448 lines
21 KiB
TeX
448 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-10-entrance}{%
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\chapter{Entrance}\label{chapter-10-entrance}}
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\epigraph{``No one ever won a war by being shy.''}{Queen Elizabeth Alban of Callow}
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The door didn't make a sound as it closed. I was in a pretty little
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antechamber decorates in shades of wood, leading into a large bedroom. I
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eyed the featherbed with untoward intentions, noting it was twice as
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large as my own in Marchford. Silk covers and enough pillows for three
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people: this was exactly the kind of staggering decadence I'd been
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promised when I'd hitched my wagon to the Evil horse. Instead I had to
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deal with goblins who couldn't keep their knives in their pants, half
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the Empire out for my blood and a demesne whose ledger ran so red it
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looked like it was bleeding. All of which I had to handle while sleeping
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in woollen sheets, to add insult to injury. There had to be someone I
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could lodge a complaint with. Hells, maybe that could be the first thing
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I ever prayed to the Gods Below about -- \emph{how about some grapes and
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oiled up manservants, you stingy fucks?}
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With a snort I unbuckled my belt and sheath, tossed them on the covers.
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Normally getting out of my plate was a job best fit for two, but I'd
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been stabbed enough today it had gotten a great deal easier. I got rid
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of the greaves first, then the gauntlets and then fiddled with the
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breastplate and pauldrons for a while. By the end of it I had a lovely
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little pile of goblin steel full of murder holes on the ground, and with
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a sigh of pleasure I got rid of my armoured boots. The smell was ripe,
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so I tossed them as far away as I could. Being Named got me out of many
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of the little ugly details of life -- didn't get sick anymore, tired
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much slower and I hadn't had my monthlies in about two years -- but it
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did nothing for sweat. Or what the inside of a boot smelled like after a
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hard day of fighting.
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The aketon I placed on the bed, leaving me in only a pair of heavy cloth
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trousers and able to breathe comfortably for the first time in what felt
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like forever. I passed a hand through my hair, tugging off the leather
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ring keeping it in a ponytail. I grimaced at the sensation of sweat long
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gone cold, then forced myself to get up instead of just dropping on the
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silk to lie there like some sort of moaning spineless mollusc. There was
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an archway into a side room to the left, so I picked up the invitation
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scroll and padded that way. Strange how even this far into a land of ice
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I barely felt the cold: I was fairly sure that wasn't my Name at work.
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Who knew, maybe even fairies got gold. To my pleasure I found a low bath
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set in a quaint little square of stone, already drawn. The water was
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limpid, almost impossibly so.
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It also did not seem to be warm.
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I got closer and dipped a toe inside, flinching at the wintry
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temperature. Yet after the moment the cold started to feel refreshing.
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Purifying, almost. Huh. Well, it wasn't like I had alternatives. I
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placed the scroll by the edge and got rid of my trousers, gritting my
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teeth before sliding into the bath all at once. The sudden cold was
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overwhelming for the first few heartbeats but when I got used to it the
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sensation from earlier returned. It was rather calming, really. I ducked
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under the surface to rinse my face and hair, shaking underneath before
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coming back up close to the side. Carefully I broke the seal on the
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scroll having shaking my hands off the worst of the droplets, watching
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the frost dissipate. Inside was an invitation, like the steward had
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stated. Not directed at me specifically, I noted, but at whoever was in
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the Still Courtyard.
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Whoever that usually was, they were pretty far up the food chain. The
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language was both elaborate and ingratiatingly polite -- and given that
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it was the Duke of Violent Squalls who'd sent this, that probably meant
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this was for royalty. Or not, I frowned, reading the lines again. No
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mention of royal title was made, but some of the phrasing implied the
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receiver was \emph{foreign}. Regardless, it was an invitation to a ball
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held in the Duke's palace in the city, after nightfall. A masquerade to
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boot, because evidently I'd stepped into a shady Proceran romance. At
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least Hakram would be at home, I thought with a grin. He had like three
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of those stashed under his bunk. The one I'd thumbed through involved a
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lot of corsets being manfully ripped off and longing sighs all around.
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It was a sign of my deep love for the orc that I hadn't told Robber
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about my find.
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I set the scroll aside and leaned against the side of the bath, closing
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my eyes with a sigh. The Winter King, I decided, would have more than
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one place to stash guests until he could receive them. It was not a
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coincidence we'd been sent to the one where there would be a vaguely
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addressed invitation waiting for us. We -- I -- had been meant to get
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this. More than that, the way I'd lied through my teeth to get us into
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Skade had either been expected or was something the quasi-god ruling
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this place intended to use. For his advantage, probably. That was
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usually the way it went. What in all the Hells the ruler of half of
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faekind would want with a Squire from the Dread Empire was where I was
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drawing a blank. The Winter Court had staked a claim on Marchford, sure,
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but I was beginning to grasp it was more complicated than that. For one,
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if a noble of the calibre of the Lady of Cracking Ice had stepped into
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my city there would be corpses from wall to wall.
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Instead we'd gotten a few of their soldiers, a single group of riders
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and a bunch of aristocrats that must have been hilariously low down the
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pecking order for them to be taken out by mere legionaries. I didn't
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mean to sell the Fifteenth short: there weren't a lot of forces in the
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Empire or out of it I wouldn't pit them against. They were highly
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skilled professional soldiers led by the most talented tactician I'd
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ever met, with the core of their troops blooded against devils and heavy
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cavalry. They were not, however, equipped to stand against a host of
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demigods who could warp the landscape with an idle thought. No, if the
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Winter King had been serious about getting a foothold in Marchford right
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now he'd have one. Actually taking the city, then, had not been his
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objective. \emph{If you know the means and the results, you can grasp
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your enemy's intent,} Black had taught me.
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The attacks had been the means. The results were that I'd sallied out to
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fight the fae, by necessity stepping into Arcadia to shut down the door
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on their fingers. There was a distinct possibility, then, that getting
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me here -- whether that was Arcadia in general or Skade I could only
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guess -- had been the entire point of that affair. I took a moment to
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master my rage at the thought. I had no way of knowing how many
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casualties we'd taken on the second attack, but the number would not be
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small. My soldiers, killed just to get my attention. I breathed in and
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out until I could think beyond \emph{murdering my way through everyone
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responsible for that}. All right. We'd been pushed towards Skade by the
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Winter King, and after getting there had been directed to the Still
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Courtyard. I was willing, for now, to assume that had been the plan. I'd
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been neatly guided to the city, every step thinking I was bluffing my
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way out.
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At the Courtyard we'd found an invitation waiting for us, meant for
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someone of high rank but perhaps not of the Winter Court. I was pretty
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sure mortals didn't usually come this deep into Arcadia unless they were
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as ragingly insane as the Lady of the Lake, so odds were this invitation
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was for another fae. That meant the Summer Court, and wasn't that just
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another kettle of equally murderous fish? The Courts were meant to be at
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war, I knew, but somehow they were not. Summer was out there making
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someone regret their decisions and Winter was puttering about in my
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backyard -- yet even with that difference from the norm, the stories
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were unfolding. Like they had in the marketplace, everyone going through
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the motions and always leading to the same outcome.
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``He wants us to play someone else's role,'' I spoke into the empty
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room.
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We'd been summoned to fill the shoes of some Summer fae, inserted into a
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story we didn't know the plot of. \emph{Why?} And that was the question,
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wasn't it? Two people out there were playing shatranj on a board I
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didn't know about, and once more I was a pawn. I wouldn't be finding any
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answers in a bath, though, so it was time to go. I hoisted myself out,
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reaching for the cloth set aside on a bench to dry myself. I raised an
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eyebrow when I saw my trousers had disappeared, setting the cloth on my
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shoulder and heading for the bedroom. My armour was gone as well, I saw,
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as was everything but my sword belt and cape. Neatly placed on the bed
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was a dress of green brocade with accents of gold thread, along with an
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ornate fox mask of gold with green accents.
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I tried on the dress as much out of curiosity as because I wouldn't be
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going out naked in the corridors to ask for my plate back. It fit
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perfectly: sleeveless, high-collared and going down to my ankles, it was
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the single most comfortable thing I'd ever worn. A looking glass made of
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ice to the side told me the cut was hinting at my having cleavage in a
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way that was slightly less than honest. I could move easily in it,
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though bending over was tricky -- still, no more than it would have been
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with armour on.
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``Well, it wouldn't do to show up at a masquerade in plate,'' I
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murmured.
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I buckled my belt around my hip, adjusting so my sword would be easy to
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draw. Looking for something to replace my boots I found exquisite
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crystal slippers. \emph{Not happening}, I snorted. Those would be
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impossible to fight in. The pair of supple leather boots by them was
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more to my taste, as were the green silk thigh-high stockings inside
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them. Hadn't worn anything this nice since I'd gone dancing with Kilian
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in Laure, I thought, and decided I was definitely stealing all of that
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when I bailed out of Arcadia. The cloak settled comfortably around my
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shoulder, Hakram's handiwork of striped banners flourishing behind me as
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I turned to pick up the mask. I left the room to look for the others,
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blinking when I saw out the window that night had already fallen. How
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long had I been in that bath? \emph{Stupid question, Catherine. Like
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time means anything here: Could have been in there just long enough to
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dip your toe and it'd still be dark out.}
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Archer's rooms had been just further down the hall so I checked there
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first, but the door was open and no one was in. I wandered a bit before
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running into a servant, who after the obligatory kneeling and abject
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submission guided to me to the library -- I was apparently the last out
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and all the others had gone to Masego. Library, as I found out, was
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something of a misnomer. Though the walls were covered with stacks
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filled with volumes, the amount of plush chairs and tables made it clear
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this was meant to be a room where people were received. Small orbs of
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fairy flame floating like chandeliers lit up the place with a subtle
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blue tint. Apprentice was easily found: he was alone on his chair, an
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orb floating right above his head as he paged through a manuscript. Two
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piles of volumes flanked him and he paid no attention whatsoever to the
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others.
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This was the first time I'd ever gotten a good look at Archer, so I paid
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close attention. My guess that she was stacked underneath the layers
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seemed to have been right on the nose: her grey vest and white shirt
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curved noticeably. Over it she wore a long woollen coat of darker grey,
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embroidered with gold patterns along the border that matched the exact
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shade of the gold on my dress. Long grey trousers ending in soft leather
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shoes, her neck covered by a carelessly arranged silk scarf matching the
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coat. I could see the handle of her longknives peeking out, but of the
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bow there was no trace. She had a thinner face than I would have
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thought, and a remarkably slender nose. Hazelnut eyes met mine, going up
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and down my dress with a grin. Yeah, I'd seen that one coming.
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I almost laughed when I saw Hakram. He wore a dark velour doublet and
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matching trousers that made it clear exactly how broad his shoulders
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were, but the amusing part was the cape: black fur with pure white
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bordering, it made him look like Creation's fanciest warlord. The axe --
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not his own, it had been broken earlier this one was too silvery to be
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his after repair -- hanging off a leather ring at his belt lent him a
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slightly more martial appearance, as did the thick leather boots. The
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skeletal fingers that had seen him called Deadhand by his own peeked
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over the edge of his sleeve, unnaturally still.
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``There were golden earrings and white war paint,'' he said in an
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aggrieved tone. ``\emph{War paint}, Cat. What is this, the War of
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Chains? No one's used that in centuries.''
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``I'm sure you'd make for a very costly hour at a brothel,'' I reassured
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him.
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He groaned and covered his eyes.
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``I always did wonder if orcs have the same\ldots{} machinery down there
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as we do,'' Archer said with a shit-eating grin.
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``We're not having the `what do orc genitals look like' talk,'' Hakram
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replied firmly.
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``I have a book, I'll loan it to you,'' I told Archer.
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She raised a perfect eyebrow.
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``Got curious,'' I shrugged. ``And he gets all irritable when asked
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about it.''
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``Masego never changed,'' Adjutant said, desperately changing the
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subject.
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We all turned towards Apprentice, who was still reading.
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``I think he's under a silencing ward,'' I said with a frown.
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I took out the the invitation scroll and tossed it at the darks-skinned
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mage's head. It hit him right in the glasses and he nearly jumped out of
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his skin, dropping the book and hastily dispersing the spell around him.
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``Oh, is it time to leave yet?'' he asked.
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``My guess is that will be whenever we decide to go,'' I said, ``but
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we've got places to be. Go get ready.''
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That got some attention from the others.
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``The invitation?'' Archer asked.
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``We're going to a masquerade,'' I said. ``To find out exactly who we're
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supposed to be.''
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``That seems counterproductive,'' Masego pointed out. ``We'd be wearing
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masks.''
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I wasn't sure if I was just terrible at the vague-but-meaningful
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announcements or Apprentice was that much of a pain, but clearly my
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technique needed work.
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``Did you notice how we're all wearing different clothes, Masego?'' I
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said.
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He paused, pushed up his spectacles.
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``Yes,'' he lied.
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Archer coughed into her hand, failing to disguise her laughter.
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``I'm guessing there's a fancy outfit in your rooms,'' I patiently told
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Apprentice. ``Go put it on.''
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``My robes are clean, if that's what you're worried about,'' he said.
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``There's a self-cleaning enchantment on them.''
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So \emph{that} was why he never used the Fifteenth's laundry chains. I'd
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always assumed he had some poor -- literal -- devil handling it.
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``We also have masks,'' I said, bringing up my own.
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I glanced at the others, who didn't seem to have their own, and Hakram
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gestured a table in the back. Theirs were there: a black obsidian bear
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for Adjutant, and a gold-and-grey falcon for Archer. Apprentice snapped
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his wrist, whispering a word in the mage tongue, and a thin blank
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carnival mask of ice formed over his face. It accommodated his
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spectacles perfectly, at least.
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``Fine,'' I said, ``have it your way. But don't come complaining to me
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if the fae make fun of you.''
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``Do I \emph{have} to talk with them?'' he asked very seriously. ``I'm
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not even close to finished with these.''
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He rapped his knuckle atop the pile of books to his left to clarify. I
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bet the Lone Swordsman never had to deal with shit like this, I thought
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irritably. Killing him had been an act of justice just for that.
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``You can bring one,'' I said. ``And only read when someone's not
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verbally trying to entrap us into something lethal.''
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He muttered under his breath. His fathers had spoiled him, I thought. I
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didn't want to make assumptions here, but I was betting on the incubus
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for the worst of it. He was probably a soft touch when it came to
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discipline. The matron at the orphanage always spanked us if we made
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noise after lights out, now \emph{that} was a firm hand. I took back the
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invitation and adjusted my cloak.
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``All right, you sad excuse for a band of minions,'' I said. ``Gird your
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loins, we're going on a magical adventure.''
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Archer clapped, painfully slowly.
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``I'm guessing the speeches aren't why they put you in charge,'' she
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said.
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``Last time we went on an adventure I ripped out someone's soul,''
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Apprentice said. ``Do I get to keep it this time if we do it again?''
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``Hakram?'' I asked despairingly.
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``Have you seen how tight those trousers are?'' he grunted. ``Doesn't
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get more girded than that.''
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If we all got killed, I better go last. I felt like I'd earned it.
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---
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There'd been a carriage waiting for us outside the Courtyard. Four white
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horses and a coachman who'd bowed to us as we claimed the seats inside.
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I'd gotten Hakram on my side, making the tactical decision to sacrifice
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Masego behind if Archer got grabby. I peered out the window, watching
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Skade in the light of ever-present fairy lights. I didn't recognize any
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of the streets we went through from earlier, though that didn't mean
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much. The night sky above us was just as confusing: now and then I got a
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glimpse of the stars they way they looked above Callow, but most of the
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time they were entirely foreign constellations. The way they kept
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changing between every look probably didn't help. We were quiet on the
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way to the duke's palace, only stirring when we began to hear music in
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the distance.
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A beautiful voice was singing, though I couldn't make out the words yet,
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accompanied by what seemed like a set of string instruments. The
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carriage eventually slowed and I waited patiently until servants came to
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open the doors for us. I stepped down onto a woven blue carpet leading
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to a set of stairs, moving aside to make room for the others as I stared
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at the Duke of Violent Squalls' palace. Gods Below, it was made of
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\emph{wind}. Walls and stairs and columns, sculpted out of every
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stirring wind that looked like a physical thing. Boreal lights shone
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like lamps and I could see more of them inside, in a grand hall. A
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servant attempted to take my cloak and I waved him off as the others
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caught up to me.
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``Stable and self-sustaining,'' Apprentice murmured. ``Interesting. I
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don't think it could be reproduced outside Arcadia, but the underlying
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principles\ldots{}''
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``Think about that after we've made it through the night,'' Adjutant
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said.
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Archer finished adjusting her falcon mask over her face and gallantly
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offered me her arm. I rolled my eyes and strode forward. Servants parted
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for us, bowing low, until we reached the summit of the steps. There a
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man with spectacles was holding an unrolled scroll in his arms,
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discreetly peering at us through the glass. An announcer. \emph{So much
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for the masks hiding identities.} I slowed in front of him and he began
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to speak, then closed his mouth. He looked panicked for a few heartbeats
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before clearing his throat.
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``Lady Catherine Foundling of Marchford, the Squire,'' he announced.
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I looked at him, the suddenly ripped the scroll out of his hands. I
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ignored his protests and scanned through the list of names until I found
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where he'd been looking at. Four names, the most important of which was
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the first: \emph{Princess Sulia of High Noon, envoy for the Summer
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Court.} I gave him back his list.
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``Fuck,'' I said feelingly.
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Archer was announced as `Lady Archer of Refuge, first pupil of the
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Darkest Night', before catching up to me.
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``What do you know about how wars start between Winter and Summer?'' I
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asked her.
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``They have several reasons, never use the same twice,'' she replied.
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Behind us Hakram was announced as `Lord Adjutant of the Fifteenth, the
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Deadhand'.
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``Is one of them some princess called Sulia getting her ass killed at
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truce talks?'' I asked.
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The other Named frowned.
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``That rings a bell,'' she said. ``But I think she gets captured.
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Trap?''
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``Isn't it always?'' I grunted.
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Masego joined us after his introduction of `Lord Apprentice of the
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Wasteland, Son of the Red Skies'. We all clustered at the threshold of
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the entrance hall for a moment.
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``Problem?'' Hakram said.
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``We've taken the place of diplomatic envoys from Summer in a story,'' I
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whispered.
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``That doesn't sound good,'' Apprentice said. ``I suppose it's a good
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thing we have you along.''
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I glanced at him.
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``What's that supposed to mean?''
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``You're very good at murdering our opposition,'' he said, genuinely
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believing he was giving me a compliment.
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I occasionally forgot Masego had been raised by villains. For him that
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probably counted as praise.
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``You don't know for sure I'm going to kill someone,'' I said.
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``Not gonna lie, I'll be disappointed if we don't,'' Archer noted.
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``I've done diplomacy before,'' I continued.
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``I don't think extorting the High Lords counts,'' Apprentice said.
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``Or looting that angel,'' Hakram added.
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``I think bullied might be more accurate,'' Masego said.
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``If you guys keep this up I can \emph{guarantee} you someone's getting
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killed,'' I said.
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``That's the spirit,'' Apprentice said, patting my shoulders. ``Now
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let's move along, Catherine, we're blocking the way. You really need to
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pay more attention to your surroundings.''
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He strode into the hall before I could come up with a reply, still
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gaping. The others followed, Archer turning back only long enough to
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give me a mocking grin.
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