384 lines
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384 lines
16 KiB
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\hypertarget{chapter-34-lesson}{%
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\chapter{Lesson}\label{chapter-34-lesson}}
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\epigraph{``The Praesi take on negotiations is to slam a severed head on the
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table and smile at your interlocutor until they reconsider their
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position.''}{Prokopia Lakene, first Hierarch of the League of Free Cities}
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Heiress was daintily picking at eggs and sausage, cutting off small
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slices with a knife. How she'd even arranged for a meal to be served in
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the guildhall was beyond me, since I'd given standing instructions for
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any of my officers to tell her to fuck off if she asked for anything.
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Either she'd bullied a Callowan to get it done -- in which case I was
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going to break her fingers -- or she'd brought servants on a military
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campaign. The second seemed most likely: my life would be a lot easier
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if she were someone stupid enough to push me when my teacher was in the
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city. Speaking of the man, Black would be joining us soon enough. For
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now he was still busy overseeing Warlock's work in clearing my
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legionaries. Until then, though, I refused to sit at the same table as
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the wretch in front of me. Just being in the same room had me itching to
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run her through, an urge it was getting harder to keep under control
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with every passing moment.
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``You're quiet this morning,'' the Soninke aristocrat mused. ``Couldn't
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get a good night's sleep?''
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My fingers tightened until the knuckles turned white but I refused to
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fall for a provocation that obvious.
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``One of these days,'' I replied softly, ``I am going to find something
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precious to you and I am going to \emph{break} it.''
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``Oh, I don't doubt you'll try,'' she replied with a friendly smile that
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never reached her eyes.
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Absurdly enough, it looked like Akua had brought several suits of armour
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with her. The polished silver-enamelled breastplate in the Miezan style
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she wore wasn't one I'd seen before, and neither was the quilted
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colourful aketon she had underneath. It reminded me of the eye-catching
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robes and dresses I'd seen nobles wear when I'd first gone to the Tower.
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Was that how Praesi armies had looked like, before the Reforms? Like a
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flock of tropical birds girded in steel, as beautiful as they were
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poisonous? It was hard to imagine after a lifetime of seeing the Legions
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if Terror decked in the sober, practical gear they now used.
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I sometimes forgot that, for all the misery its lower classes often
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lived in, the Dread Empire was one of the richest nations on Calernia.
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The Hungering Sands were full of precious metals and the Wasteland was
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pregnant with gemstones, both of those too close to the surface to have
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been claimed by the dwarves. The Free Cities had famously grown rich as
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the middle-man between Praes and nations that wouldn't be caught dead
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trading directly with the Tower. And yet Wasteland aristocrats were
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still wealthier than anyone else on the surface, save perhaps Proceran
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princes -- and even then those without silver in their principalities
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would have to rely heavily on trade to bridge the gap. I was shaken out
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of my thoughts by Black's arrival, which was probably for the best.
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Another round of verbal sparring with Akua wouldn't get me anything but
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the need to grind my teeth.
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Black had ditched his cloak at some point, leaving him in the plain suit
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of plate he always wore. I could count the number of times I'd seen my
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teacher out of it on my fingers, but having since learned the breadth of
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enemies he truly had I couldn't fault him for the precaution. It wasn't
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paranoia if the people out to get you had a shelf full of
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devil-summoning books. Even being out on the field hadn't managed to get
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his pale skin to tan, a trait I'd come to suspect was Name related, but
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even then he still looked\ldots{} healthy. There was a vitality to him
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that had been missing when I'd first stumbled into him in Laure, or
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perhaps just been hidden under layers of amused indolence. It made for
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an unsettling sight.
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``Catherine,'' he greeted me.
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``Black,'' I replied, rolling my eyes at the formality of it.
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``Lord Black,'' Heiress said, making to rise, ``It's a pleasure to-``
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Pale green eyes flicked to Akua.
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\textbf{``Ram it into your hand,}'' he Spoke.
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My rival's hand slowly rose, shaking as she tried to fight it, and she
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nailed her other one to the table with the same knife she'd been using
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to break her fast. Heiress didn't cry out, though her lips thinned.
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Unlike my leg, mage healing would fix that wound. That said, it would
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have been a lie to say I didn't derive a great deal of satisfaction from
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what was unfolding in front of me.
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``I suspect you were insufficiently disciplined as a child,'' Black
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noted. ``For the rest of this conversation, you will speak only when
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addressed to.''
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``My lord, this is-'' she began.
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\textbf{``Twist.''}
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She ground the knife into her own hand, and this time let out a small
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hiss of pain.
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``Do you understand me, Heiress?'' Black asked patiently.
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She nodded.
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``Good,'' he smiled affably. ``Now thank me, for the valuable lesson you
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were just taught.''
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There was a heartbeat of silence.
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``Thank you, lord,'' she replied through gritted teeth.
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The dark-haired man claimed the seat at the head of the table and
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gestured for me to take the one to his right. None of this was quite as
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viscerally satisfying as if I'd been the one to knife her myself, but
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for now I'd take it. Our accounts were still far from settled.
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``I'll begin with the obvious, even though I have a feeling I won't get
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my way,'' I started. ``She let out a fucking demon in the middle of a
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military campaign. Honestly I feel like just letting one of those things
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loose at all should be enough to be buried in a shallow grave so I'd
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like her head on a pike, pretty please.''
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I resisted the urge to bat my eyelashes for effect. Black raised an
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eyebrow, then turned to Heiress.
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``Rebuttal?'' he prompted.
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``I take no responsibility for this,'' she replied, face gone pale with
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the pain and bleeding. ``The wards holding the demon were overrun by
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foreigners. Given Squire's pointless pursuit of the Silver Spears after
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her victory, it seems obvious who is at fault.''
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Not a single word of that was an actual lie, I was certain. Not that
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anyone in the room was fooled. The only question was whether or not her
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connections to the Truebloods would be enough to get her off with a slap
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on the wrist regardless of guilt. I had a nasty feeling they would be.
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``No solid proof of your interference has been provided,'' Black told
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Heiress. ``Because of that, Her Most Dreadful Majesty has declined to
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give me permission to execute you.''
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If she'd ever been worried it had not shown on her face, and neither did
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relief now. The dark-skinned aristocrat inclined her head, murmuring a
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platitude about Malicia's wisdom and foresight.
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``That said, I would like you to keep something in mind,'' the
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green-eyed man continued.
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He leaned forward.
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``Your behaviour during this campaign has been a hindrance to Imperial
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interests in Callow, Akua Sahelian. Should it ever become a threat, I
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will send your mutilated corpse back to your mother piece by piece.''
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He did not raise his voice, or change his tone in any way. He might as
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well have been discussing what he'd have for dinner. He'd snatch the
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life out of her just as casually, I knew, and though he'd not used his
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terror trick I felt a shiver of fear go up my spine. The way Black was
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looking at her but he wasn't seeing a person: all his eyes saw were a
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possible liability, and he'd been leaving corpses of those behind him
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for decades. Akua's face remained blank but I could feel the terror
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beneath the mask, the realization that she'd come very close to crossing
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what may very well be the most dangerous man in the Empire. At the end
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of the day our Names were both transitional ones, the stepping stone to
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something greater. The monsters out there in the world were at the top
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of the pyramid for a very good reason: \emph{they'd killed all their
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competition}. Ambition did not equate power, as my life seemed ever
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intent on reminding me. We still had years ahead of us before we'd be a
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match for any of the Calamities.
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``You've been very careful to toe the line of the law,'' Black said.
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``It seems you believe this affords you a degree of protection.''
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His eyes turned cold.
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``\emph{I am a villain, child},'' he hissed. ``The appearance of the
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rule of law is useful to me, so I have allowed it. Do not mistake this
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for true fettering. Should you ever inconvenience me again, I will Speak
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three words and you will slit your own throat.''
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The intensity vanished out of him as swiftly as it had appeared,
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replaced by a pleasant smile.
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``In happier news, you and your mercenaries have been attached to the
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Fifteenth as auxiliaries for the next part of this campaign,'' he
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informed her. ``Congratulations, you've been granted the equivalent of a
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commander's commission.''
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``Thank you, lord,'' Heiress murmured.
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Black drummed his fingers against the table and there was a long moment
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of silence.
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``Well?'' he asked. ``What are you still doing here?''
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Lack of understanding flickered across the aristocrat's face,
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immediately blanked out.
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``A mere commander is not cleared for this kind of meeting,'' Black
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explained patiently. ``You are dismissed.''
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I swallowed a snort. Oh, now that was just \emph{precious}. That was
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probably the worst insult he'd given her today, given how self-important
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the other villain was. Akua rose to her feet after getting the knife out
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of her hand, blood dripping all over the table. There was the smallest
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flare of magic and the bleeding stemmed. With a stiff bow, my rival made
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to leave.
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``One last thing, Heiress,'' Black said, not bothering to turn to look
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at her. ``You've made a mess all over Catherine's table. I expect you to
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be back with a rag and bucket to clean it up within the hour.''
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I'd been wrong, evidently. \emph{That} was definitely the harshest
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humiliation he'd doled out in quite some time, and I took a moment to
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savour it as I watched Heiress close the door behind her. I leaned back
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in my seat, allowing myself a small break before the conversation
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resumed. I found Black's eyes had drifted to my bad leg, the faintest
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trace of a frown on his face.
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``Masego said it can't be fixed,'' I said.
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``Inaccurate,'' he replied. ``If we amputate the leg entirely you can be
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grafted a fully functional replacement.''
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``But?'' I prompted.
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If it were that simple, he wouldn't be frowning.
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``Limb grafts made by magic can be unmade by the same,'' he replied.
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``It would be a liability against any sorcerous Named.''
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``Pass, then,'' I grunted.
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Just because the Bumbling Conjurer was dead didn't meant I'd never have
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to deal with a Named mage in the future. Mundane casters could probably
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manage the same kind of spellwork too, if in sufficient numbers. I
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cleared my throat.
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``I do appreciate you turning the screws on Heiress a bit,'' I said,
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``but this is\ldots{} unusual, for you. You don't usually intervene in
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these kinds of confrontations.''
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``None of it was meant for your benefit,'' he replied easily. ``I was
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attempting to frighten her enough that she'd let out the demon.''
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I blinked. ``That\ldots{} does not strike me as a good idea.''
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``Wekesa began to set a binding array around this building the moment
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she entered,'' Black patiently explained. ``If I'd witnessed her
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bringing forth a demon responsible for the death of Legion personnel, I
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would have had valid reason to execute her.''
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I frowned. ``Can't Warlock just find the standard she's using?''
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``He has not been able to,'' Black admitted.
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My brows rose. ``She can't possibly be that good of a mage,'' I said.
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``It wouldn't be her own spellwork,'' my teacher noted. ``Wolof has been
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the centre of sorcerous learning in Praes since the days before the
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Miezan occupation. No other city has ever produced as many Warlocks.
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Odds are she's using a dimensional bubble one of them created a century
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ago that has long been forgotten by everyone else.''
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Well, fuck. How many other surprises like this would Akua have up her
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sleeve? Hells, before last night I hadn't even known she was a mage. I
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realized the frown had yet to leave my teacher's face, which I didn't
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like the looks of.
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``You look like you want to say something,'' I hazarded.
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``If I believed in corporal punishment, you'd be cradling your cheek
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right now,'' he spoke flatly.
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I flinched.
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``You're angry.''
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``Furious,'' he agreed calmly. ``You did a damned foolish thing,
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Catherine. Fighting a demon inside your Name, when you've yet to even
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fully grow into it? Recklessness is only an asset if you understand when
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to use it properly.''
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``I was in a desperate position,'' I defended myself.
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``You put yourself in a desperate position,'' he corrected. ``The
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Fifteenth did not have to engage the enemy, you \emph{made} that
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choice.''
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``And what was the alternative?'' I barked. ``Run away and leave tens of
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thousands to die? I refuse to believe that was a better way.''
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``And that's why Heiress just beat you,'' Black replied, eyes shadowed.
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``As long as you allow people a lever that obvious to dictate your
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behaviour, they will.''
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``She set it up so she'd get something she wanted whatever choice I
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made,'' I replied tiredly.
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On a battlefield, I was pretty sure I'd beat Heiress nine times out of
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ten. She didn't go for battles, though. Most of the damage she'd done me
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was while she was out of sight, working through proxies and spies. Black
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sighed.
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``I'm not telling you to stop taking these kinds of stands, Catherine,''
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he said. ``But if you want to continue doing this, you need to turn the
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Fifteenth into the kind of force that can crush your opponents
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underfoot. Not next year, not when the war is over, \emph{now}. If you
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cannot cut through her manipulations, you need to make them
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irrelevant.''
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``I don't have the men for that, right now,'' I admitted.
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``I scraped together all the recruits in Callowan camps before you
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fought your battle at Marchford,'' he replied. ``Within three weeks
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you'll have another two thousand legionaries camped across the western
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branch of the Hwaerte.''
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``Green recruits,'' I pointed out.
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``You have a core of veterans now,'' Black murmured. ``Men who've been
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through battles the equal of any waged during the Conquest. Officers
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who've held the line against devils and some of the finest cavalry on
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the continent. The legionaries who fought against the Kingdom are
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getting old: you might very well have the sharpest fighting force in the
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Empire under your command, at the moment.''
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That\ldots{} was a very good point, actually. The Conquest had been over
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twenty years ago: most goblins who'd been alive back then were dead and
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the older human and orc soldiers from that war were either retired or
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permanently behind desks.
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``I don't mean to dismiss your accomplishments, Catherine,'' my teacher
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said softly. ``You've made mistakes, but you've also won repeated
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victories against horrendous odds. What you did for Marchford, the story
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you've created with your actions, is something that will ripple across
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Callow in the years to come. You've taken the first step forward in the
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path you set for yourself. That is something to be proud of.''
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For a moment I allowed myself to bask in the praise of a man I'd come to
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admire, for all that I despised some of the things he'd done. Only for a
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moment, though.
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``I get why you're angry,'' I admitted. ``I lost an aspect. That's not
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something that you can just walk off.''
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Black snorted. ``A minor loss, that. The risk you took in the attempt is
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the infuriating part.''
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I blinked. ``I permanently damaged my Name, Black,'' I spoke carefully.
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``Crippled the amount of power I can use by at least a third until I
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come into another Name.''
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The dark-haired man rested his chin on his palm, looking amused.
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``You've seen me used my shadow before, yes?''
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I nodded.
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``That is the most useful fighting trick I get out of my Name. My
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predecessor as the Black Knight, on the other hand, could bring down a
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tower with a flick of his wrist. And yet on the first Fields of Streges
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he was killed by a footsoldier. Not a hero, not a knight or a wizard. A
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young woman rammed a sword in his eye, and no amount of power could
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allow him to shrug that off,'' he told me. ``He died after tearing
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through a hundred soldiers, because he was tired and surrounded and he'd
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chosen his ground poorly.''
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He smiled darkly.
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``Villains like Heiress think of power as something they can rain down
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on their enemies, but that's a false perception. She could set an entire
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field aflame and still die from an arrow in the throat. And unlike you,
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she \emph{will} get in that situation. You make mistakes because of who
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you are, Catherine, not because of what your Name drives you to do. You
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can learn. You can adjust.''
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His fingers tapped against the wood, the rhythm that of an old Callowan
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funerary march.
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``So pick your ground,'' Black spoke quietly, inexorably. ``Surround
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her. Tire her out. And then let her do the rest.''
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