457 lines
20 KiB
TeX
457 lines
20 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-26-seek}{%
|
|
\chapter{Seek}\label{chapter-26-seek}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``A villain should make plans with the understanding that
|
|
everything you can conceive of going wrong will, and then a few others
|
|
things too.''}{Dread Empress Regalia}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I hit the ground with a thump and half a dozen yelled curses. My fall
|
|
threw up a cloud of what looked like dark dust, thick and cloying. I
|
|
groaned and rolled over, wincing since apparently going into a Name
|
|
dream wasn't enough to make my leg not feel like it had gone a few
|
|
rounds with an angry ogre. Rubbing the dust out my eyes, I took a look
|
|
above: cloudy skies as far as I could see, dark and roiling things. The
|
|
way clouds got just before a storm. I managed to push myself back on my
|
|
feet with only minimum urge to scream, getting my bearings as I caught
|
|
my breath. I was surrounded, it seemed, by an endless wasteland of ash
|
|
and dust.
|
|
|
|
``I'm honestly not sure whether or not that's an improvement over the
|
|
swamp,'' I grimaced.
|
|
|
|
Last time there'd been landmarks of a sort, a sort of reverse tower
|
|
where Good Twin had been keeping her smug ass on a chair. Now, though?
|
|
No sign of a structure in sight. A breeze like a warm breath blew across
|
|
the plain, shifting dunes of ash and dust in ever-changing patterns.
|
|
Save for that eerie murmur, there was not a sound to be heard. I checked
|
|
my belt and saw that my sword was still at my side, already an
|
|
improvement over last time.
|
|
|
|
My armour, on the other hand, was noticeably less well-maintained. Black
|
|
had mentioned to me once that Roles reacted to the way you thought of
|
|
your Name rather than what you truly were. Heroes were strikingly
|
|
handsome and heroines wholesomely beautiful because that was how they
|
|
expected to look. On the other side, good-looking villains could turn
|
|
ugly in a matter of months if they thought of their Name as a brute's.
|
|
On others, the effect was subtler. Warlock was said to have stopped
|
|
aging in the prime of his life, Malicia at the peak of her beauty and my
|
|
teacher hadn't changed one speck since the day he'd become the Black
|
|
Knight.
|
|
|
|
What I thought of myself through the lens of my Name did not seem much
|
|
different from the way I'd always been. It did, however, seem to include
|
|
slightly unkempt armour -- maybe that'd change if I stopped allowing
|
|
Hakram to arrange have it polished for me. I would have checked under my
|
|
aketon to see if the long scar William had gifted me on our first
|
|
meeting still snaked across my chest, but that would have required
|
|
unfastening my armour. Not worth the trouble, I decided. I'd expected
|
|
for something to have happened by now, anything really, but this vision
|
|
was determined to be a boring one. I sighed and headed north through the
|
|
wasteland, picking the direction at random.
|
|
|
|
My pace was slow but steady, the throbbing in my leg never quite going
|
|
away. How long I walked I couldn't say: it could have been hours or
|
|
days. Nothing changed here, not in any meaningful way, and the longer I
|
|
headed north the more I became uneasy. I'd been out of it for days, last
|
|
time, and though I did not think forcing an aspect this close to
|
|
manifestation would take as long I couldn't afford to be out of
|
|
commission for that long. Masego had mentioned the demon might be able
|
|
to interfere and though I was confident I could take it on inside my own
|
|
soul, it occurred to me there might be no fight at all coming.
|
|
|
|
Maybe it would just keep me asleep while Marchford burned, until one of
|
|
its devils ripped my throat open.
|
|
|
|
I shivered even though my forehead was matted with sweat. Demons were
|
|
not supposed to be thinking creatures, not the way mortals and older
|
|
devils were. They could mimic speech, the way the\ldots{} thing that
|
|
served as the Tower's gatekeeper had, but it was only ever mimicry. They
|
|
were not born of Creation, and so all that sprang from it was beyond
|
|
them -- or so said the House of Light. Theirs was an intelligence we had
|
|
no understanding of, as they lacked understanding of us. That was always
|
|
what unmasked them, in the stories: a missed detail, a small error
|
|
springing from their inability to truly grasp what it was to be alive.
|
|
The thoughts kept me company on my lonely trek, and though I knew it was
|
|
paranoia to believe that growing fear had been planted in me I had to
|
|
wonder\ldots{} was that what it wanted me to think?
|
|
|
|
The first break in the sinister monotony came not as an interruption,
|
|
per se. Scaling a dune of ash, I noticed there was something buried near
|
|
the tip of it. A scrap of leather, looked like, warped as if by great
|
|
heat. Keeping a prudent hand on my sword, I scattered the dust around
|
|
it. \emph{Not a scrap, a boot.} With a leg still attached to it. I
|
|
started digging in earnest, unearthing what appeared to be a man's
|
|
corpse. The flesh and armour were melted badly, but I would recognize
|
|
the silver scale anywhere: this had been a man-at-arms, one of the
|
|
Silver Spears. I looked up to the sky with a frown.
|
|
|
|
``Giant graveyard, is it?'' I sighed. ``There better not be bloody
|
|
zombies again.''
|
|
|
|
I moved on after hacking the limbs away just in case. That first finding
|
|
seemed to have been the droplet to tip over the vase, because I now
|
|
found a dead body every few moments. Silver Spears at first, men-at-arms
|
|
and cataphracts forever riding their butchered mounts under the ash, but
|
|
eventually I started coming across legionaries. Men and women of the
|
|
Twelfth, who'd died when I'd thwarted the Lone Swordsman in Summerholm.
|
|
By the time I stumbled on the first of mine, I'd steeled myself for it.
|
|
A Soninke girl, her corpse not quite desiccated enough to hide the sword
|
|
wound that had split her head in half. My fingers formed a fist and I
|
|
ground my teeth.
|
|
|
|
``I walked the battlefield when the blood was still fresh,'' I told the
|
|
sky. ``I did not flinch then. Do you really think I'll flinch now?''
|
|
|
|
There was no answer, not that I'd expected one. I pressed on. It
|
|
shouldn't have surprised me but it did, when I found Nilin's corpse. No
|
|
flesh remained and the bones had been blackened as on his pyre, but the
|
|
senior tribune's markings on his armour betrayed his identity. The
|
|
Exiled Prince and Page lay in front of him, the bones of their hands
|
|
threaded together in a morbid embrace.
|
|
|
|
``I know it was my fault,'' I admitted. ``I take responsibility for it,
|
|
even if no one is casting the blame in my direction. And yet\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, we'll even that score soon enough,'' someone replied.
|
|
|
|
The ash under my feet erupted and the thin point of sword nearly ran
|
|
through my throat -- I stumbled away, already on the back foot, and my
|
|
sword came out with a metallic ring. My doppelganger sat with a smug
|
|
grin in the dust where she'd apparently half-buried herself waiting for
|
|
me. This one was a familiar sight. An older version of me, with a pink
|
|
scar running across the nose and a face hardened by years of war. She
|
|
wore a regular's chain mail instead of my own plate, her standard-issue
|
|
sword glinting in the gloom even when covered in ash.
|
|
|
|
``I had a feeling I'd run into you at some point,'' I grunted. ``I have
|
|
a feeling stabbing you again will be the most pleasant part of this
|
|
little jaunt.''
|
|
|
|
Her grin widened and she shook off the dust as she rose to her feet.
|
|
|
|
``No need for any of that, Cat,'' she denied. ``We're buddies now. I
|
|
kinda like what you've done with the place.''
|
|
|
|
``You would,'' I muttered. ``You also said we wouldn't fight last time
|
|
and look how that ended.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{Not to mention you just tried to stab me in the throat}, I thought
|
|
but didn't bother saying. Rubies to piglets she'd have a ready-made
|
|
excuse.
|
|
|
|
``Things have changed, Cat my girl,'' she told me. ``Thought you lacked
|
|
the stomach, but you've been nailing it. We got a legion, a nice bunch
|
|
of competent minions and we're building up a body count. Should have
|
|
found a pretext to run Heiress through by now, but nobody's perfect.''
|
|
|
|
She paused.
|
|
|
|
``Except me,'' she conceded. ``I am perfect.''
|
|
|
|
I wished I'd looted a boot off a corpse, if only so I could throw it at
|
|
her head.
|
|
|
|
``They're not my minions,'' I replied through gritted teeth. ``They're
|
|
my friends.''
|
|
|
|
``The Calamities are living proof you can be both,'' the doppelganger
|
|
dismissed, then leaned forward. ``But before you go all righteous on me,
|
|
sweetcheeks, answer me this: if you asked Nauk to rip out some noble's
|
|
throat, would he even stop to think before obeying?''
|
|
|
|
He wouldn't. I knew that. She knew I knew that. Hakram might ask me why
|
|
afterwards, given the same order, but Nauk? He'd laugh and forget it had
|
|
ever happened before the month was done.
|
|
|
|
``I wouldn't ask,'' I replied instead.
|
|
|
|
``You will,'' the spirit smiled, the certainty in her troubling.
|
|
``That's the beauty of this greater good business you've been peddling.
|
|
You can justify anything, if the final outcome's nice enough.''
|
|
|
|
She waved around her sword, warming up to the subject.
|
|
|
|
``Heroes might spawn from this orphanage and make a big mess, so we burn
|
|
it. Those nobles might be trouble down the line, so we poison the wine.
|
|
That officer will be a liability when I commit treason, so in the worst
|
|
of the fight she goes.''
|
|
|
|
``I haven't done any of those things,'' I retorted. ``You're just
|
|
pushing my position to extremes and pretending that's the rules I
|
|
obey.''
|
|
|
|
``I can't help unless I'm higher up in the ranks, so I engineer a war,''
|
|
my twin said softly. ``Extremes? I'm just getting us to the logical
|
|
conclusion. Don't get me wrong, Cat, I'm on board with this greater good
|
|
wagon you're driving. I just want us to stop pussyfooting around and get
|
|
some real changes going.''
|
|
|
|
``It won't get to that,'' I snarled. ``I won't \emph{let} it get to
|
|
that.''
|
|
|
|
The doppelganger lightly rested the flat of her sword against her
|
|
shoulder.
|
|
|
|
``See, this is the kind of thinking that's holding us back,'' she
|
|
complained. ``We're not the good guys here, Cat. Let's just\ldots{} stop
|
|
pretending, why don't we? We're the girl that sees something that needs
|
|
to be done, so we do it the best we can. If that means a few thousand
|
|
people die?''
|
|
|
|
She shrugged.
|
|
|
|
``Well, people die all the time,'' she said. ``Can't make an omelette
|
|
without burning a few armies, sacking the villages they came from and
|
|
salting the land that spawned them.''
|
|
|
|
``The entire point of this,'' I replied coldly, ``is to avoid putting
|
|
Callow to the torch. If I didn't care about the state of the country in
|
|
twenty years, I'd be with the Swordsman waving a rebel flag.''
|
|
|
|
``Callow burns, sweetheart,'' she laughed. ``That's what it \emph{does}.
|
|
It burned whenever the Empire came knocking at Summerholm, it burned
|
|
whenever the First Prince decided it was time to expand the borders.
|
|
We're the battlefield of this continent. Hells, the only time the
|
|
Kingdom wasn't putting out fires was when we were starting some of our
|
|
own on the other side of the border.''
|
|
|
|
``That's why we pay taxes to the Tower now,'' I said. ``The war doesn't
|
|
end until someone won and there's no real way to beat Praes for good.
|
|
They tried it, after the Second Crusade, and gave birth to Dread Emperor
|
|
Terribilis instead. So they win and they rule Callow. Now I just make
|
|
that rule \emph{work} and we finally break the godsdamned cycle. No more
|
|
invasions. No more villages put to the sword so that a different flag
|
|
waves over Laure.''
|
|
|
|
``And you think the rest of Calernia is just going to take that?'' the
|
|
twin laughed. ``No, we don't get off that easy. Nobody wants Praes with
|
|
a granary, Cat. Hiding behind the mountains and fortifying the Vales
|
|
just buys everyone a few years until the armies are mustered and the
|
|
dance begins again.''
|
|
|
|
``And what's your solution?'' I mocked. ``Let's kill everything that
|
|
looks like it could be a liability and hope it turns out for the best?''
|
|
|
|
``I already told you how we stop the fires in our backyard,'' the spirit
|
|
smiled. ``\emph{We} cross the Vales, with a torch in hand. If everyone
|
|
else is running from the blaze they're not making trouble for us.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{This is why Evil loses}, I realized. By overreaching, by thinking
|
|
you could put all of Calernia on the the defensive and not be buried by
|
|
the backlash. There had to be a middle way, one between fighting the
|
|
Praesi and allowing them to plunder Callow. Black understood this, I
|
|
knew. He'd marginalized the nobles of the former Kingdom and gone to
|
|
work on the people themselves, tried to remove any reason for rebellion
|
|
rather than crush those that formed. I couldn't change Callow, I knew
|
|
that deep down. I wasn't sure I should. But I could change the system
|
|
that ruled over it, one victory at a time.
|
|
|
|
``Where's the other one?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Good Twin died in a tragic accident,'' the doppelganger informed me.
|
|
``Her tombstone's over there.''
|
|
|
|
I warily cast an eye where she was pointing, noting there was an actual
|
|
tombstone. Of sorts. Someone had taken a legionary's breastplate and
|
|
sunk it into the ground as a marker. My Name vision worked just fine, so
|
|
I could make out the inscription on the metal.
|
|
|
|
``I mouthed off,'' I read, then sighed. ``Did you murder her?''
|
|
|
|
``Calumny,'' the doppelganger protested, deeply offended. ``She died of
|
|
natural causes.''
|
|
|
|
I frowned. ``Is that the name of your sword?''
|
|
|
|
The doppelganger gave me a shit-eating grin. ``Allegedly.''
|
|
|
|
``Can anything die a permanent death here?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``Eh, who even knows,'' the twin shrugged. ``If you listen closely,
|
|
though, you can still hear her spirit whining in the wind.''
|
|
|
|
I tried to listen if only out of morbid curiosity. There was, to my
|
|
surprise, a noise coming from the tombstone. The breastplate shuddered,
|
|
then tipped over. A figure emerged, to the dramatic gasping of my
|
|
current company. Once more an older version of me came into sight, her
|
|
short hair and once-pristine white robes now marred by ash and dust.
|
|
|
|
``A zombie,'' the evil doppelganger announced. ``Quick, kill it before
|
|
it devours us!''
|
|
|
|
``You \emph{bitch},'' the newcomer gasped, glaring at the wretched
|
|
spirit. ``\emph{You buried me alive}.''
|
|
|
|
``Are any of us here really alive, though?'' the other deflected,
|
|
affecting a thinking pose.
|
|
|
|
I rubbed the bridge of my nose. No wonder I ended up in over my head all
|
|
the time, if this was what the inside of my soul was like.
|
|
|
|
``Your squabbles are of no interest to me,'' I informed them. ``I'm here
|
|
for my third aspect. I don't suppose either of you can point me in the
|
|
right direction?''
|
|
|
|
``Ah,'' the evil twin grimaced. ``Bit of a problem there.''
|
|
|
|
The good doppelganger rose from her grave, dusting herself off angrily.
|
|
|
|
``You are reaping what you have sown, Catherine Foundling,'' she barked.
|
|
``Selling your soul to Hellgods attracts their like.''
|
|
|
|
``We have a squatter is what she means,'' the other contributed.
|
|
|
|
``Fucking Hells,'' I cursed.
|
|
|
|
``Exactly,'' the white-robed twin agreed tartly.
|
|
|
|
My fingers tightened against the grip of my sword.
|
|
|
|
``You're saying it's \emph{inside} my soul?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
``We were real close to that third aspect,'' the scarred doppelganger
|
|
noted. ``Now it's sitting between us and it.''
|
|
|
|
Asking how that was possible seemed more trouble than it was worth, so I
|
|
held my tongue. I was not in the mood for a lecture or another flippant
|
|
answer.
|
|
|
|
I cocked my head to the side. ``So you know what it is?''
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Lame} is what it is,'' the evil twin muttered.
|
|
|
|
``A sign you may not yet be beyond hope,'' the other one countered. ``It
|
|
is --``
|
|
|
|
SEEK.
|
|
|
|
What I heard did not come out of the white-robed girl's mouth. The word
|
|
coiled through my veins and I fell to my knees, retching drily into the
|
|
ash. Something was smiling at me, just beyond the edge of my vision.
|
|
Both of the spirits had gone pale and shivering.
|
|
|
|
``What was that?'' I whispered hoarsely.
|
|
|
|
``You know what it was,'' the white-robed doppelganger murmured back,
|
|
helping me up to my feet.
|
|
|
|
For the life of me, I could not manage a reply. I felt\ldots{} soiled,
|
|
like I'd been dipped in filth until it had seeped into my skin and
|
|
permeated even my bones.
|
|
|
|
``And you just let that thing be?'' I croaked.
|
|
|
|
``Not a fight we can win,'' the other one admitted. ``It's been giving
|
|
it a shot, though. Your Name.''
|
|
|
|
My head swivelled in her direction.
|
|
|
|
``You mean?''
|
|
|
|
``You're fond of that little metaphor comparing it to a beast, aren't
|
|
you?'' the evil twin smiled grimly.
|
|
|
|
``Roles are bound by perception,'' the white-robed one said. ``Though
|
|
the shape you have given your power is deplorable, I will not deny it
|
|
has a certain martial might.''
|
|
|
|
The scarred doppelganger walked up to me, colour slowly returning to her
|
|
cheeks. She patted some dust off my shoulders then clapped me on the
|
|
back.
|
|
|
|
``Show that bastard the door, Cat,'' she ordered. ``Then wake up and
|
|
give that hot redhead a good seeing to, would you? Of all the things
|
|
we've been nailing lately, she's \emph{definitely} top of the list.''
|
|
|
|
I slapped away her hand.
|
|
|
|
``The day I need a pep talk from you is the day I retire,'' I grunted.
|
|
|
|
Shit, how bad was this demon for even that backstabbing pain in my ass
|
|
to be trying to be encouraging?
|
|
|
|
``Oh?'' she mocked, ``are we-``
|
|
|
|
The breastplate impacted the back of her head brutally, knocking her to
|
|
the ground.
|
|
|
|
``That,'' the good twin snarled, ``was for \emph{burying me alive}.''
|
|
|
|
The other doppelganger did not even stir. I raised an eyebrow at her,
|
|
reluctantly impressed.
|
|
|
|
``Go,'' she said tiredly. ``That creature plaguing us is worse than what
|
|
even Evil can muster. You do the work of the Heavens in ridding us of
|
|
it, however unwillingly.''
|
|
|
|
I rolled my eyes but the memory of the way it had spoken to me was too
|
|
fresh for me to make an issue of this. I had more pressing business,
|
|
regardless. By the time I'd made it to top of the nearest ash dune there
|
|
was no trace of either of them: my surroundings had shifted, wiping it
|
|
all way. And yet I was not alone. Something was following me, large
|
|
footsteps creaking against the ash as the beast stalked me. I closed my
|
|
eyes and took a deep breath. \emph{This is my Name. I own it, it does
|
|
not own me.}
|
|
|
|
``\textbf{Come out},'' I Spoke.
|
|
|
|
There was a mocking huff of laughter but the beast strode out of its
|
|
hiding place. I'd wondered what my Role would look like, given flesh,
|
|
and now I had my answer. No fur and bones for my monster, only the
|
|
shifting shadows I'd learned to craft spears out of. It must have been
|
|
the size of a barn but it moved with deceptive swiftness, coiling around
|
|
me in an instant. It opened jaw larger than my head, ivory fangs
|
|
clicking just in front of my nose to see if I'd flinch. Its breath was
|
|
cold, like the bite of the wind in winter. I stilled the fear that set
|
|
my heart beating and forced myself to meet its eyes. Darker shadows, the
|
|
difference between shade and the deepest of night.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not afraid of you,'' I lied.
|
|
|
|
The jaws opened again and in a flash the teeth were closing around my
|
|
neck. My fingers turned white against the grip of my sword, but I did
|
|
not flinch. Satisfied, the beast drew back. It stalked away from and
|
|
shook itself, heading north without another look. Silently, I followed
|
|
after wiping the beads of blood where the teeth had pierced my skin. It
|
|
was not long until we found it. It sat alone on a dune, looking at the
|
|
sky. It looked, I thought, like a child's drawing of a person. Pink
|
|
naked hairless flesh from its toeless feet to the crown of its head,
|
|
where I shuddered at what I saw. If it had been tentacles or horns I
|
|
might have simply thought it a monster and dealt with the fear, but it
|
|
was neither. Just darkly coloured flesh, cut into smaller threads as a
|
|
sordid parody of hair and perfectly combed. It did not turn when we
|
|
approached. It did not breathe. The beast howled and I drew my sword,
|
|
and only then did it deign to glance in our direction.
|
|
|
|
I wished it hadn't.
|
|
|
|
Its lips were sealed, made of the same fleshy growth, and its nose did
|
|
not have nostrils. Its eyebrows were nothing more than dark ridges but
|
|
the eyes were the worst. Holes in tightened flesh, empty. I took a step
|
|
forward, the beast following. The moment I set foot on the ash dune
|
|
something clicked.
|
|
|
|
``Seek,'' I spoke, before it could.
|
|
|
|
My mind unspooled as I snatched away my aspect, filling with information
|
|
I should not have known. I knew the exact height of the dune. I knew how
|
|
many steps would take me to the demon, how I needed to balance my weight
|
|
to avoid worsening my leg. The flow of knowledge was too great, like I'd
|
|
opened a floodgate, so I forced it to narrow. This was the aspect I'd
|
|
been looking for, something beyond the brute equalizer I'd been relying
|
|
on. A pathfinder to craft solutions, and I knew my first use for it.
|
|
|
|
\emph{How do I get the demon out of my soul?}
|
|
|
|
The thread narrowed, then exploded into paths. My mind followed them
|
|
down eagerly. And one by one, they stopped. Hit a wall. The creature's
|
|
lips twitched up and down, its attempt at a smile. It reached for me. My
|
|
beast sprung forward with a snarl but it was late, too late.
|
|
|
|
MINE.
|
|
|
|
I woke up screaming, strapped to a bed.
|