846 lines
40 KiB
TeX
846 lines
40 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-7-expatriate}{%
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\section{Chapter 7: Expatriate}\label{chapter-7-expatriate}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``A journey ends with two strangers: time changes the hearth no
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less than the traveller.''}
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-- King Richard the Elder of Callow
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\end{quote}
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What else could I do but run?
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I shot out of the reservoir room, sword in hand, and into the hallway
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beyond. A dozen strides had me at the crossroads I'd spied on the
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fortress plans, where I slowed for a heartbeat as my cloak swirled
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around me. A squad of armed guards -- \emph{good} \emph{mail and
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helmets, longswords}, the calm part of me assessed -- was hurrying
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towards me from the right side, blades bare. I was already pivoting
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towards the left, though, down another hall that ought to be bring me to
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the bastion that was our way out. The door to it was open and it looked
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empty, not a single rack of spears disturbed or table toppled. Archer's
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head popped out with a wary look on it a heartbeat later, which at least
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told me the two of them had won their scrap inside.
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``Bard's here,'' I hissed, rushing through the doorway.
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Three corpses, cleanly killed, waited for me inside along my two
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companions. Archer began stringing her shortbow, a grim look on her
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face. Akua was leaning over the edge of a bare stone window overlooking
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the courtyard, the rope end of a fastened grappling hook in hand. She
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withdrew, cocking a questioning eyebrow at me.
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``Bard,'' I simply repeated. ``Courtyard?''
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``Unfortunate,'' she said. ``Seven guards. There were more but the alarm
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ward drew them in.''
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That was a sort of silver lining, I supposed. I hesitated for a beat.
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Keeping the corpses in my shadow was now meaningless, since the
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defenders already knew there'd been intruders. Discretion was out. This
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could still be salvaged if we got into the streets and hit the ground
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running, though. Wolof was a big city and Sargon's people couldn't be
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everywhere. Besides, our arranged distraction should be starting any
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moment now.
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``We punch through,'' I ordered. ``Leave the bodies.''
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Akua nodded.
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``Two mages,'' she said, glancing at Archer.
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``Got it,'' Indrani easily replied.
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She took the rope Akua offered her and hoisted herself atop the
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windowsill before dropping down.
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``I'll go after,'' I said, idly closing the door into the bastion behind
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me. ``Bring the rope when you follow, would you?''
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``How very frugal of you,'' she replied, eyes amused.
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I toppled a table, shoving it in the way of the door, and rolled my eye
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at her. What, did she think this stuff grew on trees? Good rope was
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\emph{expensive}. I sheathed my sword, hearing the sound of hurrying
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soldiers catching up, and headed to the window. I got to the edge just
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in time to see Archer leap out of a smooth slide down the rope, an arrow
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nocked and loosed before anyone could notice. By the time I'd begun
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climbing down she'd landed smoothly on the ground, having loosed a
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second and killed twice. There was shouting from the rest of the guards.
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Without the mages in the way, though, Akua could move freely. I let
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myself go into a controlled slide that burned at the palms of my hand,
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hearing the door burst open when I was barely halfway through.
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Swearing, I looked up and saw Akua flow over the edge of the window. She
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dislodged the hook, narrowly dodging a sword blow, and I swore even
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louder as my slide turned into a freefall. I pulled at motes of Night,
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whispering a curt prayer -- \emph{grant me at least a beggar's miracle,
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you stingy carrion sisters} -- and dragging the slightest bit to me. I
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shaped a thin downwards panel of darkness and angled my fall, tumbling
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down atop it into a disastrous roll that scraped my trouser against
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stone. It'd shaken and almost broken: the fortress wards were disrupting
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it, making it unstable. I rose to my feet, bad leg burning, and even as
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the Night-working evaporated behind me I was forced to hurriedly
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unsheathe my sword.
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I caught the blow at a weak angle, the side of my own blade almost
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biting into my shoulder, but I spun as I took a small step to the side.
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The pressure from the taller and larger dark-skinned soldier trying to
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hack at me was turned against him, making him stumble, and I finished it
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with a manoeuvre I must have practiced a thousand times. As he stumbled
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forward I finished my spin and withdrew my sword, so that when the
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soldier steadied his footing and began to turn I was already hacking
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into the exposed side of his neck. It was a quick blow, and quite
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lethal. Without batting an eye I moved on. Archer had killed two more
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before a survivor got close enough to make her drop her bow and
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unsheathed her longknives, I saw, and the last one was coming for me.
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Brave of him not to run, I thought, but not particularly wise.
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Akua landed behind me, the soft noise of it entirely on purpose, and in
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the moment that drew his attention I struck. He was a big man, muscled,
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but clearly used to fighting with a shield he didn't currently have.
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When I feigned at his left he overcommitted, hacking at a blow that
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didn't come, and instead I quickly stepped into his guard and slammed
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the side of his chin two-handed with the pommel of my sword. He dropped,
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stunned but still conscious. From the corner of my eye I saw movement at
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the window above, but the arrow that was fire was knocked off-course by
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the one Archer loose in answer. Too quick to even be able to tell who
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they'd been aiming at. Time to go.
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I glanced down at the soldier below, saw the fear in his eyes and
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hardened my heart. No witnesses: the guards above hadn't seen us up
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close and we wore cloaks, but this one would have descriptions. My arm
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rose, but a soft hand laid against it. I looked at Akua with surprise.
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``There would be no point,'' she spoke in Kharsum. ``Sargon will have
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the corpses upstairs raised to interrogate them.''
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I hid my startlement. It was not so rare a thing for her to preach
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mercy, not compared to the way she'd been when we were younger, but I'd
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not expected it here and now. I looked at the soldier, lowering my arm.
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``Looks like it's your lucky day,'' I said in Mthethwa.
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He grimaced, mouth bloody form my blow.
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``I traded for this shift,'' he replied. ``So not \emph{that} lucky.''
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I grinned, brushing past him, and overheard him whispering something to
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Akua as he inclined his head. \emph{Miyetham Sahelian}, or something
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close to it. No idea what it meant, aside the fact it looked like he'd
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guessed Akua's identity even through her disguise appearance. People
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spoke Mthethwa differently here than they did in Ater and among the
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Legions, I sometimes had trouble with their pronunciation. She did not
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answer and we wasted no time fleeing into the street before the archer
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up in the bastion could start shooting at us again. The street outside
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the bastion was board, almost an avenue, but mostly empty of people. The
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two young girls carrying urns of water made themselves scarce when we
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came out, Akua wordlessly taking the lead.
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We'd barely run ten feet when lights began pulsing in the sky above the
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fortress. I almost grinned. The timing was a little off, but it looked
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like our distraction was finally happening. Hierophant would be
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hammering at the city through a ritual using the waters of the aqueduct
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as a battering ram to smash the inside of the fortress, even as troops
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began emerging from the Ways in a position to capitalize on the breach
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should it happen. The plan was for the Wolofites to repulse the assault
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and blame any damage on the aqueduct grids we'd nipped coming in on
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Masego's assault, but we'd strayed off path some. Still, the threat of
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an outright attack ought to bump us down Sargon's priority list a bit.
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At the very least we'd have fewer pursuers, since the commander there
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would want to avoid thinning their garrison.
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Pursuit still poured out of the same gate we'd used before we'd even
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turned the corner. I wasn't much of a runner these days, but I grit my
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teeth and pushed through the pain as we followed Akua into the neat
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labyrinth that was the streets of Wolof. Our enemies weren't any slower
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than we were, but we could take shortcuts they couldn't -- three brave
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souls followed even when Archer took me by the waist and leapt atop a
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wall, climbing as quick as they could, but we lost them three streets
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down when we got to a rooftop. It was one of those gardens I'd seen from
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afar, a lovely little shaded enclave where flowers and cabbage grew, and
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the three people in it when we intruded froze.
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The oldest among them, a white-haired old man, deliberately looked away
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from us and began to speak of the weather with the younger pair. I
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snorted, taking it as the tacit invitation to move on that it was. The
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old man ignored Archer's friendly wave, stubbornly looking away, and
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Akua guided us southwards through rooftops and streets until we found a
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deserted corner. We paused there, catching our breaths and allowing our
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heartbeats to slow.
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``We are near a bazaar, unless Sargon change the trade-rights for this
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district,'' Akua said. ``The two of you will be able to change clothes
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there.''
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``You could go buy them for us,'' I suggested. ``It'd draw less
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attention.''
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She shook her head.
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``There are city guards at the bazaar,'' she said, ``and it is only a
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matter of time before the fortress garrison sends warning to all
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companies, if they haven't already. There are scrying posts at regular
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intervals in the city, all with runners at hand. They will begin looking
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around soon, and this is not a true hiding place.''
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I felt a sliver of envy at the system described. Laure was nowhere as
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well-organized. It wasn't that we didn't have the ability, at least not
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in principle -- we had the people and the magic. Callow just didn't have
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the coin to spare for something that sophisticated, not when there were
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a hundred other things being neglected that were arguably more
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important.
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``I'm not keen on splitting up,'' Archer said, ``but in that little
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description you did mention that there were guards \emph{at} that bazaar
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you want us headed to.''
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``Only entrances and exits, most likely,'' I noted. ``She thinks it'll
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be easy to disappear into the crowd and come out less conspicuously
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dressed.''
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``My very thoughts,'' Akua smiled.
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It always startled me how easy it was to understand her, to think along
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the same lines. Hakram probably knew me better, but sometimes I wondered
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if I didn't understand \emph{her} better than I did him. It made him a
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better right hand, of course -- his ability to think differently than I
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did, to see what I didn't, was a priceless asset -- but the ease with
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which I could follow Akua Sahelian's thoughts felt oddly intimate. It
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made it dangerously easy to feel close to her.
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``It's boring when you two agree,'' Indrani complained, then turned
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serious. ``Let me have a look at that entrance, at least. I want to be
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sure they're not already looking for us.''
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``Good idea,'' I admitted.
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Akua offered no objection, and after she gave a brisk description of the
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easiest path to the bazaar Archer was gone. I leaned against a rough
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brick wall, earning a raised eyebrow for it. Even when it wasn't her
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face it was still her mannerisms, which made it a little uncanny to look
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at.
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``Yes?'' she asked.
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``Just curious,'' I grunted. ``The guard we spared, what was it he said?
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In don't know what `miyetham' means.''
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``It is an archaic form of the words,'' Akua said. ``What he said was
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`mile thaman'.''
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My brow creased.
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``Always good?'' I hazarded.
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``Ever worthy,'' she corrected, then hesitated. ``It is a turn of phrase
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here in Wolof. It is\ldots{} praise for my family, in a way.''
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\emph{Ever worthy, Sahelian}, I mentally completed. That was what the
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man had said. Considering she'd likely saved his life I wasn't inclined
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to argue.
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``I sometimes forget your High Seats are actually liked by the people
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here,'' I admitted. ``I'm so used to seeing them as the enemy that it's
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hard to conceive of anyone looking up to them as protectors.''
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``We know better than to be devils to our own, Catherine,'' Akua smiled,
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almost ruefully. ``It is why we do best with enemies. That we may pour
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the venom outwards, while the wonders we bring back to our homes.''
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``Dragons risible
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Our claws, swords
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Stealing miracles
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To better hoard,'' I quoted, the Taghrebi stiff on my tongue for lack of
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practice.
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Something like delight flicked across her face, gone in a wink.
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``One of Sherehazad's,'' she said, approving. ``Not without reason was
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she titled the Seer.''
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A moment of comfortable silence passed.
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``You ever miss it, this place?'' I asked, half on a whim.
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Her expression was hard to read, and not for the shade of the alley.
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``Sometimes,'' Akua quietly said. ``Parts of it. Others I am not so sure
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I could suffer now that I have known the world beyond the Sererian
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Walls.''
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I slowly nodded.
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``And you?'' she smiled. ``Do you miss Laure?''
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I clenched my fingers, then unclenched them.
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``No,'' I admitted. ``Laure's just a different fight to me, now. It's
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the court and trying to keep Callow whole. I miss the parts I loved when
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I was a kid, but the city? No.''
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It hadn't been home in a long time, though it galled me to admit it even
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in the privacy of my own mind. I'd never felt as more than a guest in
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the old palace of the Fairfaxes, a child putting on adult's clothing,
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and these days what I loved most in the world was condensed into the
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shape of a few people. I was still fond of the city, it had been my home
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once, but I would not weep to leave it after the war ended. The
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conversation ended with Archer's sudden return, but to me it felt only
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half-done. Like we'd left bits of it still hanging in the air. Now was
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not the time, though, so when Indrani informed us that the handful of
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guards at the bazaar entrance looked too bored to have been warned I
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went with the flow.
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We were waved through nonchalantly by the pair of guards standing in the
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shadow of the arch leading into the marketplace, neither bothering to
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look if we were armed. Akua noticed my surprise as we entered the bazaar
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and leaned close for an explanation.
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``Our clothes are of fine make,'' she explained. ``It is expected of us
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to bear weapons.''
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``They thought we were highborn?'' I asked.
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``Not \emph{that} fine a make,'' she laughed. ``They believed us mfuasa,
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likely. Some lord's retainers.''
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I nodded and follower her, letting the noises of the bazaar wash over
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me. I'd thought it would be a strange and exotic place, somewhere out of
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a dream, but I found the reality of it rather more sedate. The stands
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were a great deal more colourful than back home, and often made with
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only bare bones of wood while walls and roofs were dyed cloth, but aside
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from that it was mostly the goods sold that made a difference. There was
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no food to be bought here, as sale of such goods was strictly regulated
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in Wolof and contained to specific markets in every district, but there
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were enough spices on display to make a Callowan merchant weep for the
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wealth.
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Jewelry was terrifyingly common too, copper and silver most of all but
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some gold and precious stones as well. Everyone seemed able to afford
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it. Clothes and cloth hung everywhere, small glassworks and the kind of
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petty trinkets that every market in the world must sell. The other great
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surprise was the sale of enchanted goods, and I wasn't talking about
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magic swords. For every glinting dagger there were a dozen ever-sharp
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kitchen knives. I saw stone coldboxes engraved with runes, prettily
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sculpted magelights and even alchemical brews. They were bartered over
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like cabbage in swift-spoken Mthethwa, like it was the most natural
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thing in the world to have a cure for the cold bottled in a bazaar
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stand. Maybe it was, I thought. There were no priests here -- where else
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were people meant to go, when they were sick or wounded? It was still
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surreal, to see magic taken as something so\ldots{} common. Nine in ten
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of those people wouldn't be mages either, it was just that magic was
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utterly mundane to them.
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Perhaps the bazaar was a strange place after all, under that veneer of
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familiarity.
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Akua took the initiative to buy us clothes and cloak and I was
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disinclined to argue. Or particularly surprised she did not even need to
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press clothes against me to know whether or not they'd fit. We paid in
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Imperial coinage, silver denarii that Malicia herself had pushed into
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Callow some years past in a bid to bind us more closely to the Tower,
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and Akua got us bags for our old clothing too. I left in a burnished
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yellow cloak and matching tunic, keeping only my boots and trousers,
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while Indrani ended up in a nice pale green. I got the impression from
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some of the looks the merchant gave us that he believed us to be, uh,
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\emph{consorts} that that a young noblewoman was dressing more to her
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tastes. We picked up a few tricks to hide our appearance too, cosmetics
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that were quickly applied.
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We slipped out of the market through another entrance and took to the
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streets, the two of them already knowing where we needed to go without
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my saying: we'd come to steal two things, after all, and one would be
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easier to get at than the other.
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---
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Within moments of having a good look at the granaries, it was plain we
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weren't getting into them today.
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The Sahelians had their own private reserves near the palaces, according
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to Akua, but the `city' granaries were a set of seven large interlocking
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warehouses surrounded by a low stone wall. There were three large
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avenues leading out, each large enough for two wagons to pass on them
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simultaneously, and a handful of smaller doors. The whole place was
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warded up to its neck, though it wasn't all about keeping people out. A
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lot of it was mundane utility: wards against vermin, or to keep the
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warehouses dry and cool. The thresholds weren't too strong, considering
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wagons had to be able to come in and out easily for distribution, but
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the walls were anchors for some pretty nasty stuff even by Praesi
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standards.
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Still, we'd planned for this. The granary was one of the few places
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that'd been kept entirely intact during the mess that saw Sargon replace
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High Lady Tasia, so the wards there hadn't changed in the slightest
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since Akua had last seen them. We'd schemed a way in a weakness, as with
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use of the right magical trinket we believed we could trigger the ward
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in very specific manner and cross before it reset, and even prepared an
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escape plan. It was all useless now. The entire district was on high
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alert, even a fool could have seen it. Hundreds of household guards had
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come to reinforce the garrison and what must be a staggering amount of
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mages with them: there were balls of light hovering ten feet above the
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wall, at least a hundred of them, and the spell was one known to Akua.
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``The colour will change if there is movement where the light extends,''
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she said. ``It should last for at least an hour, and if they've any
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sense they will have staggered putting the spells up so that they can be
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smoothly replaced.''
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High Lord Sargon had been distastefully competent so far, so I'd go
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ahead and assume they had. I still sent out Archer to have a closer
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look. Even if I had my doubts she'd find a blind spot, learning more
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about the defences in place couldn't hurt. There was no way to tell how
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long Sargon would keep the reinforcements there and we could only risk
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staying in the city for so long. Our foes were looking for us, and
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eventually our luck would run out. Archer came back after half an hour,
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looking displeased.
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``The place is sealed up tighter than a tomb,'' Indrani reported.
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``They've actually closed up all the small access doors, the only way's
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in through the big gates now.''
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``That's a problem,'' I admitted.
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We simply did not have the strength to smash our way through here.
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``Did you get close enough to eavesdrop?'' Akua asked.
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Archer nodded.
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``Nothing too exciting, the usual whining and a bit of fear at the
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notion of facing us,'' Indrani said. ``I think I've figured out why the
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bazaar guards hadn't been warned yet: a lot of them complained about
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being yanked away from other assignments in the city and sent here in a
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hurry. I'm thinking Sargon put his scrying stations to work sending
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people to this place instead of looking for us.''
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My lips thinned. I did hate fighting clever opponents, they were always
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such a pain. Akua's cousin was proving to be one of that breed, having
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correctly deduced what we'd come here for and that it was a better bet
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to protect it than comb through half the city looking for us.
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``We're not going to make it in there,'' I finally said. ``And I'm
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betting he's going to be willing to keep his people here as long as it
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takes while he's looking for us.''
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If we were threatening an assault on his walls it might force him to
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pull away people, but we both knew the Army of Callow wasn't going to
|
|
try anything of the sort. He could afford to keep his mages here instead
|
|
of manning the ramparts, the tricky fucker.
|
|
|
|
``He will have the treasury vaults under reinforced guard as well,''
|
|
Akua quietly said. ``This is something of a setback.''
|
|
|
|
It was. We'd come here for grain and gold, and now it was looking like
|
|
we were going to have to leave without either. Considering Marshal Nim
|
|
had torched a third of our supplies, coming out of here empty-handed was
|
|
going to be a blow. Not necessarily the end of our campaign, but it'd
|
|
stiffen odds that were already against us. Even aside from simple
|
|
logistics, running away from Wolof with our tail tucked after we'd
|
|
swaggered wasn't going to be a good luck when we were courting allies.
|
|
Some of the Clans might reconsider raiding, if it looked like Malicia
|
|
was winning this war, and I needed the orcs south for more reasons than
|
|
I'd admitted. I bit my lip, mind spinning in circles. I couldn't see
|
|
another way, much as retreat would be a bitter pill to swallow.
|
|
|
|
``We shouldn't stay here,'' Archer said. ``Let's find a place to settle
|
|
for the day, yeah? We can figure out our next move then.''
|
|
|
|
I nodded, silent, and followed them deeper into the city. There had to
|
|
be a way, right? I tried to put together another plan, another trick,
|
|
yet all I could think of was the sound of an old monster tuning a lute.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The search was spreading out.
|
|
|
|
There were parties on the streets now, squads of twenty with two mages.
|
|
The caster regularly stopped and cast a spell with no visible
|
|
manifestation save a spinning circle of golden light, and it was magic
|
|
none of us knew. Archer wandered close once or twice as we headed
|
|
towards the southwest of the city, but she got nothing out of idle
|
|
chatter.
|
|
|
|
``I'd wager the circle is a focus mark, not unlike a rune,'' Akua mused.
|
|
``The purpose remains rather more elusive.''
|
|
|
|
``It's got to be a detection spell of some sort,'' I said. ``Sargon has
|
|
to know finding us in a city this large will be Hells otherwise,
|
|
especially when we have you guiding us around.''
|
|
|
|
``What it might detect is the question, then,'' Akua said.
|
|
|
|
We had no answer, so steering clear was the best move. We were nearly at
|
|
our destination anyhow. When I'd first been told that Wolof did not have
|
|
slums, I'd naturally been pretty skeptical. \emph{All} cities had slums,
|
|
even walled ones, it was just a matter of how large they got. Wolof
|
|
wasn't as much of an exception as Akua believed it to be, but she'd not
|
|
been entirely \emph{wrong} either -- even Scribe had agreed. The
|
|
Sahelians had a pair of districts called the Yumban in the southeast of
|
|
the city, where people who'd usually end up on the streets or in slums
|
|
were assigned to live. Accommodations were provided, if very basic ones,
|
|
and food from the city granaries regularly doled out. It all sounded
|
|
very charitable, which naturally meant it wasn't the whole story.
|
|
|
|
Any people who lived there were essentially at the mercy of the
|
|
Sahelians. By law they could not refuse military service if called on,
|
|
or a servant's station, and they could even be traded to other lords so
|
|
long as work was guaranteed by the receiving lord. People regularly made
|
|
it out of the Yumban into higher station -- mages in particular -- and
|
|
Wolofites were proud of such success stories, but the truth was most
|
|
people didn't. By design, presumably, so that if the Sahelians ever had
|
|
an urgent need of manpower they had a source at hand that drawing on
|
|
would not cause unrest. Conscription in the city would be taken badly,
|
|
but who would object to the Yumban being emptied? It was clever, in a
|
|
heinous sort of way, which I was coming to learn was the mark of the
|
|
must successful nobles of Praes.
|
|
|
|
Most of the people in the Yumban \emph{now} weren't actually from Wolof,
|
|
though. I caught the difference as we crossed into the edge of the
|
|
districts. They favoured greens and dark oranges over the yellows and
|
|
reds I'd seen earlier, the cadence and wording in Mthethwa was different
|
|
-- easier to understand for me, it was closer to the Ater-and-Legion
|
|
standard I'd learned -- and there were almost no weapons anywhere.
|
|
Sargon had taken to raiding the northern hinterlands of Aksum on
|
|
Malicia's behalf as part of his support in the civil war, and I was
|
|
looking at part of the loot he'd carried back with him: people. It
|
|
wasn't just Aksumites, of course, that was a riot waiting to happen. But
|
|
I'd wager that we were looking a the `prizes' who'd not had a trade he
|
|
could offer them a shop for
|
|
|
|
Day labourers, farmhands, those whose trade was not lacking in Wolof.
|
|
|
|
They were not mistreated and I saw little resentment, not the kind you
|
|
saw back home when a town despised their lord, but I could almost feel
|
|
it from the air that Sargon Sahelian's authority ran thinner here.
|
|
Perhaps not much hatred, but not much love either. Their abductor had
|
|
not delivered them unto a paradise. There was a lot of room, at least,
|
|
since entire streets of the Yumban were still empty. The city had not
|
|
entirely required from the brutalities of Tasia's fall. Akua guided us
|
|
carefully, keeping out of sight where we could as she explained what she
|
|
was looking for.
|
|
|
|
``We'll pick a place near a \emph{kufuna},'' she said.
|
|
|
|
I knew the word, though I'd never seen one myself. Black had mentioned
|
|
that sometimes people from them had trouble adapting at the War College,
|
|
where the ways were rather different.
|
|
|
|
``Those are the noble-backed schools, right?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
The Tower had `free' schools of its own, where people could be attend in
|
|
exchange for sworn years of service -- it was how Tyrants could recruit
|
|
mages without asking them of High Lords or drawing on Ater -- but
|
|
\emph{kufuna} belonged to noble houses, without anyone else having a say
|
|
in their running or what they taught.
|
|
|
|
``It is more nuanced than that,'' Akua murmured. ``But you are not
|
|
incorrect. People in those streets will be used to strangers coming and
|
|
going, less likely to pay it attention.''
|
|
|
|
``Never did get to see one of those,'' Archer mused. ``We should have a
|
|
look.''
|
|
|
|
She demurred, but I was curious myself. We settled on studying one from
|
|
a distance, but it turned out to be even easier than that. Such a
|
|
`school' was in session on large paved open grounds between two sets of
|
|
houses and we found good lodgings in a second-story place that had a
|
|
window looking down over the lesson. It was little more than a large
|
|
room meant for eating and two adjoining smaller nooks for people to
|
|
sleep in, but the narrow stairs to the rooftops had us sold. Building
|
|
were smaller in the Yumban than in the districts around it -- I felt,
|
|
impossibly that the rest of the city was somehow looking down on us --
|
|
but within the districts themselves it'd be a good way to get around.
|
|
After dark, anyway.
|
|
|
|
We dropped our packs and settled in, quickly figuring out why both
|
|
stories of the building were still empty even though the convenience of
|
|
closeness to the kufuna must have made it in demand: one of the nooks
|
|
had been fouled by an animal pretty disgustingly. That could have been
|
|
cleaned, even if it hadn't been, but the way the light pit in the middle
|
|
of the combined house had a wooden cover that moved in the wind and
|
|
slammed with a bam-bam-bam sound out of nowhere sometimes would have
|
|
been trickier to handle. I could already tell it was going to get on my
|
|
nerves. I went into the clean nook, which had the overlooking window,
|
|
and cast a curious look.
|
|
|
|
It wasn't that large a window, so when Indrani and Akua came too we had
|
|
to squeeze pretty tight.
|
|
|
|
They were doing mathematics, the poor fuckers. Maybe thirty `students'
|
|
whose ages looked to vary between eight-ish to fourteen were sitting on
|
|
the ground, using nice writing slates and chalk. The teacher was an old
|
|
woman at least into her sixties, who leaned on a cane -- lucky her,
|
|
hadn't been able to bring my staff -- and had cataracts in her eyes but
|
|
looked pretty spry otherwise. She guided her students through the end of
|
|
a lesson on multiplication, and it was when students were called on to
|
|
answer questions that the difference to what I was used to came in.
|
|
|
|
``The only a kid handling with the black stone can answer,'' I muttered.
|
|
``Why?''
|
|
|
|
It wasn't always the same, either. Sometimes children answered two
|
|
questions in a row before passing to another, sometimes it was immediate
|
|
but never once did the teacher actually order it passed.
|
|
|
|
``It is because of \emph{jino-waza},'' Akua said. ``I am not surprised
|
|
the rules are unclear to you.''
|
|
|
|
I frowned. It was familiar, the words. I'd read them before, if only in
|
|
passing.
|
|
|
|
``The clear-eyes,'' Indrani snorted. ``The Lady talked about it. It's a
|
|
little like the way we did thing in Refuge.''
|
|
|
|
``I can't see them keeping score over anything,'' I said. ``What's it
|
|
do?''
|
|
|
|
``It is not a game, not exactly,'' Akua hesitated. ``It is philosophy,
|
|
at least in part. To display your skills, your knowledge. To assess
|
|
where you stand in regard to your peers. The stone and questions are
|
|
just a tool to ease this.''
|
|
|
|
I studied the students, eyes narrowed.
|
|
|
|
``They're all eager to answer,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Which was not my experience with studies. The tutors the orphanage made
|
|
us sit in front of were used to squirming pupils wanting to be
|
|
elsewhere, and they used questions as a way to keep us in line. Listen,
|
|
learn, or you'll look like an idiot in front of the others.
|
|
|
|
``So they win something by doing it,'' I said. ``Esteem, maybe? They
|
|
can't trade that for something useful, though, and it's a little
|
|
abstract for kids.''
|
|
|
|
``It is training for the world beyond the lessons,'' Akua said. ``The
|
|
teacher, she will remember the one who distinguish themselves. What they
|
|
are good at. And when my family -- or someone with a trade and no
|
|
children -- sends someone, wanting a candidate for a scribe's apprentice
|
|
or kitchen attendant, she will give those names. She holds
|
|
opportunities.''
|
|
|
|
I chewed my lip.
|
|
|
|
``So the stone, it's part of the test too,'' I finally said.
|
|
``\emph{Jino-waza}. Sure, a clever kid could keep it for a long while --
|
|
but then you hog the opportunity, and no one will ever pass you the
|
|
stone. They're trading it like adults would trade favours.''
|
|
|
|
``Exactly,'' Akua grinned. ``A student who oversteps might even find
|
|
themselves sabotaged, as it often is with those who act in such ways in
|
|
higher stations. It teaches balance, to take opportunity without making
|
|
enemies.''
|
|
|
|
``Teaches who's worth making allies with, too,'' Archer quietly said.
|
|
``Not everyone's good at the same things, you can scratch each other's
|
|
back in a way that everyone wins.''
|
|
|
|
She had a strange, almost fragile look on her face as she looked at the
|
|
kids. Was she thinking of Refuge? I spoke up to move the conversation
|
|
along, even knowing that Akua was unlikely to ever be so uncouth as to
|
|
comment on the look that'd seized our friend's face.
|
|
|
|
``Everyone you're allied with, at least,'' I scoffed. ``It's not without
|
|
sense, but it's a very Praesi way of doing things.''
|
|
|
|
``I have seen the schools of your people, dearest, what few you have,''
|
|
Akua reminded me. ``They are as menageries. Kufuna are a better way.
|
|
Your nobles have their tutors, as we do, but learning is simply not
|
|
prized west the Wasaliti the way that it should be.''
|
|
|
|
``I came out of my schooling just fine,'' I replied, a tad defensive.
|
|
``And orphanages gave educations even before Black stepped in, he just
|
|
ensured they were \emph{good} ones.''
|
|
|
|
He'd also raised the number of them tenfold, but that was another
|
|
discussion entirely. It wouldn't do to forget that my father had
|
|
\emph{made} a lot of Callowan orphans along with those orphanages.
|
|
|
|
``Come off it, Cat,'' Indrani snorted. ``How much of what you came out
|
|
having learned you learned in classes? You're like a truffle pig, you
|
|
just dig into books about the stuff that you want to learn about and
|
|
ignore the rest. You barely even had help when you learned Chantant.''
|
|
|
|
``Thank you for the description, woman I will never sleep with again,''
|
|
I drily replied as she stuck out her tongue at me. ``And I could have
|
|
gotten more out of those classes if I'd cared about them. It was my
|
|
choice not to gain, because I thought it was pointless -- it'd be the
|
|
War College that was make or break for me.''
|
|
|
|
``Failure to motivate your student to learn is very much failure,'' Akua
|
|
replied. ``\emph{Jino-waza} ensures that every student knows the worth
|
|
of their lessons.''
|
|
|
|
``It also teaches your kids to always compete with each other,'' I
|
|
flatly said. ``That they'll need to squabble with each other to gain the
|
|
attention of the highborn, that it's the only way up. It sets in the
|
|
bone that you swing at the people around you, not upwards. It teaches
|
|
skills, too, I won't pretend otherwise. But I'm not exactly surprised
|
|
those schools are backed by \emph{nobles}.''
|
|
|
|
``You do not understand,'' Akua gently said. ``Jino-waza goes beyond the
|
|
schools. It is everywhere, applies to everything. The lack of a stone
|
|
does meant it ceases, the stone is a \emph{teaching} tool. It is how a
|
|
family knows which of them should benefit if a favour is called in,
|
|
whose marriage should have the most coin spent on to arrange, who gets
|
|
to eat the most when the months are lean.''
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Parents} do this?'' I replied, aghast.
|
|
|
|
``Well, yeah,'' Indrani said, brow creased. ``Makes sense, I'm not sure
|
|
why you're so offended. If you get a windfall, you don't waste it on
|
|
someone who won't do shit with it. Even parents can tell who's going
|
|
places, Cat.''
|
|
|
|
``You're not supposed to play favorites,'' I bit out. ``Everyone gets a
|
|
fair shot, that's how people who aren't obviously good at things get
|
|
their chance to shine.''
|
|
|
|
Did they not realize that what they were describing, it only ever
|
|
benefitted the slightest bit of the people involved? Talented people
|
|
would band together and help each other up while having all the
|
|
incentive to kick everyone else down. And above those games you had the
|
|
highborn, playing an even more lethal take on it with each other -- and
|
|
the ingrained notion that they should never, ever let anyone below them
|
|
come up. It could only be at their own expense.
|
|
|
|
``That's nonsense,'' Indrani bluntly replied.
|
|
|
|
``She is Callowan, Indrani,'' Akua said, and when I turned on her a
|
|
thunderous scowl she raised a hand in appeasement. ``I mean no insult. I
|
|
am only saying that it is because you come from a land of \emph{plenty}
|
|
that think this way, dearest.''
|
|
|
|
I blinked at her. A land of plenty? Had she \emph{seen} what they sold
|
|
in the bazaar. Not even the enchanted stuff, just the spices and dyes
|
|
would -- I stopped, elbowing aside the sharp irritation and forced
|
|
myself to look at it from the Wasteland's eyes. Food, I got almost
|
|
immediately. She meant food.
|
|
|
|
``It wasn't your nobles that made this,'' I finally said. ``It's a
|
|
survival teaching.''
|
|
|
|
``When is the last time Callow had a major famine?'' Akua asked. ``It is
|
|
different here. We kill to eat, to drink -- the Taghreb fight wars to
|
|
steal clouds from each other and make them into water! You come from a
|
|
place that has the luxury of fairness, but Wolof does not. Few parts of
|
|
Praes do.''
|
|
|
|
``That's not the way to do it, though,'' I said. ``You don't claw at
|
|
each other, there's no winning that when it starts. You sit and figure
|
|
it out together. Ration, share. Something like a famine, you're all in
|
|
it together.''
|
|
|
|
Splashing the mud on the others so they were deeper in wouldn't actually
|
|
get you out of the pit.
|
|
|
|
``It a pleasant sentiment,'' Akua replied, ``but it does not help to
|
|
choose which belly should be filled by the rice bowl. Jino-waza does. It
|
|
lets you make the decision with clear eyes -- and they \emph{will} have
|
|
to make it in their lifetime, Catherine. Everyone in this city older
|
|
than forty, before Callowan grain was brought in, has known hunger.''
|
|
|
|
``Not the nobles,'' I sharply smiled.
|
|
|
|
``Not my kin, the Sahelians are too wealthy for it,'' she agreed. ``But
|
|
lesser lords, ruling over poorer lands? It is not as uncommon as you
|
|
think. The fields feed everyone, Catherine, and no granary lasts
|
|
forever. We make many wonders, but not even we can make wheat sprout out
|
|
of rock.''
|
|
|
|
It would have been a better use of their skills in magic to learn that
|
|
rather than fucking diabolism, I thought, but that was unfair.
|
|
Destructive magic was easier. You needed to know a lot less to toss a
|
|
fireball than, say, heal a broken bone. I could see it writ in the long
|
|
of history, how it would have gone: the people and places inclined to
|
|
the peaceful solution, to make wheat sprout from rock, they wouldn't
|
|
last. Not when a less scrupulous rival could come in, throw a few
|
|
fireballs and take everything. It wasn't as easy as raising castle walls
|
|
with this. Magic was \emph{expensive}, and Praesi were rich but not with
|
|
bottomless purses.
|
|
|
|
So you got better at the magics that could protect you and destroy your
|
|
rivals, and then maybe if you rose high enough that you were beyond most
|
|
threats you could afford to go looking for wonders. Answers beyond
|
|
eating the other crabs in the bucket. It was not happenstance, I
|
|
thought, that the Sahelians had the finest field rituals in Praes. But
|
|
by the time you got safe enough to look for those wonders, were you
|
|
still the same people who'd wanted them in the first place? I felt an
|
|
unpleasant shiver of sympathy at the thought. I was not an unfamiliar
|
|
tale I was spinning there.
|
|
|
|
``It doesn't need to stay like this,'' I said. ``Older than forty, you
|
|
said. We had two decades of peace and trade, and that changed things.''
|
|
|
|
``It did,'' Akua murmured. ``Mother used to think it softened us, made
|
|
us lose our edge, but I disagree. It freed us to pursue different
|
|
things. To consider beyond the immediate.''
|
|
|
|
I cast a long look at the kids below, fingers tight against the
|
|
windowsill. The teacher had move on from mathematics, she was speaking
|
|
of early Praesi history -- the campaigns that brought the Grey Eyries
|
|
into Praes not so long after its founding -- as she regularly stopped
|
|
for questions and jino-waza considered to unfold before my eyes. I
|
|
couldn't have fixed this place even if I thought it was my duty to do
|
|
it, I admitted to myself. There was so much of Praes that was still
|
|
unknown to me. Parts of I knew like the back of my hand, the Legions and
|
|
the lore and bloody embrace with my own home, but it wasn't enough. Akua
|
|
had thought I might be Dread Empress once, climb the Tower, but it would
|
|
have been madness.
|
|
|
|
I was glad I had not heard the song in years.
|
|
|
|
No, what I was meant to do out east was not put on some saviour's cloak
|
|
and pretend I had the answers. I was here to bind the Dread Empire to
|
|
the Liesse Accords, to the war against Keter, and to topple the empress
|
|
who'd been such a thorn in our sides. Beyond that, I must remember
|
|
restraint. It was not my land here, and in some ways I just\ldots{}
|
|
thought differently. And did not quite understand how they did. There
|
|
was more to the differences between Callow and Praes than weather and
|
|
colours. I shook my head, shaking off the thoughts.
|
|
|
|
``We should plan out our next move,'' I finally said, pushing away from
|
|
the window. ``We'll want to move under cover of dark.''
|
|
|
|
``A shame I cannot use the family library,'' Akua said. ``Half an hour
|
|
there and I would know the nature of the spell the patrols are using to
|
|
hunt us.''
|
|
|
|
Indrani snorted.
|
|
|
|
``Yeah well, if we were in there we could just stroll up to the gold and
|
|
take it,'' she said.
|
|
|
|
I smiled, only half-listening.
|
|
|
|
``The library is in an entirely different wing than the treasury
|
|
vaults,'' Akua chided. ``It is much too-''
|
|
|
|
I turned to look at her so quickly my neck almost cracked.
|
|
|
|
``Wait,'' I interrupted. ``The library, you told me it was over the
|
|
vaults.''
|
|
|
|
``The artefact vaults, yes,'' the shade said. ``The treasury is nowhere
|
|
near these. It is not the cleverest of notions to keep demons near one's
|
|
coinage.''
|
|
|
|
Oh, I thought. \emph{Oh}. Sargon thought we were going for the grain and
|
|
the treasury, so that was the parts he was protecting. But he had to be
|
|
stretched tight with people, going all out on the defence of those two
|
|
places and looking for us in the streets with yet more mages. He
|
|
couldn't cover everything, so he'd focused on guarding what we were
|
|
after. That meant thinning the defences elsewhere. And though we could
|
|
get to neither the granaries nor the treasury, what was more important
|
|
than either of those things to the enduring power of the Sahelians? I
|
|
met their gazes with my eye, grinning wide.
|
|
|
|
``I have a plan,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Well, I could have done without the groaning.
|