481 lines
25 KiB
TeX
481 lines
25 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-9-claimant}{%
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\chapter{Claimant}\label{chapter-9-claimant}}
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\epigraph{``Gaining power's a lot like scaling a tower, Chancellor. The
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longer you do, the more likely you are to fall.''}{Dread Empress Regalia the First, before ordering her Chancellor
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thrown out the window}
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I was swatted down by the hand of an angry god, fire licking at my face.
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The world went silent and dark until I realized I'd closed my eyes: when
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I opened them I still saw spots of colour but the fear of having gone
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blind that had taken me for an instant left my frame. Everything around
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me was smoking or on fire: the top of the pavilion had been outright
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blown away and the rest of the cloth was twenty feet away, cheerfully
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burning. I pushed myself up, noticing with a grimace that the elbow
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joint of my armour had been partly melted by the heat. The damned
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ringing in my ears made it hard to focus on anything, but when I passed
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my hand over my face I felt with dismay that part of my eyebrows was
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missing. My fingers came away covered in soot but I pushed concern over
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my appearance way down the priority list: whoever had just attempted to
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kill every one of us might still be around, and the second shot might be
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a little more accurate.
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Black was already up and about, helping up a prone and shaky-legged
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Istrid as Captain hovered around him protectively. I reached for my
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sword, checking wearily wether the heat had damaged the scabbard -- no,
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it still came out just fine. \emph{Good. Now, time to disembowel whoever
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was responsible for that. My eyebrows are like, my one good feature.}
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Someone kicked my ankle and I felt it through the aketon, only now
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noticing that my left greaves had somehow been blown away during the
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impact. I snarled and look down only to find General Sacker staring back
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up at me peevishly. I gaped at the sight of her: half of her face was
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gone, a wasteland of blackened flesh with hints of meat peeking through.
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One of her eyes had popped out of its socket, not that she seemed to
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care in the slightest. She snapped her fingers in front of my face
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several times and --
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``-can't hear me at all, can you? Typical Callowan, all bark and no-''
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``Now let's not make this a cultural thing,'' I rasped out. ``Do you
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hear me talking about how goblins always look like they're up to
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something shady?''
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She slapped me. I snarled at her and reached for my sword before common
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sense could kick in. T\emph{hat little-}
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``Just making sure you're not in shock,'' she grinned malevolently at
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me, baring a mere handful of broken yellow molars.
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``Maybe I should make sure of the same,'' I told her through gritted
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teeth. ``You know, just in case.''
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She swaggered away towards Black without replying, though how someone
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who'd lost half their armour -- and face -- in the blast could manage a
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swagger was beyond me. \emph{Don't kick the Praesi general, Catherine.
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It'll be very gratifying, but there'll be Hells to pay afterwards.} I
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followed Sacker, making a point of getting ahead of her through use of
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my Heaven-gifted longer legs.
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``-- put the camp under lockdown. I don't want anyone getting out,''
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Black instructed Captain.
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``They'll be long gone,'' the gargantuan woman replied. ``But there
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might be a-''
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``I'll survive without you dogging my shadow for an hour,'' he spoke,
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tone flat and emotionless. ``\emph{Go}.''
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She went without further protest, stopping to look me over as she passed
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me by before moving on with a silent nod.
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``Fuck,'' I heard Istrid gasp as she leaned on Black's arm. ``Been a
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while since I've been on the receiving end of one of those.''
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I looked around and found that, strangely enough, a single chair had
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been left untouched by the carnage except for being knocked over. I
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strolled away to pick it up and place it next to General Istrid,
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acknowledging her grateful glance with an inclination of the head.
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``So, out of curiosity,'' I rasped out. ``Did someone just drop a
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godsdamned comet on us? Because that's a bold opening move, not gonna
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lie.''
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``No.~Goblin munitions,'' Black replied.
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``Sharpers,'' Istrid specified in a growl. ``They always mess with my
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hearing.''
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``A bad batch,'' General Sacker murmured. ``Otherwise I wouldn't be
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standing right now.''
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The tall orc seemed to notice that half of her colleague's face had been
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kissed by fire just then, a flicker of surprise and dismay going through
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her eyes.
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``Well,'' she gravelled after a moment. ``How many eyes do you really
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need, anyway? You can get an eyepatch that matches Grem's.''
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Sacker palmed what remained of her face, looking pained for the first
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time that night. I ignored the byplay, mind already spinning. Goblin
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munitions, huh. I knew a few things about those, though not as much as
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I'd like. \emph{Sharpers blow, if you're too slow. Smokers choke, and
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then you croak. Brightsticks blind, and none too kind.} Children in the
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Laure had a whole game made up around the rhyme, a sort of morbid take
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on what Imperial sappers had done to the enemy during the Conquest.
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``Sharpers wouldn't kill a Name without a good spot of luck, would
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they?'' I suddenly asked, looking at Black.
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A heartbeat passed as the cogs between those unsettling green eyes
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turned and arrived at the same conclusion I had.
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``We weren't the target,'' the Knight stated. He glanced at the two
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generals thoughtfully.
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``If I wanted to create a right mess in Summerholm,'' I spoke up,
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``first I'd off the people commanding the garrison and then-''
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He grimaced. ``The Governess.''
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Legionaries had finally arrived on the scene and immediately my teacher
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pulled one of them aside, sending him to check on Governess Kansoleh
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with a few curt sentences. Only after that did he return the full weight
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of his attention to me.
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``There will be no lesson tonight,'' he said. ``I trust you'll manage an
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evening by yourself?''
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``I'll find a way to keep myself busy,'' I replied neutrally.
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It suited me just fine, as it happened: lately I'd been going with the
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current a little too much for my tastes. While I didn't doubt that at
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some point I'd be introduced to the three bundles of murder in the back
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of my head in a formal capacity, I had no intention of waiting that long
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to get a closer look at people who were supposedly out for my blood.
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Surrendering the initiative was starting the fight on the defensive, and
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I'd always been an attack-minded kind of girl. The Knight paused to meet
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my eyes, a long moment passing before he snorted.
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``Talk with Scribe,'' he said. ``She'll see to it you have what you
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need.''
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\emph{I really need to find a book on Names}, I decided. \emph{If he
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can't read minds, I think that would actually make it creepier.}
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Displaying his usual level of helpfulness, my teacher had not deigned it
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necessary to tell me \emph{where} Scribe was.
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Thankfully, I lucked out when I asked a legionary to direct me to
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wherever the Blackguards had been settled. None of them were actually in
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the temporary barracks -- if I'd had to guess, I would have said they
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would have started running towards Black as fast as they could the
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moment they heard the explosion -- but the woman in question was
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kneeling on the ground in front of a low table already covered in
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parchments. I tried to get a glimpse, but none of it made sense to me:
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it was gibberish in a mix of Kharsum and Mthethwa, as far as I could
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tell. \emph{Cyphered, most likely.} The flat indifference she was
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displaying in her own quiet way was at odds with how close to Black I'd
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thought she was -- wasn't she worried even a little bit? A sharper
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wouldn't kill a bloody Calamity, but it could have wounded him pretty
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badly.
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``No one died,'' I told her. ``Black's not even wounded -- General
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Sacker got the worst of it.''
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``I know,'' Scribe replied, adroitly dipping her quill in the inkwell.
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I might as well have tried to empathize with a statue. A particularly
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unconcerned statue, even. Pushing down a sight, I knelt across the table
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from her.
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``I'm going to be heading out into Summerholm,'' I said. ``I need a few
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things before I do.''
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I wanted a quiet look, not a melee in the streets of a city that had
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just gone into high alert, and that meant no armour and no Praesi
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clothes. I was keeping the sword, inconspicuous as it would be, because
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screw going unarmed in a city with a hero loose in it -- especially a
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hero that considered blowing up people a valid tactic. Scribe pointed to
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my left and I followed the finger to a bundle of clothes resting on a
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shelf.
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``Bullshit,'' I replied flatly. ``How could you possibly have known I
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would need those before I even did?''
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Scribe glanced up. ``I've had those set aside since we left Laure,'' she
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simply said.
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I was starting to hate that I was playing a game where everybody seemed
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to know the next ten moves except for me, I thought with a scowl. It
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came in useful more often than not, sure, but it also left me with the
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sensation that I was being herded towards a finish they'd already
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planned out for me. What was I going to do, though, complain my needs
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were being seen to \emph{too} well? \emph{Yeah, I'm overdue something
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reckless. Been walking down roads they paved for me a little too much.}
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Without a word I shed my armour and the still-singed aketon underneath,
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slipping on the woollen trousers and short-sleeved blouse that came with
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it. Good make, both of them, but not so expensive as to warrant a second
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look.
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My old boots had been preserved and it was a glorious feeling to wiggle
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my toes inside the used leather instead of the steel-capped stuff I'd
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been given before we moved out of Laure. I already felt a little more
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like me and a little less like a doll dressed up in Evil clothes. With
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the goblin-steel sword and my knife on either sides of my hips I was
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fully equipped for murder if it came down to it, which if Black's line
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about the intention of the other Squire claimants was accurate it very
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well might. There was also a leather purse with some coins in it, which
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might come in useful: about twenty silver coins, with the Marchford
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crest on them. They wouldn't be as widely accepted as Praesi denarii --
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Countess Marchford was well-known to short the precious metals in her
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currency -- but they'd certainly attract less attention than a Deoraithe
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girl running around with a purse full of Imperial silver.
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``I'm heading out,'' I told Scribe. ``Have fun doing\ldots{} whatever it
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is you're doing?''
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The plain-faced woman hummed in response, which seemed to be the sum of
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the attention she was willing to grant me. I walked out of the barracks,
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already focusing on the other claimants as I did: one of them had gotten
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a little closer, as it turned out.
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I smiled grimly: time to check out the competition.
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Outside of the Sixth's military camp, the tent city was a lot like a
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hornet's nest that had just received a good kick. Legionaries had pulled
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back to their fortifications and now refused to allow anyone through --
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at least coming in, I had no problem getting out except for a few
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suspicious looks -- which had not gone unnoticed by the civilians. The
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explosion itself had not been a cause for panic, since any halfway
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decent mage could manage something just as loud, but the way the legions
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had reacted in the aftermath made people nervous. Yet not, I saw,
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nervous enough to shut down all activity for the night. The sea of
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torches and camp fires shed light in a way that made the labyrinth of
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tents look like actual streets instead of empty spaces, and while people
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went about their business quietly they were still very much out and
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about. I kept to the shadows as I tried to narrow down where the closest
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claimant actually was, something made increasingly difficult by the way
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he or she kept moving away when I got closer. It occurred to me for the
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first time that the\ldots{} sensation might go both ways -- if I could
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tell when they were close, could they do the same?
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That could make this whole spying business unfortunately difficult, if
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it were true.
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I might as well assume it was, given how my luck tended to run. Which
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meant his was no longer about sneaking around: it was about cornering a
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quarry. I found myself wishing I'd paid closer attention to the layout
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of the camp, but what little I remembered from earlier would have to do:
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I was somewhere to the left of the legion fortifications, I knew that
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much, so now I just needed to drive the stranger into a place where
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there was no crowd to hide behind. Ignoring the huddled families casting
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curious looks in my direction, I closed my eyes and tried to sink deeper
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into my Name like I had when I'd helped Black raise Zombie. It was
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harder without his own power to act as an anchor for mine, but this was
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also less\ldots{} complex to accomplish. It was like my Name
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\emph{wanted} me to know, and it required focus more than direction. The
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other claimant was a little north of me, moving towards the larger
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avenues, and I would have none of that: the less people around for this,
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the easier it would be to pick out my quarry. I moved in between and the
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presence backed off.
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\emph{Yeah, they can definitely feel me too.}
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I ducked around a tent, moving as fast as I could without outright
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running, and the sensation kept giving ground. Twice it tried to circle
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around me, but I was quicker: as soon as I got in the way the presence
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back-pedalled, staying out of my sight if not out of my mind. How long
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we played this game of cat and mouse I wasn't sure: night had fallen a
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while back, and the smoke from the fires made it hard to get a good look
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at the moon. It was a tedious business, but I grit my teeth and did it
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anyways -- it was a long, methodical grind to force the claimant
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somewhere I'd be able to look at them, but as long as I remained calm
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and methodical it was just a matter of time. Eventually, we ended up
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close to the edge of the camp. There were fewer fires out here but
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Black's earlier prediction had come true: I saw better in the dark than
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any human should. I felt the presence pause as it neared the open ground
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and a feral smile stretched my lips. \emph{Where are you going to run
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now, my pretty?} I put a spring to my step and moved towards the
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now-still claimant, slipping between tents as quick as I could to make
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sure they wouldn't have time to try and circle around again.
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The presence in my mind was suddenly snuffed out.
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The surprise nearly made me stumble, but I caught myself at the last
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moment. My hand drifted to my sword, and with a sinking feeling I struck
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me that I hadn't been the only one playing a game tonight. Here I was,
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far away from any witnesses and alone in the dark with only my sword for
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company. \emph{I wasn't running the bastard down,} I realized\emph{, I
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was being baited.} And I'd fallen for it like a farmer buying magic
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beans, which added insult to the very real risk of injury.
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``Well,'' I muttered to myself, ``no need to be coy about this.''
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I drew my sword and wished I'd taken my shield with me, even if it would
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have made me stick out like a sore thumb. The tents surrounding me had
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seemed like nothing more than irritants getting in my way, earlier, but
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now every one of them could be cover for someone wanting to slit my
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throat. My nice little moonlit walk was taking a sinister turn, but I
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forced myself to take a deep breath. \emph{Fear is sloppiness. Fear is
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the fault line in solid stone. Fear is the enemy's mind, drawing blood
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before his sword.} The words stilled my heartbeat and I let anger flood
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my veins instead. I might have fallen for my enemy's trick, but I was
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not without fangs of my own.
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``So,'' I called out into the silence. ``Are you going to make me wait
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all night?''
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There was no warning except for a flicker of movement at the edge of my
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sight -- the shape moved fast, faster than I'd seen anyone without a
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Name ever move, but I'd been waiting for it. In a flutter of robes my
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enemy struck, scimitar coming low for my leg. I managed to bring up my
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sword down in time, the angle awkward but good enough to stop the blade
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from scything into my flesh. I only got a quick look at whoever was
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attacking me before they leapt back before a tent, ducking out of sight:
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long dark robes that hid the body shape and some sort of clay mask over
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the face. Taller than me, but not real way to tell if it was a man or a
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woman. The claimant did not attack again, silence falling in their wake.
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I tightened my grip around the handle of my short sword taking a careful
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step back as I considered my options. Did I want to turn this into a
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death match?
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I was reluctant at the prospect of killing three strangers, even if it
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got me a Name, but this particular stranger did not seem to be overly
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burdened by the same moral objections. Taking out one of the contenders
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early appealed to the fighter in me -- one less person to worry about --
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but I'd been given to understand that I was already ahead of the curve
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when it came to claiming my Name. Killing one of the claimants on my
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first night in Summerholm might drive the remaining two to work together
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against me. \emph{And I don't know if I could handle that. If this
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bastard's disappearing trick is any indication, they have a few cards up
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their sleeves I didn't even know were in the deck.} They came from
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behind, this time. Thank the Heavens for those robes, otherwise I
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wouldn't have heard it coming: I turned around and struck blindly,
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hitting nothing but air but forcing the claimant to move around my
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swing. The clay mask and its creepy leering rictus looked back at me
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silently as my opponent tried to slice up my wrist. I got the pommel in
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the way but the masked claimant's scimitar slid down and bit into my
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fingers -- I drew back with a curse, trying to kick them in the crotch
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as they melted back into the dark.
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``Fuck,'' I swore again, taking a look at my hand.
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It stung like a bitch but the cut wasn't deep: I wasn't at any risk of
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losing the finger. It was bleeding a lot, though, and that was dangerous
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if left unattended -- worse, it was making my grip slippery. \emph{And
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that's why we wear gauntlets, Catherine}.
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``First blood to you, you creepily silent masked ambusher,'' I conceded
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out loud. ``Still, to quote-''
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I felt someone moving behind me again and bared my teeth. This time the
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blade came for my throat and I ducked under it, burrowing my fist in my
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opponent's abdomen with great relish. The pained groan I heard even
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through the mask was sweeter than any hymn and before they could step
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back I slammed the pommel of my sword right in their mask. A chip fell
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off of the cheek and they rocked back -- after a moment of hesitation
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the stranger ducked out again before I could press my advantage, dodging
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the point of my blade by less than an inch.
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``-to quote a really unpleasant acquaintance of mine, last blood is the
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only one that matters,'' I finished, falling back into a low guard.
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I'd wondered why someone who was so intent on surprise would have first
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struck after I'd invited a hit. It was after they attacked the second
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time I'd understood why: the robes made noise when they moved too fast,
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so they'd taken advantage of the sound of my voice to cover it. It had
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made the third strike easy to predict, though I doubted it would work
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again. I checked my hand again, grimacing when I saw the blood was
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soaking my grip and dripping to the ground. I couldn't let this go on
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for too long, the more it dragged out the larger my opponent's advantage
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got. \emph{All right, the time for subtle is done. It's never been my
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specialty anyway.} If my enemy was using the environment we were in to
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their advantage, then there was an obvious solution: break the
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godsdamned environment. I kicked the stakes keeping together the tent
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closest to me, ignoring the angry yells that came from inside as it fell
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and I cut through the rope holding up the one next to it.
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To my opponent's credit, they were on me before I could bring down a
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third. I slapped aside the scimitar coming for my kidney with the flat
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of my sword, moving in close. The masked claimant tried to push me back,
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but to my delight I discovered I was stronger than them: when I shoved
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back they stumbled, immediately giving ground as I pursued. From the
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corner of my eye I saw people coming out of the tents, faces turning
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from angry to fearful the moment they saw people with swords in hand. An
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older man grabbed his daughter by the hand and legged it, which brought
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a hard smile to my face. They were getting legionaries, most likely, and
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chances were good those would side with me over my opponent. The
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stranger must have thought the same, because they stopped backing away
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and returned on the offensive.
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I knew how to handle them now, though. \emph{I own close range, you
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quiet bastard. We're dancing to my song now.} I kept pushing forward,
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watching for the blade and driving my opponents into tents as they tried
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to put a little distance between us. The masked ambushed was in the
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tricky position of having to keep an eye on me as they stepped back,
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though, and after a moment they stumbled over a stake. That was the
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opening I'd been waiting for -- the point of my blade missed the throat
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but slid into their shoulder. I was forced to step back by a wild swing
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of the scimitar, but I laughed: now the both of us were bleeding, and
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that wound was a lot worse than mine.
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``Cow,'' the stranger hissed through the mask in Taghrebi, the voice
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distinctly male.
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He hadn't said cow, exactly -- the actual word he'd used meant
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\emph{bull's daughter}, though the meaning was the same. Very roundabout
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language, Taghrebi.
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``Goat-husband,'' I replied cheerfully in the same tongue, drawing on
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the extensive repertoire of insults Captain and Lieutenant Abase had
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been teaching me when Black wasn't paying attention. His fingers touched
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the wound and came back red: I raised an eyebrow when he used the blood
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to trace a line across the clay mask.
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``Would it be culturally insensitive to ask what in the Hells you just
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did?'' I mused out loud.
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``This isn't over,'' the boy hissed again, and Weeping Heavens why did
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villains always say shit like that before trying to run away? He might
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as well have sent me a written warning he was about to flee. He turned
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to make his escape but \emph{screw} that: my schedule was tricky enough
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without having to watch over my shoulder for a vengeful masked jackass
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waiting to pounce at any moment. Our very dramatic confrontation turned
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to a very ridiculous foot race in the dark. Now and then he tried to
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duck around a tent and do the melting-in-shadows trick he'd pulled on me
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during the fight, but it seemed to fail if I had an eye on him while he
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was doing it.
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He was trying to get back towards the crowd where he could hide among
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the crowd, but that kind of thing was harder to manage when I knew
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exactly what he was trying to do. He must not have known the layout of
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the tent city much better than I did, because our little race took an
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unexpected turn when he took a left into an alley that ended into a
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stone wall -- a legion supply house, by the looks of it. He slowed when
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he realized he'd run into a dead end, turning to face me. I could see
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him pant through his robes, the red stain on his shoulder soaking the
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dark fabric further every moment. I was in slightly better shape, though
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not by much: fight in the Pit tended to be on the short side, and they
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rarely required much running.
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``Well,'' I gasped out, catching my breath. ``I was aiming for a talk,
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but I suppose shanking you in a dark alley will have to do. In all
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fairness, you started it.''
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I brought up my sword into the middle line and slowly strode
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forward.People were at their most dangerous when cornered, I knew, and
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so I stepped lightly. Barely three feet in front of me, a small clay
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cylinder landed in the dirt -- there was a fuse on tip of it, nearly
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done burning. The children's rhyme drifted to the surface of my thoughts
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almost mockingly: \emph{brightsicks blind, and none too kind.} ``Shit,''
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I cursed feelingly, closing my eyes just before it blew.
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Looking straight into the flash was a good way never to see anything
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again, and even through my closed pupils the explosion light was
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horribly painful. Colours swam in my eyes and all I could think of was
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that I hadn't seen the masked bastard throwing anything but I knew of at
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least one person with access to goblin munitions with a vested interest
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in seeing the both of us dead -- I turned so that I'd have a tent at my
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back, refusing to give my ambusher a clear shot at me even as I
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half-faced the new threat. I heard two sets of steps coming down the
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alley, and when my vision cleared there were two people looking back at
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me. One was a goblin, the strangest-looking I'd ever seen: there was not
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a speck of green on her skin, all of the flesh bared by her chain mail a
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shade or red nearly orange. Next to her a tall Soninke girl with a white
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veil over her face was eyeing me curiously, a long spear propped up
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against her shoulder. It looked like a bridal veil to me, but she was no
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Callowan: to the Soninke, white was the colour of death. I felt the
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masked jackass move behind me and my eyes flicked back to him, my sword
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rising back to middle-line immediately.
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``Now that we have your attention,'' the goblin jeered. ``Why don't we
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all have a nice little talk?''
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I didn't need to reach for my name to know who those two were.
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\emph{Well}, I thought to myself. \emph{I did want to check out the
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competition.}
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