592 lines
28 KiB
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592 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-8-access}{%
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\section{Chapter 8: Access}\label{chapter-8-access}}
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\begin{quote}
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\emph{``Note: Cousin Onoko's assertion that `blood is thicker than
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water' was in fact correct, despite my initial assumption otherwise. Add
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in the silence that followed the experiment, and it can be considered an
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unequivocal success.''}
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-- Extract from the journal of Dread Emperor Malignant II
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\end{quote}
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The ruling seat of the Sahelians was called the Empyrean Palace.
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Pretentious fucking name really, even if it was probably as fancy as it
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sounded, but no one had asked me. Not that it'd ever stopped me from
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sharing my thoughts before, or in this particular case. Strangely
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enough, Akua disagreed with me. The palace's foundations were the oldest
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in the city, and though it'd begun small over the centuries it had
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turned into a real behemoth of a place. That was an advantage in the
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sense that it was difficult to entirely prevent entry into it, as there
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were simply too many entrances and too many people using them, but the
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rulers of Wolof had seen to their defences with characteristic
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thoroughness. Akua drew at knifepoint in the dirt of our quarters'
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floor, first outlining three squares in a loose but noticeable curve.
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``The Empyrean Palace is divided into seven different wings,'' she said.
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``These three are the outer section, the easiest to access. The central
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wing contains greeting halls, but the rest is places of little
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importance -- servant quarters and stables, courtyards and gardens.''
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``We'd planned to go through the eastern wing, right?'' Archer asked,
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crouched over the drawing.
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With her unstrung bow kept on top of her knees, she looked like she was
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crouching by a campfire instead of a loose plan.
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``We did,'' I agreed. ``And odds are we still will. It's heavy on
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gardens, so it'll be easier to sneak through.''
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``The difficulty begins when we are inside the western wing,'' Akua
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said.
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She drew small lines connecting the three squares, standing for open
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paths and halls.
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``Getting into any of these wings from the outside is achievable, but
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movement between the wings is strictly limited,'' Akua elaborated.
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``Each of them has its own largely independent staff, largely to prevent
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infiltrations like ours -- unknown faces are simply not allowed through.
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Which leaves us only one direction to go in.''
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She drew a rectangle vertically, nestled against the squares like a
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hammer's handle, and the deftly connected the three squares to it by
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single strokes.
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``This is the Grand Gallery,'' the golden-eyed woman said. ``It is the
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sift through which sneaks and agents are removed before they can reach
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the vital sections of the palace. It bears the great hall where formal
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banquet are held. Adjoining it are both the public kitchens and a set of
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private parlours. No guard or servant can enter the Gallery without
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holding an enchanted token, given out by the steward of another wing.
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Being caught without one means arrest if you are lucky, but most often
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summary execution.''
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I went fishing through the bag where the last two vials of the water
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breathing potion were and produced three small copper amulets. Detailed
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engravings were around the rim, and at the centre a single pearl bore a
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small enchantment. I set them down besides the plan.
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``Scribe obtained these tokens for us,'' I said. ``They're imitations,
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but very good ones. Eyes of the Empire have used them with success in
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the past.''
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The enchantments usually changed every few months, I'd been told, and
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Sargon had kept to that pattern. In the wake of his chaotic ascension to
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power, however, the Eyes had been able to subvert people in a few key
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mage cadres. The fakes were current, as even though Scribe had lost
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control of the spy network in Praes to Lady Ime she still had\ldots{}
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contacts. Favours for call in that she'd kept for a rain day.
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``That gets us into the Gallery,'' Akua agreed. ``But not forward. To
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leave the Grand Gallery and move deeper into the palace, one must pass
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through one of the three threshold-gates. Each is warded, and there is
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no enchanted ward key: the only way not to be affected is to be keyed in
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with blood at the appropriate ward stone well beyond the corresponding
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gate.''
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She drew three small arcing slices above the rectangle, then a square
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facing each. The moment she finished, she cut through the left square
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with a decisive stroke.
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``Issa's Garden has served as the personal quarters to the ruling
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Sahelian and their direct family for the last century and a half, but it
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was where my mother made her death-grounds,'' Akua calmly said. ``Even
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after years of ritual purging, there are still motes of taint and so the
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ruins remain unused.''
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She drew a stroke through the centre square.
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``The Empyrean Hall is the heart of the palace,'' she continued. ``It
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holds many of the wonders my kin have accumulated over the years,
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including the enchanted ceiling for which the palace is named. Sargon
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will be using the old formal living quarters that were raised there and
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it is also where the treasury vault.''
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``We had an in there,'' I said. ``I have a bottle of blood from a
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servant who is keyed into the wards, and I've learned a Night-trick that
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could exploit that to sneak us in with a little help from my
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patronesses. The trouble is that right now that place will be fucking
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packed to the gills. Forget the wards, it's the guards that would be a
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problem.''
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Akua withdrew her dagger, smoothly rising to her feet. As if to distance
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herself from the entire mess, she even took a step back to lean against
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the wall and arc an eyebrow at me.
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``So you want us to hit the last wing,'' Archer nodded, looking at me.
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``The Vaults,'' I said. ``It's partially a mage village, partially a
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large library and underneath are all the artefacts the Sahelians believe
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too precious to see the light of day.''
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``Or too dangerous,'' Akua pointedly said. ``If Sargon succeeded at
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binding Insipientia again, its artefact-prison will be there. The
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Weeping Snares he used when he came to parley are kept in a vault there,
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and so are over a dozen other makings in the same league.''
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``So we what, release all these beasties into the library?'' Indrani
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asked, frowning. ``I guess it'd be a kick in the guts -- Hells, if they
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get loose it'll bring the city to its knees -- but it doesn't sound like
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your usual plans. Gonna be a lot of dead servants to go with the dead
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soldiers and the dead mages.''
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A lot worse than that, should a demon be loosed in the city once more.
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``No,'' I said. ``We're going to steal the library, Indrani. All of it.
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And then, to make it clear I'm in a foul mood, we're going to rob the
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artefact vaults too.''
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Indrani laughed, openly delighted, but this was a more calculated move
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than she might think. I'd be holding two knives at High Lord Sargon's
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throat by clearing those out, though he wouldn't realize quite how bad
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it was until we sat at the negotiating table again. Akua cleared her
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throat.
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``I have no opposition to such a plan in principle,'' she said. ``But in
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practice, I have a question: how are we going to get past the ward?''
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She pointed at the threshold-gate leading into the Vaults. You know,
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that gate we didn't have a handy blood vial for that'd maybe allow us to
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trick the wards. Servants never got keyed into two wardstones,
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presumably in case of this very sort of situation.
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``I don't have a way to get us past the ward,'' I bluntly said.
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The admission took them both aback.
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``But,'' I continued, ``I know some people who \emph{can} get past
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them.''
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The Eyes of the Empire had people in the mage cadres that enchanted the
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tokens for the outer palace, and those mage cadres lived in the Vaults.
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Meaning that the Eyes had an in. And, as it happened, we knew where
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their safehouses in Wolof were -- it paid to have the woman who'd first
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set them up in your service.
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``And how are you going to get them to help us?'' Akua skeptically
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asked.
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``I am going to use,'' I toothily grinned, ``tact and diplomacy.''
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---
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Night sunk deep into the wood, spreading out in wavy cracks, and a
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heartbeat later the floor shattered.
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We dropped down in a rain of shards and broken floorboards, landing in
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the middle of what looked more like some tavern's common room than the
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spy hideout it was. I landed on the table, swallowing a moan of pain --
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Gods but I wished I could have brought my staff into Wolof -- while
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Archer threw herself on a surprised man and knocked him down. Akua
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already had a knife at the throat of a second when I checked, which left
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me the two seated at the table on which I now stood. Wait, no, only one.
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The woman in the dress had been knocked unconscious by a falling
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floorboard. That left only the bearded man in front of me, who was
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currently gaping and bleeding from the face where a wood shard had flown
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into his cheek.
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``Good evening, Eyes of the Empire,'' I cheerfully said. ``Who's in
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charge here?''
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The young woman -- barely more than a teenager -- that Akua had a knife
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on began tearing up. She was shaking, obviously terrified.
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``Please don't hurt us,'' she hurried out. ``We'll be Eyes if you want
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us to, I'm sure you're right.''
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``\emph{I curse you to be silent},'' I spoke in Crepuscular, and Night
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flared.
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Her mouth kept moving, but not a sound followed. The flash of horror in
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her eyes then was significantly more genuine than the previous
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theatrics. The man at my feet had his hand on the handle of a knife, but
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he stopped short of unsheathing it when he saw I'd caught him.
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``So not her,'' I said, cocking an eyebrow. ``Did she seriously think
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that would work?''
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It wasn't like we'd picked this place out of a hat.
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``She is young,'' the bearded man sighed. ``Good evening, Your Majesty.
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For the sake of this conversation, you may consider me to be in
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charge.''
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Meaning he likely wasn't. I glanced at the unconscious woman to his left
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and then at the poor bastard that Archer had in an absent-minded
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stranglehold, then decided there was no point in pushing for someone
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else to speak.
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``Name?'' I asked.
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``I am Ekon, Your Majesty,'' he said.
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I met his eyes with mine.
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``If I have you a choice between doing me a favour and having your soul
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fed to Sve Noc, Ekon,'' I said. ``Which would you end up leaning, d'you
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think?''
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He swallowed drily, but his face remained admirably calm. He must have
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been his forties, I thought, but his age was not wearing hard on him.
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Spying must pay well.
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``All things considered, Your Majesty,'' he said, ``I would be inclined
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to the favour.''
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``Good man,'' I smiled, and moved to easy myself down the table.
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I dropped down the floor by the unconscious woman, studying her in
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passing just to be sure she wasn't faking. No, it looked quite genuine:
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her head was swelling where she'd been struck, which would be very
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difficult to fake, and her hand was not clutching a knife but a\ldots{}
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pipe? I leaned in close and sniffed. Well, I'd be damned. For the what,
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probably the third time now? Still, Below was smiling on me tonight. I
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snatched up the pipe, which was already filled with wakeleaf, and
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offered my good friend Ekon a smile.
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``Don't worry about it, I'm not asking you to turn on Malicia,'' I said.
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``Nothing quite so troublesome.''
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``I am glad to hear it,'' the man cautiously ventured.
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I passed a hand over the pipe, fire flickering in its wake, and grinned
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around the mouth of my pipe as I breathed in deep of my vice. Ah, that
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hit the spot.
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``Now,'' I said, ``let's talk about how you're going to get us into the
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Vaults.''
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Huh, I'd never seen a spy freeze in horror before. That was probably a
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good sign, right?
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---
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Ekon had been most helpful, for a man who was going to betray us before
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this was over.
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Under cover of dusk we crept through the gardens, weaving through pools
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and flowerbeds laid out intricately under the shade of old, twisting
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trees. Stretches of lilies in pink and pale, delicate orchids in beds
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whose every rock was sculpted, hibiscus and hyacinth and candelabra
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flowers. Among them were more\ldots{} exotic breeds, flowers whose
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petals slowly changed colours or who moved without need for the breeze.
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Some even had veins of light, or sweated droplet of mist-like purple
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instead of dew. We steered clear of the menagerie, for it was
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well-guarded and there were creatures within that even we should stay
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wary of, and past a curving pool whose waters were full of nenuphars we
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took a servant's entrance into the western wing.
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The pair of guards by the door studied us as we came in but said
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nothing. We wore servant's livery, after all. I had discarded my
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eyecloth in favour of a painted stone replacement from the bazaar for my
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missing eye, knowing it might get me recognized otherwise, and a touch
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of cosmetics had seen Indrani and I pass as vaguely Taghreb. The days
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out in the sun had tanned my skin deeper than usual, it was more the
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cheekbones than the colour that gave me away as being of Deoraithe
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extraction.
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Once we were inside the western wing proper, not the outside part, we
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hugged the length of the servant quarters as we headed deeper in. At
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this time of the evening they were mostly empty, save for the children
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and the kinsmen raising them, so simply looking like we had a purpose
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was enough for the few servants we encountered to steer clear of us.
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Twice we encountered patrols, a handful of soldiers in Sahelian livery
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who lost interest in us immediately the moment Akua showed them a fake
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token. I was too on my guard to truly allow my gaze to drift around, but
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I did get glimpses of our surroundings. Tapestries were common and
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colourful, with complicated patterns whose motif changed from corridor
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to corridor. Painted wood was used as a sort of gilding along walls, and
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we had yet to encounter a single torch: it was all magelights.
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It was almost bafflingly easy to make it into the Grand Gallery. We
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showed our tokens to the guards manning the hallway leading to it, faked
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smiles when a young man tried a joke about our `coming here often' -- he
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was eyeing Indrani pretty hard, but it wasn't exactly the kind of
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inspection we should be worried about -- and were sent in. Within half
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an hour of having set foot in the Empyrean Palace, we we'd reached the
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Gallery. Akua had only described it in passing as having statues of her
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ancestors, but she'd undersold it significantly. The Grand Gallery was
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at least half a mile long and maybe half that in length? More than that,
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the `statues' were in full armour and almost eerily lifelike. They were
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on tall pedestals, and a quick glance at the names under them told me
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what I was looking at: former High Lords and Ladies of Wolof.
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I didn't dare linger, moving across the white and pink marble floor as
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quickly as I could without drawing attention. There were more people
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here, but the Gallery itself wasn't really bustling: it was the side
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parlours and the kitchens that were alive, swarming with people. I
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leaned closer to Akua, eyeing one of the statues wearing colourful scale
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and a short sword that looked like a decent fit for me.
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``Think we could grab from those before we head into the Vaults?'' I
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murmured.
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We'd had to leave behind arms and armour, which had me feeling very
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naked at the moment. The servant livery was pretty nice, red and white
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cloth with black accents, but it wouldn't stop so much as a kitchen
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knife -- much less good steel.
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``It is all cursed,'' Akua replied in a murmur of her own. ``Every
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single piece. It is a rite of passage for any Sahelian capable of magic
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to devise a curse of their own and replace one of the fading ones when
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they are fifteen.''
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Of course it was all fucking cursed, I sighed. Mildly curious, I cast a
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look around.
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``So who'd you curse up?'' I asked.
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``One of my namesakes,'' she smiled. ``The third of that name, and most
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distinguished -- she held Wolof against foreign armies in the wake of
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First Crusade.''
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``So what'd you put in?'' Indrani asked, looking enthused. ``Is it rot?
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It's always rot with you Praesi types.''
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``Partial bone liquefaction,'' Akua replied, sounding proud. ``And I
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tweaked the curse so that the most common counter-spells would work, but
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then trigger a second curse that liquefies the skin instead.''
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I wrinkled my nose even as Archer let out an impressed noise. Nasty
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stuff. Definitely a no on nabbing weapons. We got stopped five times.
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The first was a simple token check, the second a warning by a pair of
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guards to avoid the Green Parlour -- noble guests were using it -- but
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the third almost outed us. Not because of an interrogation, but because
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an older servant ordered us to help him and another man carry a large
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wooden table into a parlour. The weight on my bad leg was atrocious, and
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though I kept the pain from my face the older man complained of our slow
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place several times. Akua begged us off as needing to report to the
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Master of Ceremonies as soon as she could and we made a getaway.
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Twice more we were asked to show tokens, and I noticed we were being
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asked more frequently than the people coming and going. I pointed out as
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much to Akua, who nodded.
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``Our guards are trained to ask the token the moment they do not
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recognize a face,'' she explained.
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Made sense, and so far the deception had held. We could only hope it'd
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continue to. It was near the end of the corridor, by the statue of High
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Lord Nassor, that we waited. Archer asked, and so we learned that the
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man was Akua's great grand uncle, whose daughter had been assassinated
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and usurped by Akua's own grandfather. Amusingly enough, Sargon was
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related to the man through his own mother and so it could be considered
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that their branch had somewhat returned to power. Sahelian family
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politics were like a rolling wheel of murder, it sounded like. I caught
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sight of someone passing through the threshold-gate to the Vaults from
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the corner of my eye and stiffened.
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``That's her,'' I said. ``Green stone necklace and grey robes, like our
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friend said.''
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Taiwo Bauna was a stout and respectable-looking woman into her middle
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age, with pale brown eyes that often saw her taken as more highborn than
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she actually was. By all reports, she was a fairly skilled enchanter
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with a good position among the enchanting cadres of the Sahelian vassal
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mages. She also liked losing a dice games and racking up debt doing it,
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apparently, which had been how the Eyes got to her. There were two
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guards by the door, and neither spoke a word as she passed them. She
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found us without difficulty, having been told of where we would be
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waiting. Her face was blank as she took us in, not bothering with
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greetings.
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``You'll be bringing treats the kitchen I ordered,'' she said.
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``Honeybread, which they don't make in our own. Follow and be silent. I
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can only buzz the wards for three heartbeats before it triggers one of
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the deeper alarms, so you'll have to cross quickly.''
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``Understood,'' I simply replied.
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It must not have been the first time she did this, I thought, for the
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wrapped and warm honeybread was waiting for us when we arrived in the
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kitchen. My leg complained of having to double back halfway through the
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Grand Gallery, but I kept myself under control. We were close, now was
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not the time to whine. She led the way as we returned to the
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threshold-gate, where we slowed. Moments before she crossed the gate,
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colourful lights began to swirl in the open air. The guards glanced at
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each other, then her. Taiwo sighed.
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``I'll talk to Lord Luba,'' she told them. ``It's been happening too
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often for it to be happenstance, the anchor patch must have been
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flawed.''
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``Please do,'' a tall man said, voice smooth. ``I apologize for the
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delay, but you will have to wait until the lights fade before
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crossing.''
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None of us argued, and moments after the last splash of colour faded we
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followed Taiwo past the threshold. There was no smell of ozone, no
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movement of power, not a damned thing. We were \emph{in}. We walked
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quickly, hurrying down an ornate hallway until we'd reached a great
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antechamber that Akua had described as the beginning of the Vaults.
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Taiwo turned towards us, snatching the wrapped honeybread out of
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Archer's hands.
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``Tell Alazi that this settles the debt,'' she said. ``And if she hasn't
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arranged someone to take the fall, I'll be selling you all out before
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I'm even thrown in a cell.''
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``Of course,'' I replied. ``She'll be in touch.''
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``She better not,'' Taiwo Bauna darkly said, and walked away.
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Well, I thought, it was a good thing we already had someone who knew her
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way around here. I unwrapped the honeybread, biting into the warm loaf
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and feeling it crunch under my teeth pleasantly. I grimaced a heartbeat
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later, though: way too much cinnamon and honey. Too sweet for me. I
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passed it to Archer, who took a bite of her own and let out a little
|
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moan of pleasure. We hadn't had time to eat, so I really wished Taiwo
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had picked up bowls of stew or something instead.
|
|
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|
``Let's get moving,'' I said. ``Akua, you know the way to the library?''
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|
``In my sleep,'' she drily replied.
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|
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|
Not exactly a surprise. Much like Masego she was a natural talent in
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matters of magic, but talent wasn't enough -- to become as good as she
|
|
had been, when she'd still had magic, you needed to \emph{work}. We
|
|
followed her. Archer ate the entire honeybread, purely to avoid question
|
|
being asked she assured us, and I let my gaze wander through the empty
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|
halls of the Vaults. Most of the mages would be eating around now, or
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|
out on duty: it was some time before we encountered another soul, and
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even then it was another servant.
|
|
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|
There were no tapestries here, the walls adorned instead with mosaics
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|
and steles in a style I did not recognize -- it wasn't from the Free
|
|
Cities, there was no paint, but it was strikingly vivid anyway -- while
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|
the ceiling above us arced gently into what appeared to be the night
|
|
sky. It was a lesser form of the enchantment covering the ceiling of the
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|
Empyrean Hall, Akua told us, one that changed only between night and
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|
day. It was used by younger mages as a practice before they were allowed
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|
to work on the real masterwork. How long was it before we reached the
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|
library? I wasn't quite sure, I was tense enough time was hard to parse
|
|
without focusing. Whatever the truth, we eventually came to stand before
|
|
great iron gates. Twice as tall and tall as a man, they were sculpted
|
|
with the figures of twisting devils offering knowledge to men and later
|
|
being made to kneel to them. I remained at a wary distance, remembering
|
|
how I'd once nearly gotten myself killed by mouthing off at the Tower's
|
|
front door.
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|
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|
``And our way in?'' Indrani asked. ``I'm not seeing knockers or a
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|
lock.''
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|
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|
``It requires a spell,'' Akua said. ``A variation on a formula taught to
|
|
all who have the right to enter this hall, and which changes twice a
|
|
day. Fortunately, there is a trick to it.''
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|
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|
She laid a ghostly hand against the iron door, near a grinning devil's
|
|
face, and closed her eyes. Her arm became as dark fog, flowing gently
|
|
along the iron. The fog narrowed into small tendrils that went along
|
|
certain lines of the sculpture -- a face there, a staff or horns or a
|
|
tower -- and after a long time she breathed out.
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|
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|
``There,'' Akua Sahelian said, smirking a moment before a small click
|
|
was heard at the gates unlatched.
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|
I breathed out, rolled my shoulder.
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|
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|
``All right,'' I said. ``Archer, you know what your job is.''
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|
``Clean-up,'' she grinned.
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|
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|
That was one way to put it.
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|
``Akua, with me,'' I said. ``I can't hold the entire thing in the Night,
|
|
and there'd be no point. It's not the common works we're after, it's
|
|
those that aren't in anyone else's library.''
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|
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|
``I know the sections,'' she agreed.
|
|
|
|
And their defences too, which would be important. There was simply no
|
|
way that the gates were the entire set of protections on something as
|
|
essential to the Sahelians as this library. I'd bet they even encouraged
|
|
young mages to sneak it past this door to sharpen them up a bit. The
|
|
good stuff, though, would be kept away from where people could easily
|
|
get at it.
|
|
|
|
``Then let's go,'' I ordered.
|
|
|
|
Archer took the lead, opening the door just enough we were able to slip
|
|
through. I wasted half a heartbeat to the wonder of what I was looking
|
|
at -- this was large as a cathedral, and most of it books! -- before
|
|
focusing on the immediate. Which was a handful of white-robed scholars
|
|
congregating around a great table near the entrance and paying us no
|
|
attention, while a squadron of twenty guards kept watch from a raised
|
|
platform to our right. Those did notice us, but the initial alarm at the
|
|
sight of us somewhat faded at the sight of Akua following us in: she had
|
|
changed her appearance to be matching the white robes of the scholars
|
|
here. We still got a pair of guards coming down our way, frowning.
|
|
|
|
Akua and I moved towards the scholars and Indrani towards the pair, pace
|
|
brisk. I scanned the room around us, taking in the tower stacks in the
|
|
middle of the great hall and the upwards layers on the walls -- almost
|
|
like the inside of a ship -- but I found no one looking at us from
|
|
there. So far our only witnesses were the people I'd seen. Four
|
|
scholars, I saw, and as we approached one of them turned to us with a
|
|
cocked eyebrow. He was looking at Akua, trying to place her face and
|
|
failing. I was, meanwhile, looking at the table. Not the books but the
|
|
rest. I found something suitable, a paring knife for quills next to an
|
|
inkwell. Less than a dozen feet between us and the scholars now. From
|
|
the corner of my eye I saw Indrani pass behind tall stacks, the guards
|
|
catching up to her there. There wasn't a sound, but a few heartbeats
|
|
later she moved out quickly and with a sword in hand. The guards above
|
|
hadn't noticed a thing, and likely wouldn't until it was too late. Only
|
|
a few feet away from the scholars now, and another one was looking at us
|
|
with similar confusion.
|
|
|
|
``My apologies,'' the first man said, ``but why did you bring a servant
|
|
here? You ought to know they are not allowed, save with a Sahelian. What
|
|
is your name?''
|
|
|
|
Ah, the poor fucker. He'd handed her a line and not even known it. Akua
|
|
met his eyes and smiled, that pretty little number she liked to pull out
|
|
when she was about to ruin someone's day.
|
|
|
|
``Akua,'' she said, hand coming to rest on the neck of a scholar with
|
|
her back to us, ``Sahelian.''
|
|
|
|
Fear flooded the man's face, even as the shade idly snapped the
|
|
scholar's neck. Calmly, I snatched the paring knife and flicked my wrist
|
|
after taking a heartbeat to aim -- it went right into the man's eye, and
|
|
he fell down twitching. Well, at least it'd spare him the embarrassment
|
|
of admitting that Akua had technically been allowed to bring us here.
|
|
Talk about awkward. One of the survivors squawked in terror, the other
|
|
one tipping as he backed away from the table hastily, but we were
|
|
already moving. Akua flowed over the table smoothly, dropping down on
|
|
the one who'd tripped, while I claimed a silver inkwell and smashed it
|
|
into the side of the squawker's head.
|
|
|
|
He tried to ward me off with raised hands, but a jab in the stomach had
|
|
him dropping his guard and I finished the job with another blow on the
|
|
temple. He was unconscious, not dead, so I went to get the paring knife
|
|
and finished the man off with it while Akua strangled the last one. I
|
|
allowed myself one breath of relief after it was done, only then turning
|
|
to look at the platform above. There'd been no alarm raised while we
|
|
killed the scholars, which was a good sign. As if prompted, Archer
|
|
appeared at the edge of the platform with a sword in hand -- and going
|
|
through a guard's stomach. The man slumped and tumbled over the railing,
|
|
falling below with a dull metallic bang. I winced at the noise.
|
|
|
|
``Go hunting,'' I said. ``We can't afford being caught too early.''
|
|
|
|
I was not yelling, but she was Named: she'd be able to hear me anyway.
|
|
She nodded, vanishing behind stacks.
|
|
|
|
``Can you hide the bodies?'' I asked Akua.
|
|
|
|
``I suppose,'' she said, wrinkling her nose. ``I've never had to dispose
|
|
of my own kills before, dearest, much less someone else's.''
|
|
|
|
I rolled my eye at her.
|
|
|
|
``I'm sure you'll manage somehow,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
``And people wonder why we build tiger pits,'' Akua muttered.
|
|
|
|
I hid my amusement, instead closing my eyes and finding my calm. I began
|
|
murmuring prayer in Crepuscular, Night flowing freely through my veins.
|
|
I could feel the attention of the Sisters, their eagerness and their
|
|
hunger. Good.
|
|
|
|
Now it was time to rob this place blind.
|