660 lines
29 KiB
TeX
660 lines
29 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-78-keters-due}{%
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\section{Chapter 78: Keter's Due}\label{chapter-78-keters-due}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``The parity of light and darkness is a false perception. Light is
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transgressive, an imposition on the natural order, and so will always
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spend itself into nothingness. Be as the dark and you will be beyond
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struggle, ever returning when the flames die out.''}
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-- Translation of the Kabbalis Book of Darkness, widely attributed to
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the young Dead King
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\end{quote}
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The turn of the year had begun with a boy I'd thought I might save, and
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then a hard lesson remembered to me by the Dead King. That this was not
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a war as I had known wars before, that there would be no miracles or
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saving graces to this ugly, brutal, exhausting struggle to the death we
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were having. I thought of that night again, as I watched stars fall on
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the city of Hainaut, and the lesson echoed once more: sometimes we just
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lost.
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Masego's spell was little more than a window between Twilight and
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Creation, but what it showed was\ldots{} I knew the forces at work, but
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still the sight caused me in me a sort of primal awe. The meteors,
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shards of a broken star, were massive. The first that struck toppled
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half the city in a streak of dust and white flame, scouring it clean of
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life, but the rain did not end there. Again and again the capital and
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the valley around it were struck until there was nothing there but
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barren glass, and still in the distance stars fell. How much of Hainaut
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had been scoured in the span of a few moments, I wondered?
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It'd not been undead alone that'd still been in the city when the star
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fell. The Fourth Army was gone, as were most of the Hannoven men and the
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Prince of Bayeux's army. Almost all of the Alavan troops had been lost
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as well, since they'd served as the Dominion rearguard, and at least
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half the Firstborn with them. It had been a cruel defeat before the
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Pilgrim began his last hurrah, but after the star had struck the results
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could only be called disastrous. Not a single army in fighting shape had
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made it out of Hainaut except maybe the Neustrians, and they'd just lost
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their princess.
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I couldn't even blame the Pilgrim for when he had begun to call down the
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wrath of the Heavens, he'd not had any choice. There would be no repeat
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of the sacrifices -- my heart clenched, my nails dug into my palms --
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that had bought him that opening, and risking a longer wait might have
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made it all worthless. He'd done what he could and turned this into a
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disaster for both sides at least. The Dead King, for all that he was the
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victor of the field, did not have an army left in all of Hainaut. The
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meteors had seen to that. Much as I itched to blame Tariq for what I'd
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lost tonight, it would have rung hollow to try it when he'd died trying
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to save all of Calernia.
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And he had, Gods forgive me. If we'd simply evacuated, fled back to our
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defensive lines, then the simple amount of corpses swelling Neshamah's
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ranks would have been enough to overwhelm us to the south after we
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retreated there to lick our wounds. And once the Dead King pierced into
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Procer, got his hands on cities and teeming masses of refugees, then it
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was all over. The Peregrine had averted that doom for us all, and I held
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that truth close as I watched the pieces of a dead star rain own on
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Creation.
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``Some of the Scourges will have made it out,'' Indrani quietly said.
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``The Hawk for sure, maybe the Prince of Bones as well.''
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``The Grey Legion's good as gone,'' I replied, forcefully calm. ``That,
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at least, is a gain.''
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There had been few enough of those tonight that I would the find silver
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linings where I could.
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``The Crab is destroyed as well,'' Masego noted. ``Though it likely was
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in a practical sense even before the meteor struck it, given the amount
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of goblinfire burning within.''
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My fingers clenched. Blood dripped down from my palm onto the soft
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grass.
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``It was a good way to go,'' Archer murmured. ``They will sing songs of
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him, Catherine.''
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\emph{I would rather they didn't,} I thought\emph{, so that I might hear
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him sing again instead.} But I'd known deep down that Robber would find
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his worthy death on some battlefield or another. He'd been looking for
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years, trying ever starker odds against ever sharper foes. \emph{You
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would have hated peace}, I thought. \emph{Despised it to the bone.} A
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long silence trundled along, the only sound that of our steady breaths.
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My cheek clenched in frustration as I tried and failed to blink an eye I
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no longer had.
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``It will end soon,'' Hierophant said. ``The power is spent.''
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I nodded. The pale streaks were waning, growing rarer. Even the might of
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the Choir of Mercy anchored on the death of a great man was not a force
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without limit.
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``Your officers want to speak with you,'' Indrani reminded me.
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``They can wait,'' I said.
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General Bagram was dead. Vivienne has saved his life from the Varlet
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only him to die trying to rally the Fourth mere hours later. General
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Zola was now in overall command of my remaining soldiers, something
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eased by the hard truth that aside from the remains of the Second I had
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few of those left. Later I would speak to her, but for now I saw no
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point. Indrani brushed a hand against my arm, startling me as I'd not
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seen her coming. I had blind spots now, I reminded myself. I'd need to
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learn to compensate for them. I shook away the touch, even if it was
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meant in comfort. Archer knew me well enough not to take it badly. She
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left me to the way I had always preferred to handle my grief: alone. Her
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footsteps were soft against the grass as she left.
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Masego stayed, but his eyes were on the vista revealed by his spell.
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He'd always been the most accommodating of my friends when it came to
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sharing solitude. It made him the easiest to be around when grief was
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still raw.
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The last streaks of light softly died, leaving behind only a darkened
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sky and one fewer star than there had been at the beginning of the
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night. Hainaut was a ruin. The city itself was shattered, blackened
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stone smooth as glass rising in jagged pillars that looked eerily like
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teeth. Smoke and ash were on the wind, swirling thick. The land around
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the capital was no less a ruin, the plains scoured down to burnt bedrock
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as far as the eye could see. Nothing would live here for decades,
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centuries even. Of the armies the dead there was not a trace left, not
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even of that behemoth Crab that had tipped the scales in the Dead King's
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favour at the end. It was all dust on the wind, hundreds of thousands of
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souls released back to whatever Gods they had kept to.
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There was a terrible peace to it all, I thought. Masego turned towards
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me, raising an eyebrow in silent question. I nodded and he let the spell
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die. It ended in time for me to hear footsteps approaching, the cadence
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of them telling me who they were before I turned. That hobbling walk was
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Hakram on his crutches, while the still unnaturally smooth stride was
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Vivienne's -- she had once walked rooftops as other women did streets,
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and the touch had never quite left her. Leaning against my staff, I
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watched them approach with apathy. Vivienne looked away when I met her
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gaze. Trying to avoid looking at my eye, I realized, and suddenly felt
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self-conscious. I would have brought down my hood, were it not too
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obvious a reaction.
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``Catherine,'' Adjutant greeted me. ``The starfall has ended?
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I cocked an eyebrow at the empty talk, gaze moving to Vivienne.
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``What is it that you two need of me?'' I plainly asked.
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She grimaced, and this time did not flinch away from the sight of the
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gruesome scar I had instead of my left eye.
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``You need to hold a war council,'' Vivienne said. ``At least for
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Callow. General Zola's keeping it together, but she doesn't know where
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to go from here.''
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``It's obvious,'' I tiredly said. ``We lost the battle but the Pilgrim
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salvaged us an opportunity with his death. If the White Knight succeeds
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to the north then we will escort the Gigantes to the shore and ward
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Hainaut from the dead. If he has lost, then we retreat for the Cigelin
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Sisters and fortify what we can against the coming onslaught.''
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I did not doubt that even as we spoke the Dead King was marching troops
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through the bottom of the lakes to our north, trying to turn the setback
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into an opportunity. We'd destroyed the Twilight Gate here along with
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the rest of the city, but we still had pharos devices for
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mass-deployment of our remaining forces. Returning to Creation at the
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moment would be pointless, especially since the ruins were still
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hazardous and there was no water left to drink, so we would be staying
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in the Ways until the sun came up if not even longer. There'd be no
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point in leaving the Ways just to enter them anew when we marched either
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north or south.
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``It might be obvious to you, Catherine, but not others,'' Hakram calmly
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said. ``More than that, you must be seen. The Lycaonese lost both their
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rulers in the span of a single night. The Alamans are shamed and
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desperate, with only a destitute Princess Beatrice to calm them. The
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Dominion mourns the Grey Pilgrim without even a body to burn. The
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Firstborn huddle among themselves and speak to no one. And the Army of
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Callow broke tonight, for the first time since it was founded.''
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``You're needed, Catherine,'' Vivienne said. ``The Black Queen is
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needed.''
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When fucking wasn't she? My fingers balled into a fist, blood sliding
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down the skin from where my nails had bit through skin. Hakram's eyes
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flicked there, though with his nose he would have smelled the red long
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before that.
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``Enough,'' Masego said, voice grown hard. ``If you have the voice to
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ask, use it settle the troubles you bring her instead.''
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I started in surprise, half-turning.
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``Masego-'' Vivienne began.
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``She should be asleep, Vivienne,'' Hierophant said, eyes burning. ``She
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insists on remaining awake, so she will, but do not mistake this for her
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being in a fit state. You ask too much.''
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I found myself both warmed and irritated.
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``I can speak for myself, Zeze,'' I said.
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``Then do so,'' Masego bluntly replied. ``But I will not let this war
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drag you into the grave, Catherine. I have not forgotten what Aunt
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Sabah's death did to my family, and I will not allow Robber's death to
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bloom that sickly flower twice.''
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I might have taken issue with the tone if he'd not spoken the words that
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followed. I remembered it too, the brittle look in Black's eyes after
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Captain was killed. I had not loved Wekesa the Warlock while he lived,
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but I would not do the man's shade disservice be denying he had cared
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for Sabah just as deeply. That evening in the Free Cities had left scars
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on all the Calamities, even if some had been subtler than others. I
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would not blame Masego for dreading the only family he had left might
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come to the same end. I sighed, drawing their attention.
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``There's nowhere for them to go,'' I said, gesturing at the Ways around
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us. ``And it will take more than my carcass being paraded through a camp
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to fix this. I'll see to the Army of Callow later, but the rest can
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wait.''
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Masego beamed at me, which was comforting even tough I knew this was
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probably the wrong decision. I was tired enough that I found it hard to
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care: there was only so much beating that this thrice-dead horse could
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take. I met Hakram's eyes and found surprise there, but he nodded.
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Vivienne was harder to read. Was she disappointed? If she was, I'd cope.
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The legend I'd set was not one I could live up to. l If this campaign
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should have made anything painfully clear for all the world to see, it
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was that I didn't always have the answers. I'd pushed for this offensive
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from the start and even if I'd not been the only one to do so my
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influence had objectively been key. This catastrophe was on me, if it
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was on anyone at all.
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Most the people I could have shared the blame with were dead.
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``Leave me,'' I said. ``I-''
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My sentence went stillborn when I felt a shudder of indignation through
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my tenuous bond with the Night. Sve Noc were enraged, and though I found
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the shades of emotion difficult to parse I did pick up that this wasn't
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about the Firstborn. In the distance, two great crows took flight.
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Masego was not far behind them, wrested sorcery already opening anew the
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same window into Hainaut he had allowed to lapse. The spell was not as
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stable as the last time, the edges buzzing and the spell itself letting
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out trails of smoke here in Twilight, but what we saw could not be
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missed. Among the great fangs of black glass which were all that
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remained of the city of Hainaut, a great spell was stirring up a storm
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of ash.
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It was not one of ours.
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``Hierophant, what am I looking at?'' I calmly asked.
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Masego remained silent for a time, golden glass eyes darting back and
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forth as they parsed the glimmers of the spell that could be seen
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through the ash. Thick, curving cords of runes spinning in cycles
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without making a sound, a dull but growing pale sphere at the heart of
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them.
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``I am\ldots{} unsure,'' Hierophant admitted.
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The Crows plunged through the night sky in a precipitous glide,
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Andronike and Komena claiming my shoulders and sinking their sharp
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talons into the steel of my pauldrons. They hissed urgency at me and I
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raised my bloodied hand to clutch my staff.
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``Whatever it is, we can't let it finish,'' I said. ``I'll open us a
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gate, and-''
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I glanced at Hakram and Vivienne, lips thinning. No more risks tonight.
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``- you and I will go,'' I told Masego. ``Archer too, if we can-''
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This time it was someone else who cut in, and before either Adjutant or
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Vivienne could object too. I was pleased to see Archer striding towards
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us on the grass, but surprised to see her scarf was already pulled up
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and her bow strung. She'd been expecting trouble already.
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``Cat,'' she said, ``we have a problem.''
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``I'm aware,'' I replied, jutting a thumb towards the spell-window.
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She took a glance, then grimaced.
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``Cat,'' she said, ``we have two problems.''
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Fuck me, I thought. Hadn't this night been enough of a malediction
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already?
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``I'm listening,'' I said.
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``The Gigantes are gone,'' Archer said. ``All of them. I think they went
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back into Creation.''
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I felt a moment of blind panic at the notion of Keter getting its hands
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on Gigantes spellsingers, Gods would even the Ways be safe anymore now
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that Tariq was dead -- but the talons of the crows pricking at my skin
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drew me out of it. I breathed out.
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``Hierophant, is this their work?'' I asked.
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``No,'' Masego immediately replied. ``This is Trismegistan, Catherine.
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And I understand why it unsettled me. The elements I found familiar were
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of my work and Akua Sahelian's.''
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I blinked.
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``The Dead King cribbed from your spellcraft?''
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``I suspect,'' Hierophant softly replied, ``that it was the other way
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around, Catherine. However unknowingly. It is not without reason that
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the very magic we practice bears the name of Trismegistus.''
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``Shit,'' Archer said. ``This is \emph{his} spellwork, isn't it? His
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actual hand weaving the spell, not some intermediary's.''
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Well, would you look at that. It \emph{had} somehow gotten worse. There
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really wasn't any time to waste if Neshamah himself was making a play,
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so I stiffly swept my staff across the air and ripped open a gate down
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into Hainaut. A howling gale swept ash and smoke towards us and I
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glanced at Archer and Hierophant.
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``You two, with me,'' I ordered, and went into the storm.
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---
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The winds slashed at us angrily, bludgeoning us with ash and sharp
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pieces of gravel.
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With the Sisters themselves on my shoulders I could almost call on Night
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the way I'd been able to before it was ruined, but my body was weak.
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Aching and too close to collapse. Even with Komena banishing the
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sensation of exhaustion, I could feel a tingle at the edge of my senses
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warning me how close to unconsciousness I still teetered. The bubble of
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stillness I wove around us flicked in and out, becoming harder to
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maintain the higher up the slopes we went. It was Archer that guided us,
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pathfinding through the jutting blades of glassy stone with their sharp
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edges that dug into our boots. She took us through detours that saw the
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stone protect us from the wind, but even with all our haste it was
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frustratingly slow going.
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I clutched the rope when it came down after Masego had finished
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climbing, passing mastery of the bubble to Andronike as I concentrated
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on hoisting myself up. My muscles burned even when Indrani came to stand
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at the ledge and began to pull me up, grunting with effort, but after an
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eternity of labour I was over that too-sharp edge and falling on my
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knees atop the stone. My bad leg was pulsing with agony, but it was dull
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and distant. The Sisters did not want me distracted. I had left my staff
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down there, beyond the bubble, but it still stood perfectly still as if
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untouched by the storm. I extended my hand and moments later it was
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slapping against my palm, the dried traces of my blood rubbing against
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my palm as I pulled myself up.
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The crows returned to my shoulders, never having strayed far. They
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seemed wary of leaving us behind, my patronesses burned by what it had
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cost them to face the Dead King while I slept. Hierophant was standing
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at the edge of the stillness, black robes in disarray and those long
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tresses woven with silver trinkets swept to the side. He was looking out
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into the distance, standing beneath two great fangs of stone
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crisscrossing as in the distance the Dead King's magic slowly revolved.
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Archer had found us the right place, I thought, sending her a thankful
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look. Decent shelter and a good vantage point, it was exactly what we
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needed.
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I limped to Masego's side, not that he gave a visible sign he'd hear me
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coming.
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``So?'' I asked.
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There was a tense silence.
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``I believe,'' Hierophant murmured, ``that he is opening a Greater
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Breach.''
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I screamed out the vilest curses I knew at the sky until my voice went
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hoarse. Archer came to stand by our side, silent as she warily eyes our
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surroundings.
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``Can you Wrest it?'' I asked.
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``I have been trying,'' Hierophant conversationally said, ``for fifty
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heartbeats now,''
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His shoulders were trembling, I noticed only then. It was hard to see
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under the ash-dusted robes. And though he was not grimacing, there was a
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line to his mouth. Tension. I dared not speak another word, even if he'd
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not said the distraction would be harmful, instead listening as Komena
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whispered into my ear. I heard not a word but something greater, and my
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vision swam until I glimpsed a part of what the goddesses were seeing.
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Wills at war over the sorcery raging ahead of us, those slowly spinning
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circles of runes and the sphere within them. Like ink in water, Masego
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was trying to spread his will through the gargantuan amount of power but
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it was not enough.
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There was too much water.
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``His perspective is still too narrow,'' Andronike whispered into my
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ear, regretful. ``He has not witnessed enough.''
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It was hard to deny the truth of that when it was before my eyes.
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Hierophant was failing and would fail. Did we have anything else that
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might destroy this? Night would not be enough, not when I was falling
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apart and the enemy's raw strength was so great. Did Archer have an
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arrow that would -- no, that was thinking about this the wrong way. The
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Intercessor had mocked me, in the Arsenal, asked me where Neshamah's
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devils and ancient sorceries were. Well, they were here now. Why? More
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importantly, why now? But I'd already been given the answer to that, I
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belatedly realized, by an old man that was now a dead one. \emph{He
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cannot use either}, Tariq Isbili had told me, speaking of devils and
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demons. \emph{It would represent too steep an increase in strength on
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his side of the scales.}
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The Pilgrim had meant in the sense that if the Dead King used devils,
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then the heroes of the Grand Alliance would in turn get to call in
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angels as a superior counterstroke. Except we'd struck first, hadn't we?
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The Grey Pilgrim had died intertwined with the Choir of Mercy calling
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down his dead star, it was our side that'd broken the seal. \emph{The
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story's not on our side}, I realized with dread. Even if Masego had
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proved to have the capacity to Wrest the spell, he still would have
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failed -- the scales were tipped in Neshamah's favour for this to work,
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he had \emph{earned} it. Fuck. And I couldn't believe it would be only
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the one gate either, it wasn't the Dead King's way.
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``Can you see afar?'' I asked Sve Noc. ``Look for other gates like this,
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still forming.''
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``It will be difficult,'' Andronike cawed.
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|
``But not impossible,'' Komena noted.
|
|
|
|
It would require enough of their attention that I'd be on my own,
|
|
though, their minds brushing against mine made clear. Wouldn't matter, I
|
|
decided, power wouldn't get us through this. They seemed inclined to
|
|
agree, and on my shoulders the weight of them waned. As if much of them
|
|
had gone elsewhere. The glimpses they had granted me ended too, but
|
|
Masego had been about to be evicted -- diluted into effective
|
|
nothingness, more accurately, but the practical result was the same --
|
|
from the spell, his aspect stuttering to a stop. He breathed out
|
|
raggedly moments afterwards, body shivering. Indrani moved to help him
|
|
up.
|
|
|
|
``You'll be fine?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``I withdrew before it could be turned against me,'' Hierophant hoarsely
|
|
replied, nodding. ``But though defeated, I have learned some of his
|
|
secrets. It was impossible not to, when my will was coursing through his
|
|
work.''
|
|
|
|
He coughed, as much out of exhaustion as the heavy and ash-laden air.
|
|
|
|
``It is imperfect,'' Hierophant croaked out. ``Unlike the closed circle
|
|
that Akua made of Liesse. Not only will Keter's Due spread, it was made
|
|
\emph{worse}. On purpose, I think.''
|
|
|
|
My stomach dropped.
|
|
|
|
``How much worse, Masego?'' I quietly asked.
|
|
|
|
The last time the Dead King had opened a Greater Breach, he'd blighted
|
|
most of the Kingdom of the Dead doing it. It was the reason the
|
|
phenomenon was known as Keter's Due in the first place.
|
|
|
|
``I can't be sure,'' Masego admitted. ``Perhaps as far as the defence
|
|
line to the south?''
|
|
|
|
That was, I thought, perhaps nine tenths of Hainaut that he had
|
|
described. Made into a howling wasteland by the spell ahead of us, those
|
|
spinning circles whose rotations were beginning to quicken. My bloody
|
|
hand left the staff and I looked down at it, feeling numb. This
|
|
was\ldots{} Tariq had \emph{died} for this, and a blighted Hainaut with
|
|
a permanent hellgate in the middle was what would be achieved? I grasped
|
|
for a story that could turn this around, but what was there left? We had
|
|
spent all our miracles, our strength, our last chances. We had bargained
|
|
ourselves away until only a remnant's remnant remained, and still it had
|
|
not been enough. The two of them looked at me, somehow expecting I would
|
|
turn it around, but to my horror there was nothing.
|
|
|
|
My bag of tricks was empty.
|
|
|
|
``I-''
|
|
|
|
I swallowed. The words tasted like ash in my mouth but I forced them out
|
|
anyway.
|
|
|
|
``I can't stop this,'' I quietly admitted. ``I have nothing.''
|
|
|
|
I looked away, afraid of what I might see on their faces at that
|
|
admission. What I found, instead, was a tall shape standing alone in the
|
|
winds. Down there, away from our shelter. Troublingly close to the
|
|
spell. Indrani began to say something but I raised a hand to interrupt
|
|
her. Was this the Dead King, inhabiting a favoured corpse and giving
|
|
silent invitation by his presence? Talon sunk into my flesh once more,
|
|
the Sisters returning from their spirit-journey at last.
|
|
|
|
``There are two more,'' Komena said.
|
|
|
|
``One close, to the west, and one far in the northwest,'' Andronike
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
The other two southern fronts. Cleves and Twilight's Pass. Neshamah did
|
|
not just intend to win here: he was going to win everywhere and all at
|
|
once. Not, not everywhere, I almost immediately corrected. That would
|
|
have been a mistake, overreaching. Enough of an opening for the Heavens
|
|
to put their fingers to the scale. He'd not touched the front against
|
|
the Firstborn, trusting in his crippling of the Night and his ability to
|
|
triumph in a battle of Evil against Evil.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine,'' Indrani said. ``It's all right. Your armies are still in
|
|
the Ways, all we lose is-''
|
|
|
|
``That's not a corpse,'' I softly said, sole eye still on the silhouette
|
|
among the storm.
|
|
|
|
I glanced at my companions.
|
|
|
|
``Hierophant, can you shield the both of you?''
|
|
|
|
``I can,'' Masego slowly replied.
|
|
|
|
``Then do it now,'' I said, and walked over the ledge of our perch.
|
|
|
|
Magic bloomed behind me even as I fell, Hierophant weaving transparent
|
|
shields as the ground hurried towards me. I barely drew on Night,
|
|
instead letting the Crows slow my descent. They were uneasy, but I
|
|
slipped through the storm and limped my way to the lone figure. It was
|
|
even taller than I had thought. Almost thirty feet tall, his deep brown
|
|
skin just as indifferent to the elements as the still-pristine white
|
|
tunic the Gigantes wore. The giant cared not for my approach, and I saw
|
|
no other of his kind around us.
|
|
|
|
``Can you end it?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
The screams of the storm drowned out my voice, but I trusted I would be
|
|
heard regardless. The Gigante glanced down at me, his short neck bending
|
|
unnaturally.
|
|
|
|
``We cannot,'' the giant said, voice even.
|
|
|
|
Hope I'd not quite allowed myself to feel died out.
|
|
|
|
``So what are you doing here?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``I wait,'' the giant said. ``I witness.''
|
|
|
|
``Witness what?'' I pressed.
|
|
|
|
``The end,'' the Gigante said, ``and what will come after. Send away
|
|
your followers, Queen of Callow. Soon the Young King's circle will close
|
|
and they cannot withstand what will follow.''
|
|
|
|
The spell was ending soon, then. He was warning me that Keter's Due
|
|
would kill Archer and Hierophant if they stayed. Masego would know as
|
|
much, and I suspected he would lead Indrani out whatever I said, but I
|
|
wove a snake out of Night and sent it towards them bearing an order to
|
|
retreat just in case. I could have gone and done it myself, but it felt
|
|
like a mistake. My instincts were screaming at me that if I left, I
|
|
would miss something important.
|
|
|
|
``There are other gates,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``We know,'' the giant replied. ``There, too, others will witness.''
|
|
|
|
There was a pause.
|
|
|
|
``Prepare yourself,'' the giant said.
|
|
|
|
The world went still, for a terrible moment, and then the storm exploded
|
|
outwards. Even with all the Night I could spare holding me down and the
|
|
guidance of Sve Noc, I still fell down on one knee. The power was
|
|
blinding, staggering, and I could feel it sink into the earth as well as
|
|
the air. Whether it lasted for moments or hours I could not tell, my
|
|
body and mind bitterly arguing what was true and false, but eventually
|
|
the storm passed. It left behind only a perfect circle of runes hanging
|
|
in the air, a perfect gate into some distant Hell.
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat passed, and nothing came out.
|
|
|
|
``What did you do?'' I rasped out.
|
|
|
|
``It is called,'' the giant said, ``the Riddle of the Lock.''
|
|
|
|
My heartbeat quickened.
|
|
|
|
``It's a gate,'' I said. ``Are you telling me your mages \emph{locked}
|
|
it?''
|
|
|
|
``Our singers are dead,'' the Gigante said. ``I witness only the work
|
|
they gave their lives for.''
|
|
|
|
My fingers clenched as I remembered that while the Gigantes had sent
|
|
people into Cleves there had been no bargain for the Pass, that -- I
|
|
stopped. But there \emph{had} been, I realized. Clever Cordelia had
|
|
spent the goodwill she had won executing the Red Axe a second time to
|
|
move the Highest Assembly to apologize to the Titanomachy for the Seven
|
|
Slayings. They'd sent people into the Pass to fortify the Morgentor. If
|
|
the Gigantes had locked all three gates, perhaps the war was not yet
|
|
lost.
|
|
|
|
``We are in their debt,'' I carefully said.
|
|
|
|
``Aid was promised,'' the giant said. ``Aid was given.''
|
|
|
|
I nodded.
|
|
|
|
``And how long will their gift last?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``A year, a month and a day,'' the Gigante said.
|
|
|
|
In the distance, dawn began to break. The giant glanced at me again.
|
|
|
|
``I will return home the corpses of my companions,'' he said. ``We will
|
|
not meet again, Queen of Callow.''
|
|
|
|
``Then take you leave with my thanks,'' I said, meaning every word.
|
|
``Your people have given Calernia a chance.''
|
|
|
|
Even if both Cleves and the Pass were blighted by the rituals too, we
|
|
had been pulled back from the fall to the brink.
|
|
|
|
``We have given them time,'' the giant said. ``What might yet fill it is
|
|
in your hands.''
|
|
|
|
And without another word he strode down into the restless ash, leaving
|
|
me behind as he moved into the shrinking darkness. I stayed standing
|
|
there for a long time, until even the Sisters left me. Dawn rose,
|
|
slowly, and with it came shadows. My own found me before too long, her
|
|
steps soft on the ashen ground. Her gaze followed my own, coming to rest
|
|
on the Hellgate.
|
|
|
|
``It is oddly beautiful,'' Akua Sahelian said, ``for such a terrible
|
|
thing.''
|
|
|
|
I didn't answer. The Severance, I thought, might destroy such a gate. If
|
|
we were lucky, it might even be able to do it through the locking spell
|
|
the Gigantes had laid so that we would not have to wait until it ended.
|
|
If we used it, though, the sword would be spent. Perhaps not materially,
|
|
but as a story: it would be diluted, no longer the blade fated to kill
|
|
the King of Death. I went through every Named I knew, every trick and
|
|
spell and use of Light, and found nothing that could be \emph{relied}
|
|
on. There were only two Greater Breaches on Calernia, one in the heart
|
|
of Keter and the other bloomed in the shadow of the Doom of Liesse --
|
|
but there was no Warlock to divert it, this time, and even that trick
|
|
had not been a true solution. The gate itself still existed in the
|
|
heartlands of my kingdom, even if did not lead into them. It had no
|
|
remained there for lack of trying otherwise on our part. One after
|
|
another, the solutions fell away until one remained.
|
|
|
|
``We need diabolists,'' I said. ``Hundreds of them, thousands.''
|
|
|
|
Enough that every devil that came howling through those gates could be
|
|
bound and dismissed, that a more permanent solution could be devised.
|
|
|
|
``There is only one realm in Calernia, Catherine, that is the home to so
|
|
many of them,'' Akua said.
|
|
|
|
There was an expectant shiver in her voice, halfway between fear and
|
|
desire. Praes. The Dread Empire. The first crucible of my life, the
|
|
fires where I had been forged. I closed my eyes, letting the rising sun
|
|
wash over me, and let the decision settle.
|
|
|
|
I was headed east.
|