949 lines
43 KiB
TeX
949 lines
43 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-9-vault}{%
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\chapter{Vault}\label{chapter-9-vault}}
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\epigraph{``Eighty-seven: the secret passage your nemesis will use to escape
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the fortress can be used to enter that same fortress. They never
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consider that, for some reason.''}{``Two Hundred Heroic Axioms'', author unknown}
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I kept my arms open wide and my hands flat, as if I were holding open a
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bag, but all that lay in between my fingers was shadow.
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Akua stood slightly ahead of me, dropping one book after another into
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the dark. Without a sound they disappeared into the hungry maws of my
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patronesses, the two of us clearing out row after row as quickly as we
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could. We'd gone for the restricted sections, the forbidden ones: there
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was no point in my taking books that'd be in every other great Praesi
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library. Those sections were all trapped and warded, but I was being
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guided by someone who knew those traps and wards intimately. We'd been
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at it less than half an hour, as Archer hunted for anyone we might have
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missed out in the stacks, but already I'd sent hundreds and hundreds of
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tomes into the embrace of Sve Noc. Akua almost reverently dropped into
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the dark what looked like the handwritten notes of someone called Olowe,
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emptying the last of the shelf, and we stopped.
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I looked back at rows and rows of empty shelves behind us, what had once
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been a section on dimensional mechanics and the technicalities of making
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a Breach. Not a book left, same as we'd done with necromancy, curses,
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High Arcana conjuration, three sections on diabolism and a dozen more
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branches of sorcery. It would have been missing the point to say we'd
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taken a fortune in books, because what we'd stolen was essentially
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priceless. There was no replacing any of this for the Sahelians.
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``That is the last of the sections I would consider essential,'' Akua
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noted. ``Unless you want to acquire more common tomes, we are
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finished.''
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``That was it?'' I asked, skeptical.
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``My family has a personal library, naturally,'' she dismissed. ``And
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the most dangerous volumes will be down in the hidden vaults. Yet for
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the library, I would consider nothing else here irreplaceable.''
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I supposed it would have been greedy to ask for a thousand priceless
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books instead of just a few hundred, I mused, not that it was stopping
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me. I folded my arms, left over right, and brought them to my chest as I
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slowly eased my grip on the Night and the darkness faded. The working
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hadn't been all that strenuous to maintain, but it had taken
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concentration: I was glad it was done.
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``I'll take you word on it,'' I replied.
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If we'd had more time I would have considered emptying the entire place
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just to make a point, but we didn't. I was, to be frank, surprised the
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Eyes hadn't betrayed us yet. My bet was on there being another game at
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play here, one I hadn't quite figured out yet. That tended to be a safe
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bet when the Intercessor was around. Regardless, we needed to get a move
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on if we wanted to clear out the artefact vaults as well before this all
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came down on our heads. We took the stairs down and I cursed every few
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steps the absence of my staff and the apparently deep and abiding hatred
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Praesi architects had for handrails. Seriously, would it kill whoever
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kept building these ridiculous places to throw up a few of those? Take
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out two of the fucking egg-sized rubies encrusted into one of the wall
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frescoes and you could pay for those to be done for the entire damned
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palace. Some of my thoughts came out as grumbling under my breath, I
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figured, since Akua looked highly amused and offered me her arm for the
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last few steps. I took it with ill-grace, looking away. I got cackled at
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for that immediately, Archer popping out from behind stacks with a grin.
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``Aw, isn't that cute,'' Indrani grinned. ``If we get to robbing the
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Tower, is it going to make you hold hands?''
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She smelled faintly of blood, I noticed. I cocked an eyebrow at her and
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she threw me a sheathed short sword about my size.
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``Lots of stragglers?'' I asked, ignoring the jibe.
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I drew the blade, testing the weight, and found it good enough. Not as
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good as something fitted for me, but it'd do. As I fitted the sheath at
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my belt, Indrani passed a blade at Akua who nodded thanks in return and
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got a smile for it.
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``Five,'' Archer replied, ``but one of them was a mage. I had to get
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tricky.''
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The edge of one of her sleeves was slightly singed, I found with closer
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study.
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``Good work,'' I simply said. ``We're hitting the hidden vaults now. You
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good to fight?''
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``I was promised horrors, Foundling,'' Indrani grinned. ``Hells, why do
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you think I'm even here?''
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Ugh, I bet that pun was even intentional. I truly did have terrible
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taste in women.
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``I'd assumed because you were dared while drunk,'' Akua drily replied.
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``Hey,'' Indrani replied, offended. ``That only works like, a third of a
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time.''
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I loudly coughed.
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``Fine, maybe closer to half,'' Archer conceded.
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Immediately after she turned to Akua with a scowl, jabbing a finger at
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her.
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``And don't you dare cough too, Petty Poltergeist,'' she growled. ``Half
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is all I'll go up to.''
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``I would never dare,'' Akua lied, smiling prettily.
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It was in a better mood that the three of us moved out towards the back
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of the great library, where the returned once-heiress to Wolof told us
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that the easiest path into the hidden vaults lay. I'd expected some sort
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of archway full of damned souls or a corridor swarming with enchantment,
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but what our quick march there revealed was actually just a set of tall
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golden doors. Nicely sculpted, if a little heavy on the
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Wolof-and-particulary-the-Sahelians-are-the-best-look-at-all-these-fools-we-crushed
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slant. To my admitted bewilderment, Akua then simply grabbed one of the
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large iron rings on the doors and pulled one open. It revealed a short
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hallway of bare stone, leading to a steel grate.
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``Wait, is that it?'' Indrani asked.
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She sounded a little cheated.
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``That's got to be a trap, right?'' I asked, cocking my head to the
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side.
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``Oh, it is,'' Akua flatly agreed. ``There is a secret entrance thirty
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feet to our left that would allow us to avoid the first two killing
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rooms, but it would require us to pass through the terror room -- and
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without the proper protective amulets, that would be\ldots{} unwise.''
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``Terror room, you say?'' Archer idly repeated, sounding dangerous
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interested.
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Of course she would be.
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``Magical terror,'' Akua specified. ``As close to the demonic emanation
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as my forebears could manage. Most people die of a stalling heart within
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the first ten heartbeats. No, the front path is best suited to our
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needs.''
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I considered the stone hall for a moment, humming.
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``Floor trap?'' I guessed.
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``Hand me a book,'' Akua asked.
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Snorting, I grabbed what looked like a primer on the classical elements
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-- \emph{could have used you a few years back, buddy}, I thought -- and
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began to pass it to her before pausing and glancing at Archer.
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``Don't tell Zeze,'' I said.
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``I'd be counted as an accessory,'' Indrani solemnly replied.
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The book went to Akua's hand as she rolled her eyes, tossing it
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carelessly into the hallway. I glimpsed iron spikes emerging from the
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walls before the golden door shut. Huh. Akua, looking somewhat
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aggravated, wrenched open the door again and I stood there to watch as
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the spiked walls slowly closed in on the middle of the room. Door
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probably couldn't be opened from the inside, I decided. We stood for a
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while longer, waiting. Sometimes the walls quickly lurched forward for
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an inch or two, but most of the time they just\ldots{} slowly advanced.
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``Now that's just \emph{asking} for a hero to find a way out,'' I sadly
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said.
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``The mechanisms that make the walls move are deep in the stone,'' Akua
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said, sounding a tad defensive. ``They can't be changed without
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load-bearing walls being knocked down.''
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``How do we get through?'' Indrani asked, more pragmatically.
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The shade stepped into the hall fearlessly when the walls were near
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through, slipping around the edge of the right one and disappearing. A
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few heartbeats later there was a metallic wrenching sound, maybe a lever
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being pulled, and the walls stopped. They stayed extended, leaving a
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path maybe a foot wide between the iron spikes that led straight to the
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door in the back. \emph{You could have at least pushed the door to the
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left so it'd be covered when the wall advanced, you hacks}, I silently
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thought. Akua slipped back around the edge of the wall, reappearing with
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a smile as she dusted herself off.
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``And to cross that?'' I asked, pointing at the steel grate.
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``The Archer key,'' the shade gracefully replied.
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The Archer in question snorted, stepping forward -- Akua flowed around
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her -- and pushing to the end of our little narrow passage. One, two,
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three, four. On the fourth Name-assisted kick the steel grate toppled
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down, ripped right off the hinges. I cocked an eyebrow at Akua.
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``It is enchanted against blades and lockpicks, not mules,'' she
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shrugged.
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``\emph{I heard that},'' Indrani called out.
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Swallowing a grin, I shimmied through and followed the shade over the
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fallen grate. It brought us to another stone hall, this one rather more
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ornate than the last. The walls were covered with mosaics in the
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Sahelians colours whose patterns felt\ldots{} oddly fascinating -- I
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wrenched away my eyes forcefully -- and whose floor was checkered marble
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in black and white. At the end I saw an open stone doorway and what
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looked like curving stairs going down. The three of us were huddled in a
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small antechamber between the halls, and out of curiosity I looked up.
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Yeah, as I'd figured the stone archway here had small depression in the
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rocks.
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``Stone door falls down here and over there,'' I mused. ``I'm
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calling\ldots{} pit trap?''
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``Oh,'' Indrani gurgled. ``That's an \emph{old} one. Is it the black or
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white tiles that make it work?''
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``There are triggers under both,'' Akua sighed. ``And the floor itself
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is not trapped. Once the doors close, the mosaic shifts in some places
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and begins releasing alchemical gas.''
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``What's it do?'' Archer asked,
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``It was a forgetfulness mixture, when I left,'' Akua noted. ``Prevented
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memory recall longer than five heartbeats. It could be anything now, of
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course.''
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``And we beat this how?'' I asked.
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It was too long for us to jump our way across, although maybe if I used
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Night\ldots{}
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``The stone doors open again once the monitoring enchantment senses that
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there is no longer gas in the air,'' she said. ``I know where the
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openings are, so Catherine and I simply need to block them until the
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trap begins to reset. We'll have a window of four heartbeats to cross.''
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``That's very unsporting,'' I approved.
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She pointed out where in the mosaics -- near what looked like a swirl of
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pale eyes -- we'd need to act and then we moved out. The doors
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immediately fell down from the ceiling, blocking the paths out, but what
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followed what almost absurdly mundane. I did not use Night or a Name
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trick, simply jamming my thumb into the opening and then waiting for a
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while as the doors began to rise again. We ran, Indrani snickering the
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whole time, and made it to the stairs before the trap activated again.
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We went down slowly, catching our breath, and I cast a consternated look
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behind us.
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``I don't understand why your ancestors didn't just layer a hundred
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wards,'' I admitted. ``This stuff can be beaten, a hundred different
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layers of protection changed every few years can't.''
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``We are in the Vaults, my darling,'' Akua replied. ``It is presumed
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that anyone who made it this far into the Empyrean Palace has the help
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of traitors within our own. Wards can be crossed in the snap of a
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finger, with the right helper. This? This cannot.''
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I was about to object some more when she silenced me with a finger.
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``These were the easiest of rooms, my heart,'' she said. ``Now that we
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are below, tricks such as I used will find little bite.''
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Straight from the start we were faced with a crossroads, the paths going
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to the left and right. The left side, Akua explained, was where the
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other entrance above would have led to directly. The terror room.
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``And where we're headed?'' I asked.
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The hallway here had mosaics much like those above, dangerous to look at
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for too long, which I figured was actually pretty clever on the part of
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the builders. You couldn't see the traps coming if you couldn't risk
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looking at your surroundings for long. Wouldn't want to be one of the
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poor fuckers in charge of cleaning this place, though. Maybe they had
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wards in place to prevent it getting dusty?
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``Straight into the illusion room and the duelling room, then we may
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access the first vault,'' Akua replied, leading us to another steel
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grate.
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It required Archer's tender attentions once more, but when forced off
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the hinges it did not fall into the room beyond it. Anchored by
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enchantments, our guide noted, and so we `opened' the broken thing as if
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we'd used a key. Beyond was a hall that was entirely mosaic, that
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confounding little number we'd been walking through. Here it covered the
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floor and ceiling too, though, and led to another steel grate. I risked
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small glimpsed at the floor, finding pale eyes there like those that'd
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covered the gas exits above us, but I bit my lip. Something was wrong
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here, itching at me. I felt the presence of the Sisters fill me like
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cold water, Komena nudging my chin to look right instead of- the
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illusion broke and I let out a gasp.
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``Fuck me,'' I murmured. ``The spell here makes you twist left and right
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for up and down.''
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``Yes,'' Akua said, sounding pleased. ``And so draw the eye away from
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this\ldots{}''
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She shimmied in front of me, dipping her foot into what my mind still
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insisted was the right wall, and the mosaic vanished. Under it was a
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sharp drop and even sharper steel spikes. Ah, lovely.
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``There's a safe way through?'' I asked.
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``Indeed,'' Akua replied. ``Archer?''
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I turned to look at Indrani, who had her eyes closed and was muttering
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under her breath. She opened her eyes once, quickly glancing at the
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floor and then closing them again. Twice more she did that, looking
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angrier and angrier, until on the third she drew back her sleeve and bit
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her forearm hard enough blood came out. She looked again, eyes hard, and
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only then offered me a wild grin.
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``It's fine, ladies,'' Archer said. ``I can See it now. Mind couldn't
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get around trying to believe two things at the same time.''
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It was useful now and then to be reminded of how fucking dangerous
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Indrani actually was. Akua had been raised here and I had goddesses
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helping me see through this. Her? It was Name and grit that got her
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through. And somehow, now that she'd seen through the spell, I suspected
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that no other one like it would ever fool her again. We crossed the
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floor like children holding hands in dark woods, moving across the
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complex back and forth pattern that Akua unerringly led us through until
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we'd reached the door on the other side. Solid copper, this one, and our
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guide opened it by ghosting a hand through the lock and picking it with
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her own `fingers'. It popped open, revealing another short antechamber
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leading into another hall.
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This one, which she'd called the duelling room earlier, was little more
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than bare stone and mosaic walls save for the five longswords that'd
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been sheathed in stands of copper. It was a thick steel door that
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awaited us at the end of the hall, with no visible lock or pull.
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``So we draw a sword and fight an opponent for each one we draw?''
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Indrani guessed.
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``Not at all,'' Akua laughed. ``Pulling swords only makes parts of the
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floor fall away into spikes when the monster is unleashed. It is the
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touch of flesh on the door that begins the duel.''
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``And how does the door open?'' I asked.
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``An enchanted key, which we do not have,'' Akua said.
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I glanced at the steel door in the back and Archer did the same.
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``I'm not sure I can force my way through that with brute strength,''
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she admitted.
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``We will not need to,'' the shade said. ``The swords are, naturally,
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all cursed.''
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``Naturally,'' I drily echoed.
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``The second blade from the right should have a particularly nasty
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rotting curse on it that I believe will damage the door enough to reveal
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the lock, if pressed in the right place,'' Akua said. ``I should be able
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to pick said lock from there.''
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``And you have no flesh to rot,'' I mused. ``All right, that'll work.
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That leaves Indrani and I to handle whatever creature comes out. You
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have any notion of what it'll be?''
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``It used to be giant scorpion, but it should have died by now,'' Akua
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noted. ``It shouldn't be too difficult an opponent, given the breakdown
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of relations with Aksum. That is where all the most\ldots{} difficult
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creatures tend to come from.''
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I nodded.
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``Can we use the other blades against the beastie?'' Indrani asked.
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``Alas, it is always bespelled to be protected when put away here,''
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Akua said.
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It was typical of Praesi highborn, I thought, that though a great many
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of them were utterly and irremediably mad their madness somehow turned
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out to be in some ways sensible and organized. It was a through sort of
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lunacy, and all the more dangerous for the thoroughness being married to
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the absence of sense in most other ways. I unsheathed the blade at my
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hip, rolling my wrist to limber it and stretching my limbs carefully.
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Archer gave me an amused look but did the same, Akua patiently waiting
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for us to be done.
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``Where's it going to come from?'' I asked.
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The shade simply pointed upwards. Of course it was, I sighed. I looked
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at Archer, who nodded in approval.
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``Get us started, Akua,'' I said.
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Smoothly she walked up the swords and pulled out her chosen one from the
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copper stand, darting away afterwards. There was no visible sign of the
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curse she'd mentioned on the sword, but I could smell the scent of power
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in the air. She'd not lied when she called the enchantment on that
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nasty. Three heartbeats passed before a floor panel of about nine feet
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by three shattered into neat pieces and revealed a spiked pit below even
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as the ceiling shifted above us. There were three birdlike screeches as
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a massive form -- Gods, large as two oxen as least -- dropped down from
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above between Indrani and I. Two thoughts came to me about at the same
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time. First off, Akua had been rather optimistic when she'd assumed that
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the giant scorpion had died of old age.
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Second, \emph{this was not a noise a scorpion should be able to make}.
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``Why does this thing have faces on its back?'' I asked.
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``Better question,'' Archer mused, ``why are they all screaming?''
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I ducked away from a lightning-quick strike of a stinger the size of my
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head, the massive scorpion trying to trample Indrani as it kept me away.
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She slid under it, laughing in glee as something in its belly began
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spitting out acid that she only narrowly avoided, and I chopped away at
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one of its bony legs to distract it. Bony was the right term for it, I
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found out, the bloody carapace was hard as bone. And that was just the
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leg, the body would be worse. That left the eyes to strike at or, urgh,
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the\ldots{} faces. Which were still screaming, looking like damned souls
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sown into chitin and singing out their eternal torment. Hells, they
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actually might be. It turned its attention to me as Archer put distance
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between her and the tail, pincers twitching. I kept close to the wall,
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throwing myself to the side at the last moment when it struck and
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smiling at the screeches of pain it let out when the pincer hit solid
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stone.
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``I am working the lock,'' Akua calmly called out.
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``Archer, let's not fight the damn thing,'' I screamed.
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``Boo,'' Indrani screamed back.
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Her shout drew back its attention and it stabbed away at her repeatedly
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with the stinger, growing angrier as she kept dodging at the last
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moment, and I darted close to its face to make sure it had to keep its
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attention divided. The pincers came at me from both sides, but the
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anglers were predictable. Anger was making it sloppy. It grew even
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angrier a moment later, when Indrani finally baited it into a stinger
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strike at the angle for her to cut off the entire thing after she
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dodged. Even as it screeched I took the opportunity to land a few hacks
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at its eyes, black fluid dripping everywhere, and retreated as it began
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to attack blindly.
|
|
|
|
``Around the spikes,'' I yelled at Indrani.
|
|
|
|
There was a narrow strip between the walls and the floor that'd dropped,
|
|
and with the scorpion partly blinded now was the time to make us of it.
|
|
I began to cross towards the latter half the hall, where Akua was
|
|
kneeling before the door, and Archer did the same a moment later. With
|
|
any luck the bloody thing would try to follow us and fall to its death.
|
|
Halfway through I turned to have a glance and had a moment of triumph
|
|
when I saw the monster was following us, but it was short-lived. The
|
|
scorpion's legs unfolded further with a wet wrenching side, and hoisted
|
|
him up by pushing against both walls. \emph{Oh fuck me}, I thought as it
|
|
began to walk on the walls to catch up to us.
|
|
|
|
``Akua,'' I screamed.
|
|
|
|
``I am nearly done,'' she replied.
|
|
|
|
The tail Archer had cut was leaking black blood everywhere, but it could
|
|
still serve as a whip. As I discovered when it snapped after me, forcing
|
|
me to hop forward on my bad leg and nearly fall to my death.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Akua},'' I screamed.
|
|
|
|
``And done,'' she replied.
|
|
|
|
I heard the door open with a click and threw myself on solid ground,
|
|
landing in a painful. Archer was already there and she helped me up,
|
|
dragging me as we broke into a run towards the open door. The monster
|
|
was behind us, pincers lashing out as it landed on the solid stone with
|
|
a clattering sound, but Indrani threw me through the doorway and I heard
|
|
her stumbled through as I flopped on my belly. Akua slammed closed the
|
|
door, not quite quickly enough to silence the screeches of rage from the
|
|
monstrous scorpion. All three of us dropped to the floor for a while
|
|
after that, catching our breath.
|
|
|
|
``So the scorpion might still be alive,'' I solemnly told Akua.
|
|
|
|
There was a moment of silence, then all three of us began laughing in
|
|
spasms. The merriment passed, but it'd done us some good. Even better
|
|
was that we were now going to get into our first vault of the night. The
|
|
room we opened did not look like the fabulous gold-and-gem-laden
|
|
treasury my imagination had conjured up. Disappointingly enough, the
|
|
large vault looked more like an orderly storage house than anything
|
|
else. The goods were interesting, at least. A dozen enchanted swords and
|
|
twice as many armours, a bow made of dragonbone -- which Indrani pawed
|
|
lustfully at -- and several banners whose cloth was woven with spells
|
|
that inspired either valour or fear. There was also a saddle made of
|
|
what I suspected to be human skin, which I almost hesitated to take.
|
|
Well, the Sisters probably wouldn't mind even if it was. It was minor
|
|
artefacts aside from that, mostly enchanted jewelry and amulets.
|
|
|
|
``Prestige pieces,'' Akua told me. ``All were crafted by famous
|
|
practitioners. It is a traditional way to reward a subordinate without
|
|
overly empowering them.''
|
|
|
|
``Well,'' I shrugged, ``into the Night they go.''
|
|
|
|
It didn't take long to clear it all out, Archer reluctantly parting with
|
|
the bow when it was pointed out to her that she did not have arrows to
|
|
go with it.
|
|
|
|
``Left now,'' Akua said. ``It will bring us to three adjoining vaults.''
|
|
|
|
Huh, that did sound rather tempting.
|
|
|
|
``What's in the way?'' I asked, and before she could answer I got my
|
|
response.
|
|
|
|
It was, uh, remarkably straightforward.
|
|
|
|
``This is an acid pool,'' Archer said, looking down at, well,
|
|
\emph{that}.
|
|
|
|
``So it is,'' Akua cheerfully replied.
|
|
|
|
It was maybe three feet below the threshold we stood at, and there was
|
|
no way to tell how deep it ran. The length of the hallway was at least
|
|
thirty feet, which made it a laughable notion to try jumping.
|
|
|
|
``How do people usually get through it?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``They bring a specially crafted silver bridge,'' Akua smiled.
|
|
|
|
``With a mage around you could make a bridge across out of shields,''
|
|
Indrani noted.
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat later, there was a little shiver across the room as a pulse
|
|
of\ldots{} something went through the air. I cocked an eyebrow at Akua.
|
|
|
|
``Raw magic,'' she said. ``It would disrupt any ongoing spell formula.
|
|
Anyone trying to cross on a shield panel would\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
She glanced meaningfully at the gently simmering acid. Lovely.
|
|
|
|
``I'm pretty sure Night won't be disrupted,'' I frowned.
|
|
|
|
``My ancestors did not, in fact, plan for the human herald of drow
|
|
goddesses to infiltrate their vaults and then use a largely unheard of
|
|
and poorly understood power to make a bridge across their acid pool,''
|
|
Akua confirmed, her tone holding the faintest note of sarcasm. ``How
|
|
short-sighted of them indeed.''
|
|
|
|
I coughed in embarrassment, then got to work. The wards over the palace
|
|
were still making it hard to call on Night even though we were well past
|
|
nightfall, and I found the magic pulse harder to deal with than I'd
|
|
thought it would be. Had to do double layers to avoid a thinning, which
|
|
made it take longer than I would have liked. It was with sweat beading
|
|
the back of my neck that I brought us to the other side, where Archer
|
|
promptly kicked her way through the steel grid. How had the godsdamned
|
|
acid pool been the trickiest of these so far? It was a good thing the
|
|
wards hadn't been updated here in a while, I thought, because a few more
|
|
layers of whatever made it hard to shape the Night might have managed to
|
|
lock me out from using it in practice.
|
|
|
|
Akua stopped us before we could enter the traditional antechamber,
|
|
dragging an ethereal foot over the floor. Headsman's blades came out
|
|
from both sides, cutting into nothing but thin air, and they began to
|
|
withdraw. Well, that'd been bracing. They'd been building up the
|
|
impression that the antechambers were safe this whole time, hadn't they?
|
|
Tricky fuckers. The hallway beyond was unlike any we'd seen before,
|
|
which I did not take as a good sign. Every part of the walls, floor and
|
|
ceiling was covered with angled mirrors, giving the impression that we
|
|
were standing on the inside of a gem. The uncovered parts were the doors
|
|
in and out, and somehow I suspected that was only a temporary state of
|
|
affairs.
|
|
|
|
``Enchanted mirrors?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``They induce nightmare-filled sleep if stared at,'' Akua said, ``but it
|
|
is the doors to watch out for. They will shoot out burning rays of
|
|
light, which then\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``Reflect every which way,'' Indrani finished, sounding a little
|
|
impressed.
|
|
|
|
``The enchantments in the mirrors amplify the heat,'' Akua said. ``There
|
|
is an upper limit, of course, but after seven reflections it would be
|
|
enough to incinerate an ogre on contact.''
|
|
|
|
Given the kind of people these defences belonged to, I suspected it was
|
|
not a figure of speech she'd used there.
|
|
|
|
``Night's not great against fire,'' I admitted. ``So that's a problem.
|
|
How do we get through the door on the other end?''
|
|
|
|
It was a copper one and Akua had picked one of those earlier but I
|
|
didn't want to assume.
|
|
|
|
``I can get us through the lock there,'' she said. ``But not before at
|
|
least a dozen spells have been shot out.''
|
|
|
|
``These rays, do they reflect off anything or just the mirrors?'' Archer
|
|
suddenly asked.
|
|
|
|
I breathed out in understanding and so did our guide.
|
|
|
|
``The side of a sword should work,'' she replied.
|
|
|
|
Indrani shot me a smile, which I forced myself to return. I was getting
|
|
closer to my Name, but the reflexes weren't quite there yet. I began to
|
|
draw Night into myself, murmuring prayers in Crepuscular. At the very
|
|
least quickening my limbs ought to help. Our swords were bared a moment
|
|
later and as I grimaced we darted forward. Before we'd even made it a
|
|
foot forward mirrors moved to cover the entrance we'd left and three
|
|
spells shot out from the polished copper door. Whooping with glee,
|
|
Indrani casually batted one away while Akua and I instead prudently
|
|
moved to the sides. She went straight for the door, even as it began
|
|
spewing out a second volley, and I took up a position guarding her back.
|
|
|
|
I narrowly caught a ray that would have hit my chest, reflecting it
|
|
upwards and then into a wildly careening trajectory. The trouble with
|
|
all those fucking angled mirrors was that it was hard to guess what path
|
|
the spell would take when it came back. Archer was still in the middle
|
|
of the room, moving with a dancer's grace as she reflected spells in
|
|
what was too measured a way for it to be random. Eyes narrowed I tried
|
|
to follow what she was doing, but only figured it out after the third
|
|
volley of spells came out and two of the rays hit each other in midair,
|
|
bursting into a ball of flame and smoke. Fucking Hells, was she actually
|
|
making them hit each other? I could barely keep up with the ones
|
|
actually coming for me.
|
|
|
|
That moment of inattention cost me, even my quickened limbs not quite
|
|
quick enough when a ray I avoided was reflected right back into my
|
|
shoulder from behind before I could blink. I managed to get it to clip
|
|
the shoulder instead of bite into the muscle, at least, but I swallowed
|
|
a scream as a parchment's depth of my shoulder just turned to ash and
|
|
the livery over it vanished. \emph{Fuck}, that hurt. Akua came through
|
|
for us moments later, the copper door opening, and I was quick to
|
|
retreat behind it. Archer took her time joining us, twice more slapping
|
|
away spells before slipping behind the door as I slammed it closed. Her
|
|
eyes dipped to my shoulder, but like Akua she said nothing. I called on
|
|
Night to kill the pain and we moved on to the vaults awaiting us.
|
|
|
|
The first vault looked very mundane, until you had a closer look. The
|
|
neat piles of wood were all atrociously expensive sorts from the Waning
|
|
Woods or beyond, the blocks of rock and the gems all gave off the scent
|
|
of magic without being enchanted -- which meant inherent sorcery -- and
|
|
the sealed copper boxes here were all filled with living plants I did
|
|
not recognize. There was a single potion rack, with maybe sixty vials in
|
|
whole, but my jaw dropped when I saw a whole half-dozen of them were as
|
|
red and faintly glowing water.
|
|
|
|
``Are those actual healing potions?'' I croaked.
|
|
|
|
``They are,'' Akua said. ``And not even the most precious of the lot.
|
|
The bottom row is the elixir of long life. Drinking it adds at the very
|
|
least forty years to one's lifespan.''
|
|
|
|
I'd keep one of those for Vivienne, then. I shook my head, still in
|
|
shock that I was looking at the little red potions that were said to be
|
|
the closest thing to a panacea that alchemists had ever achieved. They
|
|
were also said to require the blood of a dragon taken while it still
|
|
lived to be brewed, which had seen them placed squarely in the realm of
|
|
legends. The last Callowan ruler said to have drunk one was
|
|
\emph{Elizabeth Alban}. It was with petty glee that I cleared out the
|
|
room into the Night, being careful not to break anything. We wasted no
|
|
time hitting the second vault, which was significantly less worth
|
|
smiling about.
|
|
|
|
Rooms full of demons tended to get that reaction out of me.
|
|
|
|
I saw the same three Weeping Snares the High Lord of Wolof had stood me
|
|
off with and promptly stashed them away, to the reluctant acceptance of
|
|
the Sisters, but they had significantly less qualms taking in the rows
|
|
and rows of grimoires that Akua told me were contracts with devils. Two
|
|
silver jigsaw puzzles that supposedly could give a glimpse into how to
|
|
make a Great Breach when completed went into the Night as well, as well
|
|
as a dozen more of what Akua called `insight' artefacts, but when we
|
|
came to a simple copper crown on a pedestal the Crows sent me a wave of
|
|
wariness.
|
|
|
|
``Insipientia,'' Akua reverently said.
|
|
|
|
My Old Miezan was rusty, but not \emph{that} rusty.
|
|
|
|
``It's a bound demon of Madness,'' I said. ``The same one your mother
|
|
unleashed?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes,'' she replied. ``My family has held other demons, over the years,
|
|
but never was there a binding quite so thorough or a demon quite so
|
|
mastered as Insipientia has been. Centuries of foes have tried to free
|
|
and turn it against us, ever to no avail.''
|
|
|
|
I reached out for it, but the Crows balked. There was something about
|
|
the crown that spooked them, and I wasn't one to gainsay the instincts
|
|
of my patronesses when it came to demonic taint.
|
|
|
|
``It stays,'' I said. ``Vault's clear, what's in the third one?''
|
|
|
|
``Nothing, presumably,'' Akua shrugged. ``It is almost never used. It is
|
|
the guest vault, and my family has rarely granted the honour of its use
|
|
to anyone.''
|
|
|
|
``Hey, worth a look anyway,'' Indrani drawled. ``Maybe there'll be loose
|
|
change there we can toss into the Night.''
|
|
|
|
I rolled my eye but did not disagree. I wanted to be as through as
|
|
possible when clearing the vaults. Akua informed us there were only two
|
|
more left after this, and the paths began to grow complicated- we'd have
|
|
to double back over the acid pool -- when we forced open the warded
|
|
door, revealing a sight that gave paused to all of us. In the bare stone
|
|
room there was an altar and a sleeping body on it, but that wasn't the
|
|
part that gave us pause. It was the fact that we were looking at a
|
|
perfect reproduction of Akua Sahelian when she'd died. A shift modestly
|
|
covered the body, but I'd seen enough of Akua over the years to know
|
|
that this was looking at a twin. One that was \emph{breathing}. The
|
|
shade, face unreadable, took a few hesitant steps and laid a hand on the
|
|
body. After a moment she gasped.
|
|
|
|
``What is it?'' I quietly asked.
|
|
|
|
``She has magic,'' Akua said. ``No mind or memories that I can feel, but
|
|
the Gift is there.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Ah}, I thought, and the pieces fell into place. The guest vault,
|
|
huh. So this was the work of the sole person in Praes who might feasibly
|
|
make this request of Sargon: Dread Empress Malicia, First of Her Name.
|
|
There'd never been any need for me to lay out bait, I now understood.
|
|
Malicia had always intended to take it. She was in need of a Warlock and
|
|
of someone who had a good handle of me and my plans, so she intended to
|
|
secure both in a single stroke. And there was the deeper game here, the
|
|
one I was beginning to glimpse. The Intercessor, who had outed us in the
|
|
fortress but not gotten us captured. The Bard had made sure that Sargon
|
|
would cover the treasury and the granaries, figuring out one step of me
|
|
that it would leave me only one place to go.
|
|
|
|
That the Intercessor too had wanted Akua to be in this room, at this
|
|
moment, sent a shiver of dread up my spine. Did she know something I did
|
|
not? Had I made a mistake? Or did I, for once, better understand the
|
|
nature of the woman we were dealing with than either my opponents? My
|
|
fingers clenched, then unclenched. None of us would know the answer to
|
|
that until the very last moment, I suspected. Besides, now that we had
|
|
seen what we were meant to the Eyes -- the dull throb of magic filled
|
|
the air, a ward being tripped. \emph{There you go}, I thought, as
|
|
troubles as I was vindicated. And still I couldn't shake the impression
|
|
that I was missing something. That I was still underestimating my
|
|
opponents somehow.
|
|
|
|
``We need to get out,'' I said. ``They know we're here.''
|
|
|
|
``Fuck,'' Indrani cursed. ``Think we should grab the\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
She hesitated. I glanced at Akua.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' she decisively said. ``It will be a trap of some sort.''
|
|
|
|
I nodded.
|
|
|
|
``We're still using the way out in the Empyrean Hall,'' I said. ``Can
|
|
you lead us there quick?''
|
|
|
|
``Very much so,'' Akua replied. ``There is a hall that leads there
|
|
directly.''
|
|
|
|
I didn't bother closing the door behind us as we filed out. We took a
|
|
left at the end of the hall where the vaults were, which brought us to
|
|
another large hallway where aside from the mosaics the sole decoration
|
|
was a tomb of stone.
|
|
|
|
``That doesn't look good,'' Archer muttered.
|
|
|
|
``There is no need to worry,'' Akua snorted. ``For this, I will require
|
|
neither of you.''
|
|
|
|
Taking her at her word we followed her in, and predictably enough the
|
|
tomb's lid began to open. A strikingly good-looking man in bronze armour
|
|
began to rise out, smiling eagerly, but the shade met his eyes and
|
|
straightened her back.
|
|
|
|
``I am Akua Sahelian,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
The man froze. His eyes were blank, I noticed only then. And I had yet
|
|
to see him breathe. Undead of some sort? I glimpsed a slender sword in
|
|
the tomb with him, already half-drawn.
|
|
|
|
``No,'' the man hissed in Mthethwa. ``Not after-''
|
|
|
|
``I am of the blood of Subira,'' Akua said, tone flat. ``By the ancient
|
|
compact, I bid you to return to your sleep and grant us passage.''
|
|
|
|
``Insolent child,'' the man bit out, ``how dare you-''
|
|
|
|
And yet, for all his complaining, his limbs were moving. He lay back
|
|
down into the tomb, and even as he cursed Akua profusely he closed the
|
|
lid over himself. There was a moment of silence, then Archer cleared her
|
|
throat.
|
|
|
|
``So, uh, what was that exactly?''
|
|
|
|
``Dread Emperor Revenant was not the first Soninke to attempt to rule
|
|
forever,'' Akua replied with a smile. ``Merely the most successful. And
|
|
some of my ancestors had an\ldots{} interesting sense of humour.''
|
|
|
|
Well, didn't that sound ominous. Still, I counted our blessings and
|
|
followed our guide as we left. The door wasn't even locked from outside,
|
|
meant to keep people out instead of in, and we hurried through only
|
|
occasionally trapped sets of stairs until we emerged above in what
|
|
looked like a large marble hallway. Above us I caught sight of something
|
|
staggeringly beautiful: the night sky in all its glory. It wasn't like
|
|
the lesser version of the Vaults, this was the real one -- the very
|
|
wonder this palace was named after. I could almost feel the wind looking
|
|
at the ceiling here, see the clouds move and even the occasional bird
|
|
fly. It was one of the most magnificent works of magic I'd ever seen.
|
|
|
|
``We are close to the passage,'' Akua said, breaking me out of my
|
|
thoughts. ``Let us hurry.''
|
|
|
|
Yet even with her navigating for us, this part of the palace had been on
|
|
high alert. It was mere moments before we came across a servant, who
|
|
screamed out in alarm at the sight of our swords, and soldiers were on
|
|
our heels in moments. Arrows and spells streaked behind us as we ran,
|
|
clattering against tall marble columns and setting tapestries aflame.
|
|
How many were there? At least sixty, I thought. Archer took an arrow in
|
|
the arm but she ripped it away without batting an eye, cursing as she
|
|
did, and twice streaks of flame went through Akua. She came back\ldots{}
|
|
weaker each time she reformed afterwards. Tired in away I'd never before
|
|
seen her be as a shade.
|
|
|
|
We remained narrowly ahead of our opponents, until we reached the statue
|
|
of Subira Sahelian that was the mark of one of the eleven secret
|
|
passages into Wolof. Akua pushed the crown the man held in his hand and
|
|
the statue began to move, revealing a narrow set of stairs, and we
|
|
wasted no time heading down. The soldiers were close. The statue moved
|
|
back behind us, though, which ought to slow them down some. The
|
|
oppressive weight of a new set of wards washed over me the moment I got
|
|
onto the stairs but I grit my teeth and quickened my pace. We'd planned
|
|
to leave through here from the start, though initially it would have
|
|
been after we robbed the treasury instead of the vaults. See, like all
|
|
of the eleven secret passages into Wolof this one was a trap.
|
|
|
|
The narrow stairs flared out into a larger platform where we all paused,
|
|
and hastily I took out our last two water breathing potions. Indrani
|
|
idly took two steps down the platform as I did, to trigger what we all
|
|
knew was coming: moments after her foot touched the lower stairs water
|
|
began pouring from the ceiling. It was a flood corridor, see. Either the
|
|
pressure of the flood or drowning would take care of anyone who came
|
|
through here. Except, of course, if they had prepared potions for this
|
|
very eventuality. It'd never been an option to come back by the aqueduct
|
|
again: we would have needed to swim uphill and against the current, and
|
|
break through the enchanted barriers there again without the evanescent
|
|
powder to do the work for us.
|
|
|
|
``Bottoms up,'' Indrani said as I gave her a vial.
|
|
|
|
We toasted and knocked down the drinks. I breathed in, limbering my
|
|
shoulders for the coming swim. Sooner or later the guards would come
|
|
down the stairs and try to snatch us with spells even if proper pursuit
|
|
was impossible, we needed to get a head start. We waited a few
|
|
heartbeats. And then, hideously, nothing happened at all. The potion did
|
|
nothing.
|
|
|
|
``Cat,'' Indrani slowly said, but I did not answer.
|
|
|
|
Instead I closed my eyes. And there it was, the missing piece. Malicia
|
|
had wanted Akua to see that body down in the Vaults, it was why the Eyes
|
|
-- who had no doubt reported to her body in the city the moment they'd
|
|
been sure I could no longer kill them for it -- had waited so long to
|
|
pull the alarm. But it'd not made sense to me that she would then
|
|
simply\ldots{} let us go. Much as I despised the empress, she was one of
|
|
the cleverest people I'd ever met. Malicia had been fine letting us go,
|
|
I now realized, because she'd known we weren't going anywhere. The
|
|
return vials of water breathing potion had been sabotaged before we ever
|
|
left.
|
|
|
|
Had she gotten to the Concocter? No, I thought, she shouldn't have the
|
|
leverage for that. Mostly likely just spies that'd had access to the
|
|
vials at someone point before they got to my hands. A few foreign
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reagents would have been enough to fuck up a brew this complicated. And
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it didn't matter how it'd been done, I forced myself to acknowledge,
|
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just that it had. \emph{The Intercessor knew from the start}, I put
|
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together as my stomach dropped. \emph{It was Malicia's plan, and Malicia
|
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is Named.} So the old monster had just come in at the right time and the
|
|
right place to nudge us so her favoured outcome came about. My fingers
|
|
clenched.
|
|
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|
Figuring out my enemies was useful, but what I needed right now was a
|
|
way out.
|
|
|
|
``Akua,'' I said. ``When we came out the reservoirs, you dried us. Do
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|
you think you could keep a bubble of air around our heads as we swim?''
|
|
|
|
There was a long moment of silence, then she shook her head.
|
|
|
|
``I do not think I am strong enough for two,'' the shade admitted. ``Not
|
|
after the spells I was struck by, and perhaps not even at my best.
|
|
Around one of you, if I meld closely, and even then it will be
|
|
difficult.''
|
|
|
|
So Akua and one of us could still make it out. Not quickly, though, I
|
|
thought. Which meant the person staying behind would have to keep the
|
|
soldiers off their back for a while. Could I work around this with
|
|
Night, steal air to bring with me? I murmured a prayer, reaching for the
|
|
power, but though I felt the Crows reach out to me our fingers\ldots{}
|
|
missed. The wards were too heavy here, I realized. Night wouldn't get me
|
|
out of this.
|
|
|
|
``You can't use Night, can you?'' Indrani said, eyes sharp.
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|
|
|
I shook my head.
|
|
|
|
``That settles it,'' Archer said. ``It's got to be me. Your Name's not
|
|
there yet. I'll keep them off long enough and you can trade back for me
|
|
later.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out, looking for calm. Forcing it.
|
|
|
|
``Yeah,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
She slowly nodded, then turned to ask Akua something, and without
|
|
missing a beat I struck the side of her head. She was quick, and strong,
|
|
but I was both too and she'd not been expecting it. I caught her in my
|
|
arms before she could collapse, golden eyes following me all the while.
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|
|
|
``They can't kill me,'' I said. ``Malicia knows she'd be risking handing
|
|
the Dead King a victory if she did.''
|
|
|
|
There was simply no one else that could keep the Firstborn bound to the
|
|
Grand Alliance and Callow in the war the way I could. Vivienne could
|
|
maybe talk our soldiers around, but the drow? No, Malicia wasn't after
|
|
my life here. She wanted me in her grasp.
|
|
|
|
I intended to make her rue that notion to her dying day.
|
|
|
|
Above us the statue began moving, and I handed Archer to Akua. The shade
|
|
took our friend, coming so close to me for a moment it would have been
|
|
the easiest thing in the world to steal a kiss from my lips, but she
|
|
refrained. Shouts from above. There was no more time, and if I was going
|
|
to make it out of captivity I needed\ldots{} something. A plan, a
|
|
workaround. And it came to me, in a flash, as above the first arrow was
|
|
fired loosely in our direction.
|
|
|
|
``Takisha Muraqib,'' I hissed. ``Make the offer for it. And the rest
|
|
Sepulchral.''
|
|
|
|
Her hand touched mine, impossibly warm, and she nodded.
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|
|
|
``I will,'' Akua Sahelian swore.
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|
|
|
Moments later she was in the water, bringing Archer with her, as spells
|
|
began to light up the hall and I turned towards the enemy. Well, Night
|
|
or not I had a sword and a long history of stabbing people with those.
|
|
|
|
Time to see how long I could buy them.
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