replied.
|
|
``He is the White Knight, and the hordes of Evil has come.''
|
|
|
|
``Maybe that was true a century ago,'' I said, ``but you gave me a whole
|
|
speech about how he has to find a new way, Peregrine. What you're
|
|
describing is more of the same.''
|
|
|
|
``This new way you argue for is also \emph{your} way, Black Queen,'' the
|
|
old man said. ``Not his. If this were his own notion I too would
|
|
reconsider, but it is not.''
|
|
|
|
I grimaced. Yeah, I could see that from his perspective this was
|
|
meddling on my part.
|
|
|
|
``It's a strategic decision I'm pushing, not a personal or even a story
|
|
one beyond my understanding of forces that need to be addressed for the
|
|
operation to be a success,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
It wasn't exactly an apology or a justification, but it flirted enough
|
|
with both he should be able to understand I wasn't unaware of where I
|
|
was treading.
|
|
|
|
``I believe you to be acting in good faith,'' the Pilgrim acknowledged,
|
|
``but that does not mean it would not lead to error.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out.
|
|
|
|
``All right,'' I said. ``Then I'll back off and stop pushing, if you do
|
|
the same.''
|
|
|
|
He cocked an eyebrow, clearly less than inclined to agree. I clenched my
|
|
fingers, then unclenched them. I was going to have to pay for the goods.
|
|
|
|
``I'm calling in my favour,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
I'd not agreed to keep an eye out for Razin and Aquiline without putting
|
|
a price on it. The old man's face remained calm, but he studied me for a
|
|
long moment.
|
|
|
|
``I will not argue for something I believe to be a mistake,'' Tariq
|
|
Fleetfoot said.
|
|
|
|
``I'm only bargaining for silence,'' I replied.
|
|
|
|
He didn't look happy about it, but then favours weren't supposed to be
|
|
things you were inclined to give in the first place.
|
|
|
|
``Then the bargain is struck,'' the Grey Pilgrim reluctantly said.
|
|
|
|
We shook on it, wrists clasped, and broke off the grip as we reached the
|
|
end of the path.
|
|
|
|
Leaving the garden of death behind, we went into the city and instead
|
|
saw to the living.
|