516 lines
26 KiB
TeX
516 lines
26 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-6-retaliation}{%
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\section{Chapter 6: Retaliation}\label{chapter-6-retaliation}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``And so a great host came to stand before the Sererian Walls, led
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by four kings and three queens who meant to raise Aslam Isbili as king
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over Wolof. Their envoys were scorned by High Lady Akua of the
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Sahelians, and so in great anger did they storm her walls. Seven times
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and one was the army driven back, broken by sorcery until corpses stood
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tall as hills. Only then did High Lady Akua answer the envoys, speaking
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thus: `Have you come to win a crown, or lose seven?'\,''}
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-- Extract from the Scroll of Ruin, twenty-fifth of the Secret Histories
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of Praes
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\end{quote}
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There were eleven different secret passages into the city of Wolof and
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all of them were traps.
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Akua had told me that one of her distant ancestors, after discovering
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several made by disloyal vassals aiming to overthrow the Sahelians, had
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decided instead of walling them up to make several more. High Lord Kofi
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had then seeded rumours about their existence, fake traitors and secret
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scrolls, and sat back waiting for all his enemies to come at him by
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where he'd see them coming. The number of passages had grown over the
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years as people outwitted Sahelians for a time, but in the wake of those
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victories the family always reclaimed the fresh weakness and added it to
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their centuries-old ploy. I'd been halfway to admiring High Lord Kofi,
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until Akua noted he was also famous for his habit of throwing one of his
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cousins in a maze every summer solstice. Along with starved lions. It
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kept everyone on their toes, he'd claimed.
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\emph{Praesi}.
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If there were no secret passages to use and storming the walls was too
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costly for us, then that left us few options to enter the city. Sneaking
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in as part of a delegation had been considered, but we'd be watched like
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hawks and likely kept under wards the whole time. Assuming we weren't
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just betrayed. Pickler had narrowed in on the aqueduct that fed the city
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as our way in, but her suggestion had been\ldots{} overly bold. She'd
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wanted us to cut the water and send in goblins with munitions through
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the stone channel. They'd blow their way through the wards at the end
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and we'd funnel troops into that foothold by the dry aqueduct, taking
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enough of the city by surprise that Sargon was forced to either
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negotiate or suffer a sack. Problem was, I had my doubts that we
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\emph{could} secure that foothold.
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The aqueduct whose source was deep in the Jinon Hills was squatted over
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by the fortress of the same name, then whipped across the valley in
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straight line, but welcoming it into Wolof was yet another set of
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fortifications. The Sahelians weren't fools, they'd known the running
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water was the weakness in their wards. The place was fortified
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thoroughly and garrisoned through day and night: even if we \emph{did}
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take the soldiers there by surprise, I figured it was a toss up whether
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we'd win the fight. And if we lost it, well, that'd get \emph{bloody}.
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So a somewhat quieter way in was needed, which had led me to our current
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scheme. Namely, my old Everdark crew resurrected for one more jaunt: a
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more subtle infiltration of the city through the same weakness Pickler
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had identified.
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I'd needed the Concocter to make it feasible, since without the ability
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to breathe in water that was a \emph{very} long swim, but those vials
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and ransacking through the remains of the old Sudden Abjuration project
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had gotten me the right tools. Cordelia had been the one to most benefit
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from the emptying of the Arsenal, since she'd been able to take all the
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half-finished projects and throw them at the Dead King on various
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fronts, but taking the Concocter east had paid dividends for me. I knew
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the First Prince appreciated me not drawing too heavy on the pool of
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heavy hitters among Named, too. She'd not be so grateful if she knew I'd
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not shortchanged myself in the slightest, simply picking mine for
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stories instead of raw war potential. The Barrow Sword so that I could
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tie him up with the Blood, all of Ranger's surviving pupils for when it
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inevitably came to blows with her, two kids approaching the time of
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their transition into a more settled Named -- hanging swords I could
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bring down, pulling at the right strings. It was a pretty little
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arsenal, though it would not be of use here in Wolof.
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No, here it was an older company that'd be taking the field again.
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``I'd always imagined that if I crossed the Sererian Walls again it
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would either be as Empress or as bones,'' Akua said, eyeing the shape of
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the city in the distance.
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``Well, you're slightly bones,'' Indrani mused. ``You know, in a poetic
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sense.''
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``Ah, bones,'' the woman who had once been the heiress to Wolof drawled.
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``Those famously incorporeal body parts.''
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She made her shape turn shadowy for a moment to hammer the point home
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before returning to her usual guise.
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``Poetry's all about metaphors, Heirloom Haunt,'' Indrani sneered.
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``It's a mark of your inferior education you don't know that.''
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Akua's face creased with what appeared to be genuine outrage.
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``You were raised in the \emph{woods},'' she replied.
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``I guess it must just be the gap between our natural talents, then,''
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Indrani airily replied.
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``There was a time where I would have had had you drowned for that
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sentence,'' Akua noted.
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``Well,'' Indrani said, eyeing the aqueduct. ``Day's young. Give it a
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shot.''
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Idly, I wondered if it was too late to replace one of them by Hakram.
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Sure, given how much metal he wore these days he'd swim about as well as
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a rock but I was having to weigh the prospect of dragging him along the
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bottom the whole time against at least a day of this.
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Convenience \emph{narrowly} won out.
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``All right, let's get this going,'' I said. ``The timing will get
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tricky if we linger.''
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I got a mocking salute from Archer and a graceful nod of acknowledgement
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from Akua, sparing one last look for the distant shape of Wolof before I
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left. The ramparts up here did have an amazing view during the day. We
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headed down into the belly of the beast, and I split from them to have a
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short conversation with the commander leading the garrison. He confirmed
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that Hierophant was already getting started on his ritual, which meant
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we needed to get going. I ordered him to get the gears moving and
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followed my companions below, to the source feeding the aqueduct.
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It was bare-bones, for such a crucial location, a cube of stone split in
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the middle by a rectangular `river' that fed into the channel that would
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lead all the way to Wolof. The water actually came from further out, an
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underground spring deep in the hills, and this room had been raised for
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maintenance purposes. The stone conduct on raised steles -- Pickler had
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commented unkindly on the way the Sahelians had been forced to fortify
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the stone with enchantments to compensate for not using arches the way
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the Miezans had -- was dotted with warded ``hatches'' on the ceiling
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through which mages-engineers could enter to have a look at any blockage
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or foulness, but it wouldn't help the three of us: there wasn't enough
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space between the top of the channel and the water for anyone to be able
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to breathe reliably.
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I would have been able to get around that with Night, probably by making
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a bubble around myself that let in air but not water, but the garrison
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would have seen us coming if we did. It would have tripped half a dozen
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wards on the aqueduct and destroying \emph{those} would have tripped
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further defences. No, to go in quietly the solution was the water
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breathing potion. The three of us did a last check on our equipment
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before going into the water, professionalism finally shining through.
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Archer had been forced to abandon her usual bow, as it would be too
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large as well as enchanted, so she had a simple waxed shortbow with the
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backup strings stashed in a watertight bag along with her arrows. I'd
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shed the Mantle of Woe for this, settling for a simple grey cloak over
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my usual sword and armour.
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Akua's clothes were sedate, and what she carried was not equipment meant
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for herself. The Concocter had finished the last of the ten bags of
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evanescent powder I'd requested half a bell ago, and they'd been brought
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straight here. The shade had them all, held in segmented bags held by
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complicated knots. One pull at the right place and they'd spread out
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while the bags opened, which was our way in. Sudden Abjuration had been
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the Arsenal project to create an alchemical substance capable of
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mimicking the effects of holy water. We'd never managed to make one
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that'd make it affordable to go through with the plan behind the
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project, turning all the lakes between us and the Dead King into holy
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water, but we'd had some successes nonetheless.
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The evanescent powder, for one, would wash out active sorcery on
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contact. Like wards and enchantments trying to keep us out of Wolof.
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``Everyone ready?'' I asked.
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``Bit of a swim without the potion, Cat,'' Archer grinned.
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I rolled my eye, then glanced at Akua.
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``At your disposal, my heart,'' she said.
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``You should be more like her,'' I told Indrani.
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She let a deeply insulted gasp, as I'd known she would, and I shoved a
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small glass vial into her hand. I'd thought about throwing it, but I was
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not going to roll the dice on this entire operation just to be flippant.
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It'd taken the Concocter long enough to make four doses -- two to enter,
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two to leave -- that I was not going to risk it all just before we left.
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I took out my own vial, glancing at the pale blue liquid inside. It
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looked almost milk-like, which was not appetizing in the slightest given
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the hue. I uncorked it and raised the vial in a toast that Indrani met,
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and it was bottoms up for the both of us. The entire thing tasted foul,
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like chalk cut with refuse, but I forced myself to swallow. I breathed
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in a few times, trying to get myself used to it.
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On the surface it didn't feel like anything changed, but my lungs
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felt\ldots{} heavier. Like something had grown.
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``We only have an hour,'' I said. ``Let's not waste it.''
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I want first, even though I wasn't the strongest swimmer -- Indrani --
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as I saw best in the dark. And it was only moments before it was all
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pitch black, all the worst parts of swimming and crawling in a tunnel
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put together. A few strokes forward and already my lungs were burning,
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and I find myself fighting breathing in the water even though in
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principle I knew that I'd survive it. I ended up swallowing it all in a
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gulp, but the water didn't go any further than my mouth: a thin membrane
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had sprouted and it served as a filter, letting through air and not
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water. It was uncomfortable, unnatural even, but it worked so I grit my
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teeth and kept swimming forward. I could feel Akua right behind me,
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patiently waiting.
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Shades didn't need to breathe, which at the moment I felt to be somewhat
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unfair.
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Like most adventures, it didn't feel all that exciting as we did it. It
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was work, tiresome swimming through a tunnel-like channel of fresh
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water. I was wet and cold and my arms quickly grew tired. Now and then
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we encountered small lights as we passed under maintenance hatches in
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the stone, which were warded instead of sealed tight, but aside from
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that it was swimming forward in a gentle, almost unnoticeable slope. It
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was hard to tell how long it took us. We'd estimated half an hour at a
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brisk pace, maybe three quarters of an hour in practice, and my finely
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detailed sixth sense telling me how close I was to dawn and dusk helped
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measure how long we were taking.
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We were slower than anticipated, so we had about a quarter hour left
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before the potion ran when we finally arrived at the gatehouse. I
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gestured for the other two to stop, studying the steel grid in front of
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us. The builders of this gatehouse had been faced with a problem when
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raising it, namely that you couldn't actually raise wards over running
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water. There were wards on both sides of the channel I could see going
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into the gatehouse, a large stone room where I could glimpse torchlight
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through the water's surface. In the water itself, though, the Sahelians
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had been forced to instead use three enchanted metal grids to prevent
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infiltrators going through.
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That was our opening, actually. As with all fortresses, its true
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weakness was not in the walls or the gates but in the petty demands of
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maintenance. In this case, should debris large enough to go through the
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bars of one grid got stuck on the bars of another grid there needed to
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actually be a way for someone to \emph{get it out}. Preferably without,
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you know, this turning into a major undertaking involving knocking down
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walls or parts of the aqueduct. So the builders had put `doors' in the
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grids, large enough for a small person to swim through if they held
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themselves horizontally. Those doors were held fast with very physical
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steel padlocks and more eldritch keyed enchantments, and they were our
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way into the city of Wolof.
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Archer swam forward, elbowing me in our narrow confines, and had a close
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look at the pair of padlocks on the door. She offered me a nod, which
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was a relief. She believed she'd bee physically strong to pry those open
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using her Name, then. Tempting as it would have been for her to try it,
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we couldn't afford to right now: the damn things were enchanted to glow
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if anyone touched them. Sahelian paranoia was truly inspiring. The two
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of us awkwardly made room for Akua to swim past us, which she did with
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unearthly elegance in the middle of this cramped hellhole, and golden
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eyes met mine to ask for the permission to begin. I nodded and the shade
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turned her back to the grids before pulling at the right rope, releasing
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all the knots holding closed the bags of evanescent powder.
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It wasn't all that flashy a sight: the pale powders spread out in great
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clouds that faded quickly, and then the only sign they'd been used was
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that the water looked slightly thicker. The current guided it down, past
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all three grids and then beyond. Akua withdrew without a word, making
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room for Archer, and I clenched my fists as I watched her dart forward.
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After an agonizing moment she closed her fingers around the padlock and
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nothing happened at all. No glow, no alarm. I grinned. It'd worked.
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Indrani ripped open the padlocks methodically and swam through the door
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to get working on the second grid. Even after the unpleasantly long
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swim, I now felt full of energy: I took my sword off my belt, pulling it
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close so it wouldn't get in my way when I swam through.
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Ahead, Indrani broke the last padlocks and I was gesturing for Akua to
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go ahead when I caught sight of shapes moving above the water. Hissing
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in dismay I flattened myself against the side of the channel, Akua doing
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the same behind me, but it was Archer in danger of being discovered. If
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she'd been in the dark she would have been fine, but moments later a
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long wooden staff was plunged into the waters and I saw that at its head
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was a stone enchanted to glow with light. Indrani had moved before she
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could be seen, hiding on the side of the wall in the dead angle, but the
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grid\ldots{} I started with surprise. Oh, that canny wench. While I'd
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been panicking, she'd put the padlocks she'd broken on the last door
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back. They were still busted, but she'd hung them at an angle where it
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was hard to see.
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There was the indistinct sound of people talking, at least three voices,
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and one seemed to be mocking another. The staff was suddenly withdrawn
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and I sagged in relief. If it'd come to a fight \emph{here}, it might
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have gotten ugly. We waited as long as I dared, far after the voices had
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gotten distant. Our last quarter hour was thinning out dangerously and
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there was still more swimming ahead of us, so reluctantly I gave the
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signal again. Archer opened us the path through and we got moving,
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myself last and hanging the padlocks behind me as I closed the doors so
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that it would be hard to tell we'd passed. We had an even better cover
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for our tracks coming, but best not to get sloppy.
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Hugging the bottom of the channel we went past the open channel in the
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torchlit room, into a squeezing tight tunnel that dropped downwards
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precipitously. Barely swimming at that point, I let myself be dragged
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forward and then swam up when we ended up where we'd meant to: the first
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of the three great reservoirs where the water from the aqueduct would be
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kept before going out into the city itself. The reservoir, little more
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than a large cistern, wasn't entirely full: I breached the surface to
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moist air, finding Akua and Archer already climbing up towards the hatch
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at the top.
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``Fuck me,'' I muttered, ``it actually-''
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I bit my tongue at the last moment. I refused to tempt Fate like that.
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``You'll be all right climbing?'' Archer asked in a murmur.
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I glanced at the handholds they were using, little more than indents
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into the side of the wall -- people had to be able to come down to check
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for leaks or trash -- and grimaced before I nodded. The herbs I'd taken
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for the pain in my leg were beginning to fade, but I'd make it up. It
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just wouldn't be pleasant, during or after. Indrani tried to push open
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the stone hatch but it didn't move. I cursed under my breath. Breaking
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that open wouldn't go unnoticed. Akua, however, had a solution. Her arm
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turning to mist, it slithered through a crack and I heard her work on
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the hatch from the outside. Moments later it was hoisted open, Archer
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catching it and popping her head out to look.
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She gave us a nod and a grin: the way was clear.
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Indrani went out first, leaping down soundlessly, and Akua followed as I
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climbed up. My bad leg was burning, but only dimly. I closed the hatch
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behind us, twisting it into some sort of rough lock, and just like that
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we were in the city. Well, a fortress \emph{within} Wolof anyway, but as
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far as I was concerned it counted. We were dripping all over the floor,
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save for Akua, who covered out tracks: she passed a mist-like hand over
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us and we found ourselves mostly dry. She pulled the same trick with the
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trails of wetness we'd left, and though we were still damp at least we
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wouldn't be leaving tracks.
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``You remember the way out from here?'' I softly asked.
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``I've never been in this part of the fortress,'' Akua admitted, ``but I
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have memorized the plans, same as you. It will be enough.''
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I nodded. It'd have to be. We were in a closed off section inside the
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fortress, but one that was relatively close to a way out. There ought to
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be a hall outside the reservoir room that'd go straight to a crossroads.
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Taking a left there would lead us straight to a bastion, and from there
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it was possible for us to leap down three levels into a large courtyard
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whose gate would lead us out in the city streets. The issue was that we
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hadn't known the guard schedules, so there was no telling if there were
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people in that bastion or not. And we couldn't afford to take our time
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here, because soon the Army of Callow was going to `attack' the city.
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``Take the lead, then,'' I ordered.
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She nodded, her form rippling into that of a young Soninke soldier in
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Sahelian livery. Archer and I wouldn't be half as inconspicuous,
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unfortunately, so she'd be going ahead alone. The two of us hid behind
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the reservoirs, waiting for what seemed like an hour. She returned,
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footsteps silent and with a grave expression on her face.
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``Only three in the bastion, but one is a mage,'' Akua said. ``I would
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like Archer to kill him, I am at\ldots{} risk otherwise. If he's a
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skilled enough caster, he could tap into the fortress wards.''
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``Indrani, you're up,'' I said.
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``Ah, that ought to be bracing,'' she grinned. ``See you in a bit, Your
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Graceful Regaliness.''
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``I hope you get caught,'' I sweetly replied, ``so I can
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\emph{consciously} choose to leave you behind.''
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She flipped me off, a sure sign of surrender if I'd ever seen one. The
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two of them disappeared into the hallway, eerily silent, and I was left
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to bite my thumbs. It'd been a while since I'd had to rely on others to
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do the dirty work, hadn't it? In Wolof, though, I would have to. In the
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city proper I'd be able to use Night again, in small doses, but in the
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heavily warded parts like the fortress it'd be like sending up a flare.
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I'd forgotten how boring actually doing things the right way tended to
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be, I thought with half a smile. I was considering how to dispose of the
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corpses -- if we dragged them out of the wards, we could stash them in
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my shadow -- when I heard the sound.
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Someone was tuning a lute.
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My hand dropped to the grip of my sword. The sounds of strings being
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plucked at methodically continued to echo in the room, and though I was
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tempted to remain hidden there was no point to it. The Intercessor
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already knew I was here, else why would \emph{she} be? Pushing off the
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wall of the reservoir I'd been hiding behind, I loosened my cloak around
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my shoulders and took my hand off my sword. What would a blade do
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against the likes of the Wandering Bard? Putting a lazy smile on my
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face, forcing the tension out of my shoulders, I strolled out of hiding.
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She was not difficult to find. The Intercessor was seated on top of a
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reservoir, legs dangling as she finished tuning that shoddy lute.
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Fair-haired, this time, with deeply tanned skin and starry blue eyes.
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She was barely taller than I was, if at all, though she had curves I
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could only envy. And when I came out she raised a finger, putting that
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old silver flask to her lips and drinking deep. I waited, but the finger
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stayed up and she kept drinking. I cocked an eyebrow.
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After an insulting amount of time, she pulled away the flask and smacked
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her lips before letting out a pleased sigh.
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``Alavan pear brandy, Catherine,'' the Intercessor revealed. ``Gotta
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drink while it's still the good stuff, you get me?''
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``Never took to brandy,'' I idly replied. ``Though I once knew a man
|
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more than passingly fond of that particular drink.''
|
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It'd been a barb, a test, and for it I got a pained grimace.
|
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|
``I actually thought of him as a friend, you know,'' the Intercessor
|
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said. ``Tariq was one in a thousand, even for Named. Even when every
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part of him was worn down to the bone, he never lost that \emph{thing}.
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The spark. The part that makes a man take the lash so someone else
|
|
doesn't have to. I don't think any of you ever appreciated how
|
|
staggeringly rare that is.''
|
|
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|
``He probably would have kept kicking around a few years more, if you
|
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hadn't given our plans in Hainaut to the Dead King,'' I harshly said.
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``How many graveyards' worth of friends have you buried, Intercessor?''
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She pulled at a string, smiling at the broken side.
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|
``More than you've had meals, Catherine Foundling,'' the Intercessor
|
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said, not denying or admitting a thing.
|
|
|
|
And the horror of it was that I believed her, believed her with
|
|
bone-deep certainty. How many people you loved could you bury, before
|
|
the only human thing about you was the guise you were? A hundred, a
|
|
thousand, ten thousand? In that smiling woman's shadow was an empire's
|
|
worth of graves.
|
|
|
|
``I'm a little disappointed the Arsenal only bought me a year without
|
|
you,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
More or less, leaning on less.
|
|
|
|
``Praes is where the fun's at, these days,'' the Intercessor shrugged.
|
|
``All those fires full of irons, all those old wounds never closed. It's
|
|
in the air here, you know? The\ldots{} \emph{sincerity}. The Tower's the
|
|
closest thing Below has to a smile. If you wanted me out of your hair,
|
|
you should have kept away.''
|
|
|
|
``Had a thing or two to get done hereabouts,'' I replied. ``What --
|
|
actually, have you got a name for me to use nowadays?''
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|
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|
She plucked at a string.
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|
|
|
``Yara,'' the Intercessor smiled.
|
|
|
|
``Of?'' I pressed.
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|
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|
``Oh,'' she shrugged, ``nowhere in particular.''
|
|
|
|
Well, wasn't that just fucking ominous.
|
|
|
|
``So what are you dropping in for, Yara?'' I asked. ``You got a horse in
|
|
this race?''
|
|
|
|
For a moment her face was split between wonder and surprise. I hid my
|
|
confusion, and like a firefly's flicker in the night her expression was
|
|
wiped clean. Almost quick enough to make me wonder if I'd really seen
|
|
anything at all.
|
|
|
|
``Eh, you could say that,'' the Intercessor said.
|
|
|
|
``Malicia or Sepulchral?'' I asked, tone forcefully nonchalant.
|
|
|
|
It wouldn't be my father, if he became Dread Emperor he'd put an entire
|
|
division of mages on figuring out how to permanently kill her. Captain's
|
|
death was not something he would ever forgive.
|
|
|
|
``Oh,'' the Bard smiled. ``That's cute. You think I give a shit about
|
|
who's screaming their lungs out from the top of the Tower. I really,
|
|
really don't.''
|
|
|
|
``Come for the weather?'' I drawled. ``I suppose they do have a bit of
|
|
everything, if you stand in the Wasteland long enough.''
|
|
|
|
``You know, this is usually where I get cryptic,'' the Intercessor
|
|
mused. ``Give out a few hints -- most of them lies, just enough truth I
|
|
don't get bitten for it -- and send you chasing ghosts while I line up
|
|
the knife.''
|
|
|
|
``But not this time?'' I pressed.
|
|
|
|
``There's really no point,'' the Wandering Bard smiled, strumming the
|
|
lute. ``See, when you drop two starving hounds in a pit the time for
|
|
\emph{subtlety} is past. Now is the hour of tooth and claw.''
|
|
|
|
``I killed you last year,'' I said. ``Crows be my witness, next time
|
|
I'll make it \emph{stick}.''
|
|
|
|
``That's the stuff,'' Yara of Nowhere laughed. ``Come at me, Foundling.
|
|
You want to know why I dragged my carcass to Praes?''
|
|
|
|
My answer was the whisper of my sword leaving its scabbard. Lute tuned
|
|
at last, the Wandering Bard played the first few notes of an air I
|
|
recognized, the beginning of `Stars From the Sky'\emph{.}
|
|
|
|
``The only reason I'm here is to kill you, Catherine Foundling,'' the
|
|
Intercessor grinned. ``We're done fucking around, now. There's no more
|
|
room in this game for the likes of you.''
|
|
|
|
And though I had never seen her wield a blade, never seen her do a
|
|
single thing other than speak words and drink, in that moment I felt a
|
|
shiver go up my spine. She had always been my foe, but this was\ldots{}
|
|
different. This was war, without pretence otherwise. Yet I would not be
|
|
cowed, not today and not by the likes of her. I met her eyes, brown to
|
|
blue.
|
|
|
|
``Take a swing,'' I smiled back, all teeth and malice. ``\emph{See where
|
|
it gets you}.''
|
|
|
|
She laughed, loudly, and then swept into a drunken bow. She fell
|
|
forward, off the reservoir, and as she did she screamed out at the top
|
|
of her lungs. I struck out at her, blade aimed for the neck, but before
|
|
she could touch the ground she was gone.
|
|
|
|
A heartbeat later, the alarm wards triggered with a loud screech.
|